Andrew Scheer warns of ‘forces of political correctness’ in keynote speech
HALIFAX — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer set his sights squarely on Justin Trudeau during his keynote speech to party faithful in Halifax on Friday, saying he will not allow “political correctness” to divide Canadians or sanitize history.
Scheer took to the podium to rally the roughly 3,000 members attending the Conservative convention in the Nova Scotia capital, and to demonstrate that his political rival is the prime minister — not Maxime Bernier.
He made no direct mention of the now-former Conservative MP, who announced his departure from the party Thursday with a bitter stream of anti-Tory invective.
Scheer did, however, make a thinly veiled reference to the controversy when he thanked former Tory leader Peter MacKay, who is widely credited with helping to foster the merger between right-wing factions that spawned the current-day Conservative party in 2003.


