Here are some strange things new Conservative leader Andrew Scheer deleted from his website
Want to learn more about the new leader of the Conservative Party of Canada? Good luck.
Want to learn more about the new leader of the Conservative Party of Canada?
Good luck – if you try a simple Google search, it looks like you may have some trouble getting a straight story about Andrew Scheer.
All is well over on Andrew Scheer’s Wikipedia page. pic.twitter.com/7DbbVKA4Gh— Mack Lamoureux (@MackLamoureux) May 29, 2017
Before the final results of the Conservative leadership vote were even announced last weekend, Scheer’s campaign quietly deleted the contents of andrewscheer.com, replacing the entire website with a smiling photo and the words “thank you.”
Another thing that vanished: every single policy Scheer said he’d advocate if he won the Conservative leadership.
Looks like Scheer’s policy page is gone! https://t.co/828gOg47E4Drat…. pic.twitter.com/ZhTEEYf1KI— Kevin Milligan (@kevinmilligan) May 27, 2017
What’s Scheer got to hide?
Well, the new leader is eager to present himself as moderate and middle-of-the-road – not “extreme,” as Scheer puts it.
Yet within minutes of winning the leadership, Canada’s Religious Right was declaring victory and taking credit for getting-out-the-vote and helping Scheer win.
Why would Canada’s biggest anti-abortion groups and other social conservative groups throw their support behind Scheer?
Just take a look at a few of the disturbing things that were deleted from Scheer’s website:
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