Liberals To Spend Summer Rebuilding

Bob Rae

First Posted: 07/06/11 09:18 AM ET Updated: 09/05/11 06:12 AM ET

CBC — Liberals are working hard this summer to rebuild the party, which is already thriving in the wake of a disastrous May 2 election result, interim Leader Bob Rae says.

"The party is alive and well and we have work to do," Rae said at a news conference Tuesday in Ottawa. "But we have, I think, shown a great capacity to do that work and we're looking forward to it."

The Toronto MP replaced Michael Ignatieff as leader following his resignation the day after the election left the Liberals with just 34 seats in the House of Commons. Rae was chosen to head the party until a leadership convention is held in 2013.

With no threat of an election hanging over them now that the Conservatives have a majority government, the Liberals say they want to take their time to choose a permanent leader and repair the damaged party.

"We as a party have an opportunity to do some renovation, which needs to be done and that's exactly what the party has asked me to do and what I think the public expects," Rae told reporters. "I don't expect people to be sitting on the edge of their seats but I just want everyone to know that we're moving forward."

Among the rebuilding efforts by the Liberals is a new website designed to engage people at the grassroots level that the party says will allow party members to connect, organize and help recruit new members and donors.

The party held a fundraising drive last month to back the new website and surpassed the $100,000 target, raising more than $150,000 in just four days, according to Rae. He said the success shows there is a lot of life in the party.

In a letter to Liberals on June 23, Rae said the party needs to rebuild to attract new people, and the use of digital media will be key.

But Rae says he'll hit the road so he can connect with Canadians offline and in person as well. He plans to visit every province and northern Canada. Last summer, Ignatieff attended hundreds of public events during a cross-Canada bus tour and continued the road trip theme right up until the spring election.

Rae said it's part of the job for leaders to travel the country during the summer and that he will stress during his travels that Liberals understand "the nature of the defeat and the hit that we took in the last election." He'll be listening but also talking, telling Canadians the party is still "alive and well" and where it stands on important issues such as health care, said Rae.

Liberal MPs will also be holding news conferences throughout the summer, he said.

The interim leader showed confidence when talking about the future of his party, mentioning that fundraising and membership numbers are on their way up and that the party is in good financial shape. Rae also said being in third place in the House of Commons will not stop the Liberals from making a comeback.

Both victories and defeats in politics are temporary, he said, and being in third place doesn't mean you're far from power, he said.

"Change will come and it will come again and that's the nature of the political cycle, that's the nature of the political process," he said.

"Anybody who tells me the Liberal party can't win the next election is just whistling in the wind. Of course we can. Absolutely we can. Will we? I don't know. But can we? Absolutely," he said.

The next election is years away, however, and Rae will not be leading the Liberals next time voters go to the polls. A new leader will be chosen sometime between March and June of 2013.

Part of the rebuilding process involves working towards a policy convention that will be held in January 2012, Rae said. He named health care and the Conservatives' law-and-order agenda as examples of policy areas the Liberals will be talking more about.

"I think we have to much more successfully identify the issues and identify the approaches that people can connect to and people can relate to. I think those issues will become clearer as we go forward," he said.

Rae said the Conservatives' tough-on-crime approach is taking Canada down the wrong path and is "completely out to lunch."

The Conservatives' plan to package a number of crime-related pieces of legislation into one bill that will be front and centre in the fall session of Parliament.

Before Parliament resumes, Liberals will regroup in Ottawa at the end of the summer for a caucus meeting. Rae acknowledged the party has some internal issues to work on in addition to engaging Canadians and drawing them back to the Liberal party.

He said he doesn't feel a sense of division in the party caused by the May 2 election results but that there are still "some lingering questions" about what went wrong.

The interim leader said it's important to listen to complaints and concerns but that Liberals must look forward and figure out how to build a stronger party.

Rae added that he doesn't shy away from debates within the party, and that differences of opinion are healthy.

"As long as we all realize that at the end of the day we've got to come together as a disciplined, organized fighting force which is what a political party has to learn how to be," he said. "We're not just a debating society. At some point we have to recognize that we're in a tough fight with two other parties and we have to show real discipline and capacity to deal with that," said Rae.

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CBC — Liberals are working hard this summer to rebuild the party, which is already thriving in the wake of a disastrous May 2 election result, interim Leader Bob Rae says. "The party is alive and...
CBC — Liberals are working hard this summer to rebuild the party, which is already thriving in the wake of a disastrous May 2 election result, interim Leader Bob Rae says. "The party is alive and...
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10:57 PM on 07/07/2011
I'd like to see the Liberal Party embrace some concepts of liberalism. They haven't appeared to have been doing that for quite some time. Conservative Lite isn't liberalism. Canadians went to the party that was actually offering it -- the NDP.
photo
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
10:56 AM on 07/07/2011
That's what dreams are made of.
01:43 PM on 07/06/2011
What if the Liberal Party tried something extremely radical in modern day politics......what if they made a plan to create a party that could actually effect positive change in our government. What if they actively recruited candidates for MP that had real and valuable experience in management of people and projects (like large IT projects that are continually costing tax payers wasted money). What if they recruited experts in climate change, industrial development, international relations and economics. What if they actually tried to form a team of individuals with qualifications to run our huge public administration more effectively. Our Cabinet Ministers are required to manage a portfolio of administration and yet we do not require that they have any particular skills for that job (unless perhaps they are tapped as Finance Minister....they usually try to find a guy who can balance his cheque book). Is it too much to ask that individuals who stand for the job of MP have more to recommend them than an attractive family and an ability to spout the party line.

In terms of party platforms....how about this for something attention grabbing. The Liberals should propose that if they win they will organize an overhaul of government nation wide.....looking at tasks done federally, provincially and municipally and to look for ways to streamline service delivery and eliminate reduncacy. The money saved could be used for forward thinking and job creating economic development and intrastructure projects.
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Awake-and-Sing
named after a great play written by Clifford Odets
12:54 PM on 07/06/2011
Here's a different idea.

How about merging the NDP and Liberals into a center-left Progressive Party so that the center-left isn't split leaving the Conservatives in power for a generation with a minority of the vote?

Just a thought.
08:40 AM on 07/06/2011
Bob Ray, former NDP and the premier who many people say ruined Ontario.
Jack Layton ... NDP who buried the liberal Party.
Now how does it make sense to try and rebuild the Liberal Party by putting in a former NDP person??
Michael Ignatieff was a poor choice. I thought after he was gone a good replacement would be found.
But no.
Please do not even consider Paul Martin. His role as Prime minister was to think it was cool to sit and talk with Bono.
Yes, Bono. A celebrity that sat and criticized Paul Martin for not giving enough money to foreign aid.
And Paul Martin just sat there listening. Bono ... not Canadian ... just a celebrity. Bad news.
Was Paul Martin thinking this was a way to connect with the young people of Canada ??
Please don't even consider the fossils John Turner or John Chrétien.
A major topic during the last election ... 2011 ... was how to get the young voters of Canada involved in Canadian politics.
Justin Trudeau would be a fine choice for the federal Liberal Party leadership.
I feel he is your best bet to win the young vote, and to over take the NDP ... become official opposition ... then the next step would be Prime Minister.
I thought his policy on education "If you get the grades, you get to go" ... University policy.
The last great Prime Minister that Canada had was Lester Pearson. Lets get there again.
12:27 PM on 07/06/2011
Justin Trudeau hasn't shown anything to qualify him as a leader. Just having that last name and being "young" is not qualification for anything. I'm not saying he wouldn't make a good leader either, just observing he's done nothing to date to imply he would.