Conservatives would love to win more seats in Quebec — but do they need to?
CBC
An electoral breakthrough in Quebec has for decades been a goal of the modern Conservatives, who are gathering in the province's capital this weekend for the first party convention under leader Pierre Poilievre.
But with Poilievre riding high in the national polls, are gains in Quebec still a necessary part of a winning Conservative campaign?
"The fact of the matter is, if you took Quebec out of Canada ... Conservatives would win almost every single election," said Fred DeLorey, who was former CPC leader Erin O'Toole's campaign manager in 2021.
In an interview with host Catherine Cullen on CBC's The House, DeLorey said it would be difficult to form a government when Conservatives are competitive in just five or 10 ridings in Canada's second biggest province.
Since the creation of the modern Conservative party under Stephen Harper, the Tories have struggled to maintain double-digit seat numbers in Quebec. The party won 10 seats in the 2021 election, mostly in the area around Quebec City.
While he said he'd still be pushing for a breakthrough, DeLorey told host Catherine Cullen that a big gain of seats in Quebec isn't the only path to victory.
"History tells us that we don't always have to do that to win," he said. "If you go back to 2011 — the last time the Conservatives won a majority government, or an election at all — we did it without Quebec."
Pollster Christian Bourque agrees that, mathematically, the Conservatives may not need Quebec because of their dominance in Western Canada.
"And right now, for the first time since [Poilievre] became leader of the Conservatives, he's actually showing that he's in seat-gained territory in Ontario," the Leger executive said.
"The problem with Quebec is [it's] the difference between a minority Conservative government and a majority Conservative government."
Bourque noted that while the Conservatives hold a commanding national lead, they remain a distant third in Quebec.
Baie-Comeau, Que., native Brian Mulroney led the Progressive Conservatives to two huge majority wins in 1984 and 1988 that saw the party nearly sweep the province.
But after the PCs were almost wiped out in 1993 — with Jean Charest the last MP standing in Sherbrooke — the PCs and successor Conservative Party of Canada have struggled to expand beyond their Quebec City beachhead.
Dimitri Soudas, former director of communications for Stephen Harper, said the Conservatives under Harper kept their efforts targeted at the areas around the capital.