Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jean Charest Says He's Not Interested In Seeking Conservative Leadership

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:05 PM
    SHERBROOKE, , Que. — Former Progressive Conservative leader Jean Charest is ruling himself out of the race to succeed Stephen Harper as head of the Tories.
     
    Charest, 57, told Radio-Canada he is happy with his new life and his job as a lawyer at McCarthy Tetrault.
     
    "I will not be a candidate to succeed Mr. Harper," the ex-Quebec premier said in an email sent from Paris, where he is on business before heading to Asia.
     
    Charest was elected to the Commons in 1984 under Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservatives before becoming leader in 1993 after he and Elsie Wayne were the party's only elected members in that year's vote.
     
    He jumped to Quebec politics in 1998 as leader of the Liberal party before being elected premier in 2003.
     
    Charest held the post for nine years and quit public life in 2012 after the Parti Quebecois defeated the Liberals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling
    Saskatchewan has fixed a law that the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional because it prevented some public-sector employees from striking.

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime
    Sgt. Brian Wentzell of Halifax testified today that he arrived in Saint John, N.B., on July 11 and began to examine the scene.

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship
     An Ottawa man jailed for his part in a terrorist conspiracy says a federal move to strip him of Canadian citizenship violates several constitutional guarantees, including his right to vote.

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report
    An outside review of the tribunal Canadians turn to when denied social security benefits appears to have been short-staffed from its inception, leading to a backlog of new cases and stressed-out, error-prone employees.

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report

    1 Dead, As Many As 10 Hurt, In Hammer Attack At B.C. First Nation Office Near Lillooet

    1 Dead, As Many As 10 Hurt, In Hammer Attack At B.C. First Nation Office Near Lillooet
    RCMP members arrested the male but were unable to transport him as he became unconscious and unresponsive

    1 Dead, As Many As 10 Hurt, In Hammer Attack At B.C. First Nation Office Near Lillooet

    Bell Pledges To Guard Against Reviews Of Its Apps By Employees; Agrees To $1.25 Million Penalty

    Bell Pledges To Guard Against Reviews Of Its Apps By Employees; Agrees To $1.25 Million Penalty
     Bell Canada has reached a deal with the federal Competition Bureau involving the anonymous posting of favourable reviews of company apps by Bell employees.

    Bell Pledges To Guard Against Reviews Of Its Apps By Employees; Agrees To $1.25 Million Penalty