Incumbent Liberals won’t have to fight for right to carry party banner in 2019
OTTAWA — Liberal MPs won’t have to fight for the right to carry the ruling party’s banner in the next election — provided their riding war chest is at least half full and they’ve made concerted efforts to keep in contact with voters.
Under new rules unveiled at a Liberal caucus meeting Sunday, incumbents who meet those and several other conditions by Oct. 1 will be acclaimed as candidates for the 2019 election, without the bother of having to win open nomination contests.
The new rules represent an about-face for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who ended the Liberal party’s 20-year-old practice of protecting incumbents from nomination challenges when he took the helm in 2013.
At the time, the Liberals had been reduced to third-party status with fewer than 35 seats in the House of Commons. Trudeau argued that forcing open nominations across the board, including for incumbent MPs, would help develop the ground organization the party needed to claw its way out of the political wilderness.


