Former Quebec Prime Minister Jean Charest will officially announce his candidacy for the Conservative leadership in Calgary, more than 20 years after leaving federal politics.
“Be proud of being ambitious. Be proud of being united. Be proud of being conservative,” Share wrote in the first article. Tweet On March 10th, after joining the social media platform this month.
Share has received public support from some MPs, such as the Quebec MP Gerard Demeter When Alan RaysBoth were in a leadership position under former leader Erin O’Toole. However, more parliamentarians are now approving the leadership bid for Congressman Pierre Poirievre.
Poilievre’s campaign team points out the past of Quebec’s Liberal Prime Minister, although it is a state without a strong Conservative Party, and the Quebec Conservative Party now has one MNA in Congress.
“We need leaders who want to lead the CPC, as well as those who are interested in building a unique legacy that is characteristic of Mr. Share’s record and recycling liberal policies,” he told Poilievre’s team. Conservative Senator Leo Fusakos Said On Twitter on March 7th.
In addition to Poirievre, Chalet will be competing with Conservative Leslyn Lewis, who finished third after Erin O’Toole and Peter MacKay in the previous contest, and Ontario’s independent MPP Roman Baber. ..
Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown, a former leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in Ontario and said he is considering running for leadership, is reported to officially announce a bid this weekend.
Share has begun to promote its presence on social media. Poirievre is already widely recognized because he frequently shares videos of intense interactions with government parliamentarians.
Poilievre’s video, which announced a leadership bid on February 5, has been viewed 4.3 million times on Twitter. Share made his first Twitter post on March 10th. His Facebook page had a little over 100 followers as of the morning of March 10th.
But campaigns aren’t just about social media.
Share is often “Bete PoliticsQuebec (“Political Animal”) has excellent speaking and interpersonal skills, and Poilievre’s campaign has already honed him as a powerful voice-supporting challenger within the party.
Dealing with the reasons for his leadership bid Said The National Post, which he believes can win the Tories in the next election.
“After all, there’s a very simple and very realistic question. Who can win us? It’s also part of the equation, as party membership does. Is one of the choices sought after, “he said.
“I look at the country, we are terribly divided, we have poor performance. Our financial situation, especially the exit from COVID, is far from control. The economy is declining and the world Our position in the economy has declined and we are severely divided, “challes added.
Political career
Chalet served as a minister in Brian Mulroney’s conservative government and was a leader of the Progressive Conservative Party (PCP) from 1993 to 1998.
Progressive Conservative support declined in 1993, and Mulroney was never implemented again. After that, Kim Campbell took the initiative, but after suffering a devastating defeat in the 1993 election and reducing the party to two seats, he was unable to maintain the party’s majority position. After Campbell resigned in the same year, Share took over.
As a PCP leader, Share worked on rebuilding the party and regaining some of the lost seats. In the 1997 general election, PCP won 20 seats in the House of Commons.
After that, Chalet left federal politics, led the Liberal Party of Quebec from 1998 to 2012, and became Premier of Quebec from 2003 to 2012.
Share tried to move away from the state’s usual socialist policies and raise college tuition towards the end of his third mission in 2012. As a result, the left-wing-inspired student activism protracted and fought hiking.
The movement that took place shortly after the “Arab Spring” was called the “Printempsérable” (“Maple Spring”), and movement supporters wore red felt squares on their clothes and school bags.
Chalet passed bill 78, interrupted institutional lessons on strikes, and reduced protests, thereby curbing sometimes violent movements. He then lost on horseback, lost to Pauline Maloa’s PQ in the September 2012 state elections, canceled tuition increases, and abolished Bill 78.
Share also suffered from allegations of illegal financing in Quebec’s Liberal Party while in control, but an anti-corruption investigation that has been investigating this issue since 2014 was active on February 28. Announced that it will stop.
The evidence collected was submitted to the Public Prosecutor’s Office’s expert committee and the investigation was terminated based on the legal advice obtained. Shown Permanent anti-corruption unit (UPAC).
After leaving politics, Chalet worked at the law firm McCarthy Tetrow, where he advised China’s telecommunications Huawei in the Meng Wangzhou hand-over case. report Globe and Mail.
This previous work could be seen as inconsistent with the Conservatives’ consistent call to ban Huawei from Canada’s 5G wireless infrastructure. This is something Canada hasn’t done yet, despite similar moves by major intelligence agencies.