Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Five things about Conservative leadership

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2020 08:43 PM
  • Five things about Conservative leadership

The federal Conservative party will announce the winner of its leadership contest on Aug. 23.

Nearly 269,500 people are eligible to vote for the new leader, which is roughly 10,000 more than the last time the party held a leadership vote in 2017.

Here are five things to know about how the winner will be elected.

Candidates

There are four names on the ballot: Leslyn Lewis, Erin O'Toole, Peter MacKay and Derek Sloan. To qualify as candidates, they had to raise $300,000 and get signatures from 3,000 people.

Mail-in ballots

The party has always used a mail-in ballot. The requirement is in its constitution. In the 2017 vote, about 90 per cent of ballots were submitted this way, and the remainder were cast in person at a convention. This time, it will be 100 per cent by mail, due to physical distancing requirements in place for COVID-19.

How votes are counted

While each member has one vote, the winner isn't chosen based on those totals. Instead, each of the 338 federal ridings in Canada are allocated 100 points. How many points each candidate gets is determined by what percentage of the vote they get in a given riding. To win, a candidate will need 16,901 points.

Ranked ballots

It's a ranked ballot. Party members can choose up to four people they'd like to see as leader, ranking them in order of preference from first to last. But even if they only choose one, that ballot will still be counted.

Rounds

Second choices matter. Ranked ballots are counted in rounds. If in the first round no candidate gets the majority, the person with the lowest number of points is removed from the ballot. Those who voted for that person will now have their ballots counted again, with their second choice now being noted. The process continues until a winner is selected.

MORE National ARTICLES

Witnesses support U.S. claims on Meng: documents

Witnesses support U.S. claims on Meng: documents
Documents from lawyers for Canada's attorney general say a series of witnesses will prove Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou lied to HSBC bank about the company's relationship's with Skycom in Iran.

Witnesses support U.S. claims on Meng: documents

DARPAN 10 with Dr Bonnie Henry - BC's Top Doctor

DARPAN 10 with Dr Bonnie Henry - BC's Top Doctor
Many British Columbians have become severely ill and many others have lost their loved ones to COVID-19. This is a tragedy for all of us, and my colleagues and I feel this loss.

DARPAN 10 with Dr Bonnie Henry - BC's Top Doctor

COVID roadmap helps universities prepare for fall

COVID roadmap helps universities prepare for fall
New COVID-19 guidelines for post-secondary institutions, ranging from transportation to support for international students, have been released as colleges and universities gear up for the start of classes in the fall.

COVID roadmap helps universities prepare for fall

B.C. applauds extension of COVID-19 rent relief

B.C. applauds extension of COVID-19 rent relief
British Columbia's finance minister says the province welcomes a federal government decision to extend help to businesses struggling with rent payments during the COVID-19 pandemic.

B.C. applauds extension of COVID-19 rent relief

BC Hydro says pandemic delays Site C project

BC Hydro says pandemic delays Site C project
British Columbia's massive Site C hydroelectric dam project has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic and now faces construction delays and rising costs.

BC Hydro says pandemic delays Site C project

Overdose prevention worker murdered in Vancouver

Overdose prevention worker murdered in Vancouver
A worker at an overdose prevention site in Vancouver's West End has been identified as the city's ninth homicide victim of 2020 and police are appealing for witnesses as they track his killer.

Overdose prevention worker murdered in Vancouver