Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Stephen Harper Hails Conservatives' Achievements, Says Best Is Yet To Come

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2016 11:55 AM
    VANCOUVER — Raucous cheers greeted former prime minister Stephen Harper for likely the last time in his political life Thursday as he took the stage in front of thousands of Conservative party loyalists to celebrate the legacy of his nine years in power.
     
    The party remains strong and united even in the face of last fall's election defeat, Harper said in his first public remarks since stepping down on election night.
     
    "We have a proud record, but the past is no place to linger," Harper said.
     
    "Now is the time to look forward. Our party's journey is only beginning."
     
    Close to 3,000 people are registered to attend the party's policy convention in Vancouver this weekend to update the party's policies and its constitution.
     
    Harper was the headliner of an opening ceremony that featured Chinese lion dancers, a traditional First Nations welcome and jokes aplenty from presenters about the governing Trudeau Liberals, including repeated references to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's elbowing of an opposition NDP MP last week.
     
    But Harper himself made no direct reference to his political opponent, choosing to focus on thanking his family, his staff, party loyalists and parliamentarians and his legacy.
     
    Harper said he was personally proud of the party's success in Quebec in the last election, with a record number of Tories elected.
     
     
    "Our party now has a solid base in the heart of the great Quebecois nation," he said in a nod to the party's gains specifically in Quebec City, where they won eight of ten seats in the area.
     
    The party says there are more delegates from Quebec registered for this convention than similar events in year's past and there's already one leadership contender from that province as well, former Tory cabinet minister Maxime Bernier.
     
    Harper said the party must be prepared to unite around whomever is chosen as the next leader.
     
    "In 2019, perhaps more than we understand even now, our country will need a strong, united Conservative party ready to govern," he said.
     
    "A party driven by hope, by hard work and by higher purpose that Canada can be and must always be the best country in the world."
     
    In the aftermath of the federal election, many Conservatives groused that the party had failed to communicate any sense of hope its platform or campaign, choosing too often to take a negative tact.
     
    What other mistakes may have been made will emerge Friday during a session reviewing the election.
     
    The party's grassroots are hoping to ease other wounds by amending several elements of the constitution that some argue will render the party more transparent and take away some of the power that had been amassed by Harper and the national executive over the last decade.  
     
     
    In his remarks Harper did not address what's in store for him next, saying only that he is enjoying not being centre stage any more.
     
    But his speech Thursday night could be his last as an MP, as he's expected to step down over the summer and pursue other interests, including foreign policy.
     
    The Tories will select a new leader in 2017.
     
    In addition to Bernier, Kellie Leitch and Michael Chong are the other two people formally registered to run and all are already working the delegates at the convention, alongside others considering throwing their hats in the ring.
     
    Former cabinet minister Peter MacKay is in attendance, and TV personality and businessman Kevin O'Leary is expected in the crowd as well.
     
    CONSERVATIVE PARTY SPENT $42 MILLION ON FEDERAL ELECTION, HAVE NO DEBT
     
    VANCOUVER — The Conservative party spent $42 million during last year's election campaign that saw them reduced to Opposition status in the House of Commons.
     
     
    That's $12 million less than the $54 million cap allowed by Elections Canada.
     
    But Conservative Fund chairman Irving Gerstein says he's heard no suggestions the party lost because it didn't spent enough.
     
    Gerstein is telling delegates to the party convention that the party took out a $28 million loan to cover part of the campaign spending, but that money has been repaid.
     
    He says so far in 2016, the party has raised $5.7 million — a record first quarter amount for the party in a non-election year.
     
    The Liberals have previously said they spent about $40 million on the election.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Celebrated mediator Ready to receive honorary degree from KPU

    Celebrated mediator Ready to receive honorary degree from KPU
    It’s this lifelong dedication to bringing peaceful resolutions to the most difficult of issues across the country that has earned him an honorary degree from Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU). The award will be presented June 1.

    Celebrated mediator Ready to receive honorary degree from KPU

    Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail

    Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail
    Police watchdog has determined charges could be laid against RCMP officers after a woman's jaw was broken in a Langford jail.

    Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail

    Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo

    Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo
    TORONTO — The hunt continues for two large rodents — dubbed by staff as Bonnie and Clyde — that escaped a Toronto zoo.

    Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo

    Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway

    Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway
    A Nova Scotia car collector says his landlord asked him to remove his graveyard-painted hearse from his driveway after complaints from other residents of his largely elderly neighbourhood.

    Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway

    Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats

    Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats
    BURNABY, B.C. — Eight dogs and two cats have died in a blaze at a dog trainer's home in Burnaby, B.C.

    Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats

    War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD

    War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD
    British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Robert Sewell said in his written decision that Olivier Yewa Shongu led a difficult life before he came to Canada as a refugee in 2005.

    War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD