Manitoba

Manitoba PCs won't pick their new leader for another year

The Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba will choose a new leader on April 26 — but not until 2025, the party announced Tuesday.

Potential candidates include MLAs Khan and Ewasko, former MLA Klein and East St. Paul Mayor Devlin

Two men holding each other's arm up with balloons in the background.
Fort Whyte MLA Obby Khan and former Kirkfield Park MLA Kevin Klein are considering a run for Manitoba PC leader. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba will choose a new leader on April 26 — but not until 2025, the party announced Tuesday.

The leadership committee, led by Winnipeg lawyer Brad Zander, said the long lead time will benefit prospective candidates and ensure the race — the first to be conducted under new rules approved in January — will be run as smoothly as possible.

"It's just to give potential candidates the chance to really get out there and engage with as many Manitobans as possible," Zander said Tuesday in an interview. "A longer period of time provides that opportunity."

So far, the potential candidates include MLA Obby Khan (Fort Whyte), former Kirkfield Park MLA Kevin Klein, East St. Paul Mayor Carla Devlin and interim party leader Wayne Ewasko.

Manitoba PCs won't pick their new leader for another year

8 months ago
Duration 2:10
The Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba will choose a new leader on April 26 — but not until 2025, the party announced Tuesday.

Zander also said the Manitoba PCs should benefit in 2025 from the leadup to the federal election the Conservative Party of Canada hopes to win that fall.

The new Manitoba PC leader will be the first to be chosen by party members since Heather Stefanson won a race to succeed former premier Brian Pallister in October 2021.

Stefanson served as premier from November 2021 until October 2023, when the PCs where defeated by Wab Kinew's New Democratic Party.

Stefanson stepped down as leader in January, when party members selected Lac du Bonnet MLA Ewasko as interim leader.

Ewasko has not ruled out running in the leadership race. There is no rule preventing the interim leader from running.

"All I can say to everybody is I'm definitely not saying yes but I'm definitely not saying no either," he said on Jan. 20.

On Tuesday, Ewasko continued to leave his options open.

"Not to be coy or anything, my job right now is to represent the PC caucus as interim leader," he said.

Klein, who lost his Kirkfield Park seat in October's election, said Tuesday he is likely running for party leader.

"The party is in a position where it needs to rebuild from the ground up. I still believe in common sense government. I still believe we can achieve a common sense government in Manitoba," Klein said in an interview.

Devlin, who has been mayor of East St. Paul, said Tuesday she is considering a run for leader but likely won't participate in a Tuxedo byelection.

"I think that Manitoba has great opportunities and we just need to have some good leadership in these roles and bring the party together and make some success happen in Manitoba," Devlin said in an interview.

Khan said Tuesday he is seriously considering a run and will decide soon.

"I think a robust leadership is something we desperately need in the conservative party and in all politics, it's always good to have a leadership race," he said.

A woman's face.
East St. Paul Mayor Carla Devlin is considering a run for PC leader. (Rural Municipality of East St. Paul)

The upcoming leadership race will present an opportunity for the party to engage in fundraising. The Manitoba PCs wound up with an $852,000 deficit at the end of the 2023 election campaign, according to campaign finances filed to Elections Manitoba.

The leadership race will also be held under new rules put in place to prevent problems that marred the last leadership selection in 2021.

Stefanson narrowly won that race over former Conservative MP Shelly Glover, who challenged the results in court on the basis of irregularities. While Justice James Edmond agreed irregularities existed, he dismissed Glover's challenge on the basis the problems did not affect the outcome.

Faces of two women.
Tuxedo MLA Heather Stefanson defeated former Conservative MP Shelly Glover in a 2021 PC leadership contest marred by irregularities. (John Woods/The Canadian Press, Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

In a 2023 review of the Stefanson-Glover contest, PC members Lawrence Toet and Grant Stefanson concluded the 2021 PC leadership selection suffered from numerous issues, including a time frame that was too short and insufficient resources to keep tabs on new members and ensure they all received ballots.

The PCs also failed to hire a third party to keep track of marked ballots, Toet and Stefanson concluded.

They also warned the former leadership-race rules left the Progressive Conservatives prone to a party takeover by a special-interest candidate who might be outside the mainstream of Manitoba politics.

A man wearing a blazer smiles while standing behind a podium.
Wayne Ewasko is interim leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

In January, the party amended its constitution to replace the traditional "one member, one vote" leadership selection system with a weighted system that caps the influence of constituencies with large numbers of party members.

According to the new rules, a constituency with 100 voting members will get 100 points in a leadership vote. One with 400 member votes will garner 200 points, and no constituency will have more than 500 points.

The race can be as short as 90 days and as long as 300, according to the new rules. Zander said his committee will decide in May when the race will formally start.

Leadership candidates must submit 200 nominations from PC members, undergo a criminal record check and make a refundable $15,000 deposit, the rules state.

Leadership candidates must also solicit $20,000 worth of donations to the party within six weeks of receiving access to the party membership list, the rules state.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bartley Kives

Senior reporter, CBC Manitoba

Bartley Kives joined CBC Manitoba in 2016. Prior to that, he spent three years at the Winnipeg Sun and 18 at the Winnipeg Free Press, writing about politics, music, food and outdoor recreation. He's the author of the Canadian bestseller A Daytripper's Guide to Manitoba: Exploring Canada's Undiscovered Province and co-author of both Stuck in the Middle: Dissenting Views of Winnipeg and Stuck In The Middle 2: Defining Views of Manitoba.

With files from Ian Froese