Tuesday, January 25, 2022

His Days Are Numbered

Erin O'Toole is a strange creature. He's a leader who doesn't act like a leader. Althia Raj writes:

Watching Erin O’Toole obfuscate with reporters Monday — on whether he supports a truck convoy protesting vaccination rules — laid bare the Conservative leader’s principal challenge. He desperately wants to avoid his predecessor’s mistakes but in doing so keeps making his own errors.

O’Toole was asked eight times, whether he stands with the so-called “freedom convoy,” the truckers making their way to Parliament to protest the mandatory vaccination of those crossing the border. (Since Jan. 15, unvaccinated Canadian drivers require pre-arrival COVID-19 testing and must quarantine upon their return. New American rules prevent them from re-entering the U.S.) Four times, O’Toole was asked if he would meet with them. He never gave a clear answer.

His response? Everyone — including truckers — should get vaccinated (but not via a mandate) and a “solution for our supply chain crisis” should be found. His proposal is a $333 to $666 break on Canada Pension Plan payments to make trips to the grocery store less painful.

He criticizes government policy. But refuses to take a clear position on anything:

I remembered former Conservative leader Andrew Scheer’s unfortunate appearance at the “United We Roll” rally, a similar convoy in 2019 that made its way to Ottawa, this one with oil and gas workers. It was billed as a pro-pipeline rally, but the group’s roots in the yellow-vest movement were apparent on the hill, where anti-immigration rhetoric was visible and Faith Goldy, a social media personality with white nationalist ties, addressed the crowd. Scheer’s office tried to defend his presence. Surely, O’Toole’s camp wanted to avoid that scenario. The new Tory leader has sought to paint a different picture of his party to mainstream Canadians and the possibility that the angry truckers may gather in ways similar to the last convoy must not be lost on him.

He knows why Andrew Scheer failed and does not want to draw comparisons with his predecessor. The result is public spinelessness:

O’Toole’s most pressing problem is his lack of clarity. When he stakes out positions, it’s not clear he’ll keep them (see: the type of Conservative he is, his defence of conscience rights, or MPs’ rights, or gun rights, or scrapping the CBC’s television service, or the carbon tax).

It’s not hard to communicate. But it is if you have no clarity on your position. O’Toole could have said he understands the truckers’ disappointment but doesn’t support their methods, of blocking roads and busy borders. He could have said he has no plans to meet with the group but would have liked the Liberals to negotiate with the U.S. a waiver for unvaccinated Canadian drivers. Or he could have said he agrees with his Alberta MP Garnett Genuis who tweeted that he stands with the truckers and called on Trudeau to end his “nonsensical vaccine vendetta.”

Being a leader is about taking positions and defending them. As O’Toole prepares to meet his caucus for the first time this year, perhaps he should ask himself why he wants to remain party leader, if he can’t bring himself to lead.

I continue to think that O'Toole's days are numbered.

Image: macleans.ca


8 comments:

Anonymous said...

O'Toole was never much of a leader. He was promoted once in his 12 years in the air force, then bounced around as a lawyer without making partner. He became Con leader after Poulievre dropped out and left him and Mackay as the only candidates with cabinet experience. Since Mackay is a red Tory, that left O'Toole as a reliable second-choice candidate for the party wingnuts backing Sloan or Lewis. Basically, he pulled a Stephane Dion, becoming leader as a second choice the party could agree on.

He fought the last election from his comms bunker, while other politicians met with and got heckled by voters. Since losing, he's spent most of his time trying to hang onto his job while avoiding taking any strong position. Like you say, his days are numbered.

Cap

Owen Gray said...

O'Toole leads a very fractious party, Cap. It's very hard to keep them happy. And they don't want to keep him.

The Disaffected Lib said...

Bernier calls him "a wet noodle." O'Toole may be the best thing that ever happened to Maxime.

Owen Gray said...

I suspect that further disillusion with O'Toole will cause many Conservatives to move further to the right, Mound.

Anonymous said...

The vultures are circling now.

"A Conservative Party riding association in southern Alberta has become the first in the country to formally petition the party’s national council for a leadership review."

Cap

jrkrideau said...

I suspect that further disillusion with O'Toole will cause many Conservatives to move further to the right

Or as an NDP friend tells me to the Greens. Sounds weird but apparently the philosophical bases are not that great.

Owen Gray said...

I noticed that story today, Cap. Its appearance was very convenient.

Owen Gray said...

I've heard that speculation, too, jrk. But the Greens really have some existential problems.