Annual conservative get together comes as movement seeks to recoup momentum
OTTAWA — Canadian conservatives began their annual gathering Thursday in Ottawa, still smarting from the one-two punch of misconduct and mismanagement allegations echoing through the halls of power in Halifax, Toronto and on Parliament Hill.
When the organizers of the 10th Manning Networking Conference chose “a new generation of ideas and leadership” as their theme, it was a nod to years of churn inside the movement: a nail-biter finale to the federal leadership race, a finally-united right in Alberta with its own new leader and the anticipation of new bosses in Saskatchewan and B.C.
But then came #MeToo.
In just the last two weeks, sexual misconduct allegations forced the resignation of Ontario leader Patrick Brown and party president Rick Dykstra, tossing that party into a leadership race and organizational chaos just months before a potentially transformative election.


