Conservative Party explains why it disqualified Patrick Brown from leadership race
CBC
A Conservative committee reviewing Patrick Brown's disqualification from the leadership race has concluded the party had the evidence it needed to recommend he be removed from contention.
Its decision, released late Friday, contains new allegations that Brown used money orders to purchase memberships and allowed non-compliant membership sales through a portal.
"Mr. Brown was afforded ample opportunity to address these serious concerns," Ian Brodie, chair of the party's leadership election organizing committee, said in a statement.
The party says decisions made by its dispute resolution appeals committee are final.
The committee stunned party members and Canadians alike earlier this month when it voted 11-6 to remove Brown from the race. Brown has since launched his campaign for re-election as mayor of Brampton, Ont.
Brown hired high-profile defence lawyer Marie Henein, who filed a notice of appeal of the decision to oust him. The party then hired an outside lawyer to review that appeal request and was bracing for additional legal action.
The party said the decision to disqualify Brown was based on a recommendation from its chief returning officer. A dispute resolution appeals committee had to decide whether the officer possessed the evidence to recommend his removal.
It says evidence included allegations that Brown allowed more than 500 non-compliant membership sales.
"Correspondence on this issue from the candidate indicates both an unwillingness and an inability to provide the [chief returning officer] with information about the individuals who were accessing the portal to register memberships the [party] had found to be non-compliant," the decision says.
It said Brown left the issue unresolved for two weeks and gave "evasive responses."
In a statement on Friday, Brown's campaign called the ruling unjust and "an affront to democracy."
"Also in their ruling the party has significantly changed their story on why they disallowed Patrick Brown as a candidate, now that their first story has fallen apart," his campaign office said. "Originally the party was telling the media it was because of improper corporate donations, which have since been found to be bogus claims. Now the party is saying, in their ruling, that the reason was because they received 500 suspicious memberships ... and claim, without any evidence or supporting documentation, that the memberships were brought in by the Patrick Brown campaign."
Brown is to continue to pursue legal action, the statement said.
"This is absurd and makes clear this was a rigged race from the start to install their chosen candidate, Pierre Poilievre, as leader."