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Erin O'Toole's campaign hits the rocks before it even sets sail

#1 of 163 articles from the Special Report: Election 2021
Conservative Party of Canada leader Erin O'Toole talks to residents in his hometown Bowmanville. Photo submitted by: Erin O'Toole

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Campaigns matter. For a federal conservative party that has consistently polled at or below 30 per cent for months now, and practically begged the Prime Minister not to call an election, this is all they have to cling to now. In 2015, after all, Justin Trudeau’s Liberals entered the election in third place, and came out of it with a convincing majority government. As longtime conservative insider and former Harper adviser Ken Boessenkool tweeted earlier this week, “Campaigns matter. And O’Toole has some of the smartest campaign folks I know.”

In fairness to Boessenkool, the campaign hadn’t technically started when he said that. But the runup to it has been an unmitigated disaster for O’Toole, and raises some questions about just how smart his campaign folks really are.

On Friday, the party’s official Twitter account released a video that clumsily cast Justin Trudeau in the role of Veruca Salt from 1971’s Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, a reference that isn’t exactly going to pop with anyone under the age of 50 or so. The video was so ham-fisted it drew the ire of a number of conservatives, including at least three sitting MPs and former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall. “Please tell me — @CPC_HQ that someone hacked your account and this is not an actual ad for your party,” he tweeted.

It gets worse for the Conservatives, though, because while that ad will get mocked mercilessly on Twitter, O’Toole’s comments about mandatory vaccinations will almost certainly get replayed in radio and television spots across the country. In response to the announcement that federal public servants will have to be vaccinated, along with those working for crown corporations and other federally regulated businesses, O’Toole said "Conservatives support Canadians' right to determine their own health choices."

This is a curious contradiction for someone who says he is pro-choice but has openly courted pro-life supporters in the past, and who won the leadership thanks in large part to Derek Sloan, an avowed anti-choice politician. It’s also a puzzling political choice, given that polls have shown nearly eight in ten Canadians support the idea of mandatory vaccinations. But it’s clear that the Liberal announcement was something of a trap, and it was even clearer O’Toole was going to step in it.

#Conservatives tolerance for anti-vaxxers has handed Justin Trudeau and the #Liberals a perfect campaign platform. @MaxFawcett writes for @NatObserver #election2021 #vaccinepassports

Even before the new federal requirements were announced, a member of O’Toole’s own caucus blew up his position by suggesting mandatory vaccinations were “another example of the Liberals using severe government overreach for political gain.” On Tuesday, Fort McMurray MP David Yurdiga described the idea as “tyrannical”, and said "Canadians deserve the right to liberty, whether they choose to be vaccinated or not. Mandating the vaccine as a requirement to work would be the beginning of a slippery slope.” O’Toole’s response wasn’t to kick him out of caucus or disavow his position. Instead, O’Toole noted that he and his wife had taken the “unusual step” of videotaping their own vaccinations. Yurdiga then announced this weekend he is not seeking reelection due to undisclosed health issues.

And while the Liberals and NDP are requiring their candidates to be vaccinated, O’Toole’s Conservatives are taking a slightly different position. “While the Conservatives are not requiring that their candidates be vaccinated,” the CBC’s Ashley Burke reported, “they are making it mandatory for all staff and media travelling with O'Toole to be fully vaccinated.”

In an election that seems to be purely about partisan advantage for the Liberal government, O’Toole may have just handed them a gift. As Abacus research co-founder and pollster Bruce Anderson noted on Twitter, “Conservatives excoriated Liberals over a lack of vaccines a few months ago, and today - with a Delta wave rising - oppose mandating vaccination. They say there's no need for an election, and then today they provided a reason to have one.”

There is still time for the Conservative Party of Canada to turn things around, just as there was probably time for the Titanic to avoid the iceberg. But when people tell you who they are, you should believe them. What Erin O’Toole’s Conservatives are telling Canadians here is pretty clear: they put the rights of unvaccinated people, many of whom are animated by conspiracy theories and a general indifference to the welfare of others, ahead of public safety. Don’t be surprised if the Liberals spend the rest of this campaign reminding Canadians about that. Campaigns, after all, do matter.

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