Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calgary MP Deepak Obhrai Entering Conservative Party Leadership Race

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2016 01:19 PM
    OTTAWA — As candidates from Ontario and Quebec have lined up to run for leadership of the federal Conservatives, many have wondered whether anyone from the party's Western heartland was going to join them.
     
    Well, now one is planning to — longtime Calgary MP Deepak Obhrai.
     
    Obhrai, 66, will be the fifth entrant in the contest that will conclude with a vote by party members next May. 
     
    He is the longest continuously serving member of the Conservative team in the House of Commons.
     
    During the Tories' years in government, he held a number of junior cabinet positions in foreign affairs and, while on the opposition benches, he has also served as parliamentary critic on those files.
     
    His Calgary office confirmed his plans to run, but provided no other details Friday.
     
    Obhrai recently led the charge to have the party's membership fees dropped, saying a planned hike would put the party at risk of becoming an “elitist, white-only club."
     
    He got a taste of leadership last fall when he presided over the party's first post-election caucus meeting.
     
     
    Obhrai assumed the role thanks to changes in parliamentary law requiring MPs to vote in that first meeting on how they govern themselves. The law said the vote was to be run by the MP with the longest period of unbroken service, which was Obhrai, who was first elected in 1997 as a Reform MP.
     
    The changes were spearheaded by another Tory also running for leader, Michael Chong.
     
    Obhrai is close to former Conservative cabinet minister Peter MacKay, who has been thinking about launching his own leadership bid. 
     
    Earlier this week MacKay told The Canadian Press he had not yet made up his mind.
     
    But the decisions this week by Obhrai and Ontario Tory MP Tony Clement to join the race are fuelling speculation MacKay isn't going to make a bid.
     
    Other candidates so far include Ontario MP Kellie Leitch and Quebec MP Maxime Bernier.
     
    THE CONSERVATIVE LEADERSHIP RACE: WHO'S IN, WHO'S OUT, WHO'S WAFFLING
     
    OTTAWA — Conservative MP Tony Clement launched his bid for the leadership of his party earlier this week. Here's a look at who else is in, who's out and who's still on the fence.
     
    In:
     
    Kellie Leitch. The pediatric orthopedic surgeon first elected as an MP in 2011 was the first official entrant in the race. She rolled out a campaign organization across the country on day one but that was dealt an early blow when a key organizer was charged with drunk driving offences and forced to resign.
     
     
    Maxime Bernier. The Quebec MP filed his papers a few days after Leitch and has already outlined several key policy positions, including a pledge to end supply management, a controversial approach in his home province with its established farming industry.
     
    Michael Chong. The Tory MP from Ontario has been a longtime champion of democratic reform is spending the summer holding fundraisers in a bid to bolster his campaign coffers.
     
    Out:
     
     
    Jason Kenney. The longtime Alberta MP had been thinking about a run but announced last week he'll seek leadership of the provincial Conservatives in Alberta instead.
     
     
    Rona Ambrose. A small group of conservatives, including some MPs, had been pushing Ambrose to consider making the jump from interim leadership of the party to the full time job. It would have required a rule change at the party level and efforts to make that happen failed at the party's May convention.
     
    Not yet decided:
     
     
    Peter MacKay. The former cabinet minister from Nova Scotia now working as a lawyer in Toronto is considering a run, and with Kenney's departure is believed to be an easy front-runner if he does.
     
    Kevin O'Leary. The popular TV personality and businessman first mused about running for the leadership earlier this year. He only took out a party membership in May, ahead of the convention. Since then, his thinking has begun to shift; he told The Canadian Press last week he's now considering whether to run himself or throw his weight behind another candidate.
     
    Andrew Scheer. The former speaker of the House of Commons  is spending the summer weighing his options. One key consideration for him is his young family. The Scheers have five children and the life of the Opposition leader will demand a great deal of time away.
     
     
    Lisa Raitt. The popular Tory MP from Ontario and current finance critic musings about a bid have spurred an social media campaign called "Draft Lisa Raitt." She's also using the summer months to take stock. Family matters are weighing on her mind and some have raised concerns about her lack of facility with French.
     
    Brad Trost. The Saskatchewan Tory is one of the foremost advocates for socially conservative positions within his party. When a policy opposing same-sex marriage was dropped from the party handbook in May, he said he was going to start looking into a leadership run.
     
    Dan Lindsay. The former president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba announced in May he was forming a committee to explore a possible leadership run. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened
    TORONTO — Ontario spent more than $44 million preparing for a correctional and probation workers' strike that never happened, The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy
    CALGARY — A decision by Earls Restaurants Ltd. to eliminate tipping at a downtown Calgary restaurant and replace it with a mandatory 16 per cent "hospitality charge" is stirring controversy.

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy

    B.C. Group Says Death Midwives' Philosophy Similar To That Of Birth Midwives

    "We do not want to be in a battle with the birth midwives," said Pashta MaryMoon of the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives.

    B.C. Group Says Death Midwives' Philosophy Similar To That Of Birth Midwives

    Nearly Half Of Working-Age Canadians Not Saving For Retirement: HSBC report

    Nearly Half Of Working-Age Canadians Not Saving For Retirement: HSBC report
    The big international bank says 48 per cent of pre-retirees in the country say they have not started or are not currently saving for their life after work.

    Nearly Half Of Working-Age Canadians Not Saving For Retirement: HSBC report

    'Why Me?' Gay Musician Angered After Hearing Slur During Performance At Legion

    'Why Me?' Gay Musician Angered After Hearing Slur During Performance At Legion
    HALIFAX — A gay musician says he's angry and upset that he heard someone yell a homophobic slur at him during a recent performance in Halifax that he was then asked to cut short.  

    'Why Me?' Gay Musician Angered After Hearing Slur During Performance At Legion

    Crown Withdraws Expense Charges Against Quebec Sen. Patrick Brazeau

    Crown Withdraws Expense Charges Against Quebec Sen. Patrick Brazeau
    OTTAWA — Sen. Patrick Brazeau will no longer face trial over his Senate housing expenses.

    Crown Withdraws Expense Charges Against Quebec Sen. Patrick Brazeau