After lengthy leadership race, Manitoba PCs set to announce new leader | CBC News (2025)

Manitoba's Progressive Conservatives are slated to announce a new party leaderfollowing a six-month campaign that wasovershadowed during its home stretch by the federal election.

On Saturday afternoon at downtown Winnipeg's Radisson Hotel, the Official Opposition party isslated to reveal whether itwill be led by Fort Whyte MLA Obby Khan or Wally Daudrich, who owns a hotel and ecotourism company in Churchill.

This race will determine the full-time successor to former Manitoba premier Heather Stefanson, who stepped down as party leader months after her PCs lost the 2023 provincial election to Wab Kinew's NDP.

Following her departure, the party appointed Lac du Bonnet MLA Wayne Ewasko as interim leader and decided on a lengthy contest to select a new permanent one.

The party gave prospective contestants six months to sign up for the race and another six months to campaign, partly to avoid a repeat of the party's 2021 leadership contest between Stefanson and former Conservative MP Shelly Glover.

Plagued by voting irregularities, that race led to acourt challenge from Glover, who has since vowed to form an alternativeparty to the Manitoba PCs.

After lengthy leadership race, Manitoba PCs set to announce new leader | CBC News (1)

Christopher Adams, an adjunct professor of political studies at the University of Manitoba, says the length of the PC leadership campaign may not have benefited the party, despite the good intentions behind it.

The federal election likely sucked up most of the political oxygen in this province, he said.

"Ithinkpeople sort of forgot that there is a race going on," Adams said in aninterview this week."I think people werelulled by the very long leadership campaign."

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Adams said Ewasko"did a fairly decent job" as interim leader, but it was a tough ask of him to serve 15 months in that role.

"The Opposition is supposed to be challenging the government, andit's a little bit more difficult to do that with an interim leader," he said.

Challenges for new leader

The selection of a new leader will not immediately solve every woe for thePCs, who currently occupy 20 seats in the 57-seat Manitoba Legislature.

As leader, Khan or Daudrich willcontend with an NDP government led by Kinew, who remains one of the most popular premiers in Canada, according to recent polling.

The new Opposition leader will have approximately two years to prepare for the next provincial election, assuming Kinewchooses to trigger it after the standard, but not compulsory, four years in office.

After lengthy leadership race, Manitoba PCs set to announce new leader | CBC News (2)

Khan said he is better prepared to lead the PCs in the next election by virtue of the fact he already has a seat in the legislature and is one of only two sitting PC MLAs in Winnipeg (along with Roblin'sKathleen Cook).

"For us to get back in government, we have to win seats in the city of Winnipeg. I think that gives me a huge upside," Khan said in March during an interview at the CabotoCentre in Winnipeg.

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Daudrich, who plans to run in the forthcomingSpruce Woodsbyelection, argueshe is better positioned to improve the fortunes of the PCs, sayingheespouses more conservative views than Khan. Daudrich said newcomers to Canada, who are driving population growth,tend to be more conservative than other Canadians.

"I would argue that actually being more conservative is going to attract more voters to our party," Daudrich said in an interview in March at his home in the rural municipalityof Stanley, outside Morden.

After lengthy leadership race, Manitoba PCs set to announce new leader | CBC News (3)

Early on in the campaign, Daudrich advocated for removing the word "progressive" from the party name but now says that is something he believes will happen on its own.

"I think it's actually a movement inside the party that is tired of using the term 'progressive' as if it's an apology for being conservative," he said.

"If you look back at the history, how the term progressive got inserted,it's not a big deal. Wecan remove that word. We're still the same party. We are still a centre-right party — not extremist, but a centre-right party."

Khan has been endorsed by 10 out of 20 PC MLAs, including Kelvin Goertzen, the MLA for Steinbach, whoserved as interim leader and premier before Stefanson.

Daudrichdid not receive any endorsements butinsists he has support among the PC caucus.

"I believe that I will have significant support once I win this," Daudrich said.

Khan would not commit to supporting Daudrich if the hotelier is named leader.

"It really depends on the policy direction thatmy opponent wants to take the party, and from there, we'll make a decision and see how we go forward," Khan said.

Controversy during campaign

Despite the longleadership campaign, the two candidates have not deluged party members with many policy positions.

Khan has promised topursue more public-private partnerships within the health-care system and provide municipalities with an undisclosed portion of provincial sales tax revenue.

Daudrich has promised to fast-track the development of Manitoba mines and build a second port on Hudson Bay, claiming European customers would foot the bill for the proposed megaproject.

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  • Manitoba PC leadership hopeful Daudrich says there's porn in school libraries. Opponent Khan says that's false

Both candidates have also courted controversy during the campaign. Daudrich described unnamed members of the PC caucus as lazy, claimed Manitoba schools are promoting incest and bestialityandjoked at a campaign event about using polar bears to reduce the ranks of homeless people in Winnipeg.

Khan, meanwhile, declined to support an Ewasko apology on behalf of the party for the Stefanson government's refusal to search the Prairie Green landfill for the remains of missing Indigenous women.

While Khan said the former PCgovernment displayed a lack of empathy and compassion in the way it communicated that decision, he refused to call it a mistake, saying itwas based on information the former government possessed atthe time.

  • Manitoba Tory leadership candidate jokes about letting polar bears loose to combat homelessness
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The PCs are expected to announce the winner of the contest at 5 p.m.

Approximately11,200 party members were eligible to vote and a majority of them did: the party received somewhere in the vicinity of 7,000 completed ballots, said Brad Zander, chair of the party's leadership selection committee.

In the 2021 leadership race, 16,807 party members completed ballots.

"It's more common for ruling parties to draw larger membership numbers," said Adams, the political studies professor. "Parties that have been defeated and are on the outside have more trouble garnering support."

After lengthy leadership race, Manitoba PCs set to announce new leader | CBC News (2025)

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