Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

What happened to the MP called Canada's Trump?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2020 08:23 PM
  • What happened to the MP called Canada's Trump?

Kellie Leitch, the former Conservative MP once accused of trying to be Canada's Donald Trump, says there is a lesson for all politicians in how well Trump did in this month's U.S. presidential election:

Learn how to clearly communicate to the people you want to reach.

It's a lesson Leitch said she learned the hard way, blaming the controversy she caused during her failed Conservative leadership bid not on her ideas, but on her failure to explain them.

In a lengthy interview with The Canadian Press, Leitch said she has no regrets about how she ran her campaign, nor about her proposal to screen immigrants for Canadian values — the policy that prompted accusations she was blatantly trying to be Trump.

"My campaign talked about certain issues, I wish they were communicated differently," she said.

"But the long (and) the short of it is, it's done."

Leitch was running for the Tory leadership at the same time as Trump was seeking the nod south of the border to be the Republican candidate for president. He would go on to win the nomination and the 2016 presidential election.

With Canadians largely opposed to some of Trump's more controversial ideas, including one for "extreme vetting of newcomers," Leitch was fiercely attacked, including by members of her own party, when she proposed screening immigrants for Canadian values

She suggested she became merely a "punching bag" for Trump's positions, and her own were simply badly communicated.

"Do I think it was fair? No. But it is what it is," Leitch said.

She declined to discuss how she arrived at running on those themes — during the race, it was pointed out by several of her caucus colleagues that she'd never spoken up on those issues while serving in cabinet. She said she isn't yet ready to get into detail about her choices.

Leitch ultimately finished sixth in the contest, won by Andrew Scheer in May 2017.

Before entering elected office in 2011, and even while an MP, she also worked as a pediatric orthopedic surgeon. After losing the leadership race, she declared her intention to return to that work and leave politics.

Trump lost his bid for re-election earlier this month but still captured 47.3 per cent of the vote. In the U.S., many tongues are wagging now about what Trump's fate might be next and also what will become of those who were most loyal to him during his often polarizing tenure.

For Leitch, the transition to private life did not go smoothly.

As parents and their children entered her clinics, she found herself dragged into discussions about her political views. In the interview, she at first said the interactions were positive, but when pressed acknowledged it was not always the case.

For parents to be concerned she had an "agenda" was not in the best interests of the children she wanted to help, Leitch said.

"It was beyond disruptive," she said.

"For me personally, it was very uncomfortable. And I can't imagine what it was like for the child."

So, after encouragement from Canadian colleagues and after canvassing available jobs elsewhere, she settled on accepting a job as chief of pediatric orthopedic surgery at the children's hospital of Mississippi and moved there last spring.

Leitch said she's put much of politics behind her, though remains a card-carrying member of the Conservative party and did vote in the recent leadership election, though she wouldn't say for whom. O'Toole, whom she ran against in 2017, won that contest.

She also wouldn't say whether — if she could — she would have cast a ballot for Trump.

Mixing "church and state" got her in trouble with her professional career in Canada and she doesn't want to repeat the problem in her work in the U.S., she said.

Mississippi has been staunchly Republican for years and remained so in the recent elections despite a massive push by Democrats to mobilize the Black vote, which represents nearly 40 per cent of the state.

State laws, however, place numerous barriers before Black voters, and are widely understood to be the reason there have only been a handful of Black politicians elected at the state level in decades.

Leitch said among her colleagues — including Black nurses, technologists and others — Trump's popularity is a reflection of a failure of politicians in previous years to speak directly to those feeling abandoned.

"Rightly or wrongly, Trump stepped forward and spoke to them and promised to help them. And they believed him, because he could communicate so clearly with them," she said.

"And I think the current president, future presidents, conservative leaders in Canada, who don't keep this in mind, being able to clearly communicate with the average person, really do it at their peril."

MORE National ARTICLES

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October
October's increase compared with a year-over-year rise of 0.5 per cent in September. The increase was almost entirely driven by rising food prices, particularly lettuce and fresh or frozen chicken, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy
Horgan says he wants to see the same travel rules for Canadians regardless of where they live in the country.

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau
Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Wednesday that Canada will impose different requirements than the U.S. before it lifts the grounding orders for the plane, including additional procedures on the flight deck and pre-flight and differences in training for flight operators.

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott
Christine Elliott said the country is set to get four million doses of the Pfizer vaccine between January and March as well as two million doses of Moderna’s vaccine.

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO
Kevin Page makes the argument in a paper publicly released Wednesday that the government should move away from spending to stimulate the economy as conditions improve following the shock of COVID-19.

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

Vancouver council set to vote on decriminalization

Vancouver council set to vote on decriminalization
Dr. Patricia Daly, chief medical health officer for Vancouver Coastal Health, says the COVID-19 pandemic has worsened the crisis, disrupting and intensifying the toxicity in the supply of illicit drugs and interrupting harm reduction and treatment services.

Vancouver council set to vote on decriminalization