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MacKay says he supports Scheer, hours after chiding Conservative campaign

Former Tory cabinet minister Peter MacKay said he stands by Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, just hours after making blistering comments about the party’s showing in last week’s election.

While on stage at the Canada Institute in Washington on Wednesday, MacKay was asked for his thoughts on how the Conservatives failed to defeat Justin Trudeau’s Liberals after the prime minister’s public missteps and despite palpable divides across the country on issues like the carbon tax.

“Yeah, to use a good Canadian analogy, it was like having a breakaway on an open net and missing the net,” MacKay told the crowd.

He also pointed to the Liberal team’s efforts to make the campaign about social issues by raising Scheer’s beliefs on abortion and same-sex marriage.

“[It] hung around Andrew Scheer’s neck like a stinking albatross, quite frankly. And he wasn’t able to deftly deal with those issues when the opportunities arose,” MacKay said.

In the wee hours of Thursday morning, MacKay clarified he was talking about the party’s shortcomings.

“I’ve repeatedly said I support Andrew Scheer and I worked very hard to help in the campaign,” he wrote.

“Reports of me organizing are false. Recent comments are about our party’s shortcomings and making the necessary improvements with modern policies and better coms so we can win the next election.”

However, multiple sources have told CBC News that, behind the scenes, people around MacKay have formed a team that is building infrastructure — including organization and fundraising — for a possible leadership bid if Scheer quits or is pushed out.

Sources say that MacKay will only consider running if Scheer is no longer in the picture.

Leadership questions

MacKay’s hockey comments are already whipping up division within the party.

“Big words for someone who didn’t even suit up and get on the ice,” quipped Grande Prairie-Mackenzie MP Chris Warkentin on Twitter on Wednesday.

To which former Conservative MP Alex Nuttal responded, “Have some respect for the man who gave up his leadership to unite the right so people like you could get elected.”

Scheer will face the full batch of newly elected and re-elected MPs next week, and has already been meeting with senior members of his caucus to discuss the path forward heading into Parliament.

The Conservatives will hold a convention and leadership review in April. However, the Reform Act, introduced by Conservative MP Michael Chong and passed into law back in 2015, gives MPs the power to trigger a leadership review, and to subsequently vote to oust their leader at caucus meeting.

MacKay ran to lead the Progressive Conservatives in 2003 and won.

In December that same year, he merged the PC party with Stephen Harper’s Canadian Alliance. The new party was named the Conservative Party of Canada, and Harper eventually became leader.

CBC

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CBC

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