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Calgary

Pierre Poilievre returns to his old university club, where 22 years ago he feuded with Patrick Brown

Before they were competing for the Conservative leadership, Pierre Poilievre and Patrick Brown were young rising stars in conservative politics, distinct in their competing philosophies of what a conservative party should be. Poilievre returned to his former university conservative club on Sunday.

Conservative leadership hopeful, then 20, balked at Brown memo to purge anti-Joe Clark youth element

A smiling bespectacled politician dressed in a western shirt speaks into a microphone.
Pierre Poilievre spoke to a crowd of dozens on Sunday afternoon at an Irish pub in northwest Calgary. In his speech, as he did at a Stampede fundraiser for federal Conservatives on Saturday, Poilievre quoted Tory prime minister John Diefenbaker: "I am a Canadian, a free Canadian, free to speak without fear." He also railed against a "new religion of woke-ism" and advocated to make Canada "the freest country on Earth." (Joel Dryden/CBC)

Clad in cowboy hats and plaid, dozens of young conservatives gathered at an Irish pub in Calgary early Sunday afternoon,sipping water and draught beer while waiting for Conservative leadership hopefulPierre Poilievreto arrive.

Poilievre's political roots trace back to this clubthe University of Calgary's conservative club. And much of his points of view(and even one current feud)echo back those 22years.

"I don't think you can understand Pierre Poilievrewithout understanding his background," said Mount Royal University political scientist Duane Bratt. "Youhave to look at growing up in Calgary, going to the University of Calgary, taking political science in the time period that he did."

Poilievre, now 43, was greeted to the pubby attendees jubilantly ringing cowbells. Earlier that weekend, he had reportedly skippedadowntown Conservative leadership debate hosted byonline news and opinion websiteThe Western Standardin favour of a fundraiserhosted by Calgary entrepreneur W. Brett Wilson. On Saturday, he attended the Conservatives' 1,400-person Stampede barbecue.

And though members of the youth conservative club stressed they were not advocating for any single candidate, Poilievre's message on Sundaywas received by loud cheers,just as it was at the barbecue.

"That's somebody who'swalked through our shoes, walked thesame halls that we've gone through,"said Brody Wyatt, 21,a senior advisor with the club.

The Calgary-bornPoilievre studiedinternational relations during his time at the university.In 1999,he was one of 10finalists in an "As Prime Minister " essay contest as heargued for, much as he does today, "leaving people to cultivate their own personal prosperity and to govern their own affairs as directly as possible."

"I just hope that none of my views are offensive to the prime minister because many of them come into conflict with the outdated system he has run for the past few years," Poilievre told the Calgary Herald in 1999.

Lanny Westersund, who was vice-president of the club at the time, recalls travelling withPoilievreacross the backroads of the province tofundraise "hat in hand" with constituencies,so students could participate in political conferences.

A 20-year-old Pierre Poilievre, left, attends a Reform youth party at a Westin Hotel in January 2000. To his right stand Helen Gardner, Tara Katrusiak, future Conservative Party leader Andrew Scheer and the University of Calgary's conservative club vice-president Lanny Westersund. Yaroslav Baran, who is pictured in the brown jacket in the background, is currently a spokesperson for the Conservative Party during the leadership race. (Submitted by Wayne Cuddington/Postmedia)

The political club's office at the time was next to an area of the university called Speaker's Corner, where students and others would gather to debate.

"Pierre was always an active and insightful debater. And Pierre and I were kind of on different sides of the party," Westersund said, withPoilievre having purchased a membership in the Reform partyaround that time.

"I came up through the Tory side. So it always led to spirited debates."

'Eliminate' the anti-Clark element

At that time, Poilievre's political viewpoints were shaped in large part, Westersund said, by those in the Calgary university's political science wing including former Alberta cabinet ministerTed Morton, one of the authors of the famous"Firewall Letter,"andwriterRainer Knopff.

Knopff and Morton are two of the four members of the so-called Calgary School, a term popularized by Ralph Hedlin at the oft-controversial and now-defunct conservative Alberta Report magazine (Poilievrehimself would write a column for the magazine for a short period). The Calgary School is often cited as being influential to the philosophy behind the Reform Party of Canada.

But divides within conservative ideology led to a public split betweenPoilievreand a young Patrick Brown described as a "diehard Jean Charest supporter" in an Ottawa Citizen article from the time who was then president of the national youth Tory body.

Conservative leadership hopeful Pierre Poilievre, left, and Patrick Brown share an exchange during a debate on May 25. Before they were competing for the leadership, Poilievre and Brown were young rising stars in conservative politics. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

In a 1999 article from theCalgary Herald,Poilievre, then the president of the young Tories on the University of Calgary campus,threatenedto move the Progressive Conservative club to the Reform-inspired United Alternative.

He citeda possible purge of anti-Joe Clark young people from campus clubs. Clark was leader of the Progressive Conservative party at the time.

"The direction of the party just seems to be downward," Poilievre is quoted as saying, slamming Clark as "anti-youth."

In addition to his role as president of the national Progressive Conservative youth wing, the more centrist Brown was also executive of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. He washailed by former Conservative senator Hugh Segalin a 2015 Ottawa Citizen article as the hardest workerhe had ever seen.

"He brought a level of professionalism, determination and intensity to his work, which I thought represented exactly the kind of energy mix that the[Ontario]Progressive Conservative party frankly, any party would benefit from," Segal told the Citizen.

But in a leaked memo obtained by media at the time, Brown was noted as discussing plans to "eliminate the anti-Clark element from the youth wing, most specifically those in leadership positions."

Brown denied he had any plans to purge Poilievre, who had referred to Clark as a failed leader with a record of attacking young people, from the regional club. The U of C club would later back down from their threats, withWestersundtelling the Herald the club had no plans to fight with the federal Progressive Conservatives.

A combative style

Poilievre's dust-up with Brown was hardly his first rodeo. Some on campus found the methods ofPoilievre'sassociates to be extreme. In a Calgary Herald article from 1998, while Poilievrewas vice-president of the university's Reform club, the students' union president accused theclub of practising "legal terrorism."

The students' union had decided to suspend the club's ability to have office space in student facilities, book rooms or receive grants after receiving allegations of the club hanging banners in unauthorized spaces, placing Reform stickers in unauthorized locations and "abuse of students' union staff."

Poilievre referenced the incident as part of his speech on Sunday, claiming the "far-left" president had banned the club because "we left a window open over at the clubs room."

WATCH | In 1998, then-MP Jason Kenney arrived at the universityto show support for the Reform Club. At 0:16, a young Pierre Poilievreis pictured:

Jason Kenney backs Reform Club in fight with U of C Students Union

8 years ago
Duration 0:56
MP Jason Kenney arrives at the University of Calgary to show support for the Reform Club in its dispute with the Students Union.

At the time, the students' union president said similar administrative issues had cropped up among the other 146 student clubs on campus, but the Reformers took the complaints "far too seriously," announcing it would take the complaints to the Court of Queen's Bench to protest the decision.

"This is not the first time [the Reform club members] have held people hostage with lawsuits," president Paul Galbraith told the Calgary Herald at the time.

The Reform club's president, Ben Perrin, accused the union of acting in a biased manner and said the club was "taking a stand for freedom."

"We are not the first club that the [students' union] has bullied, but we are the first to stand up and say no,"Poilievre is quoted to have said.

Round 2

His time with the university campus conservative club in the rear-view mirror, Poilievrewould go on to found a political communications company with former Alberta justice ministerJonathan Denis before entering politics himself, working on a leadership campaign for eventual Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day.

"Love himor not, I'm the guy who people can either blame or thankfor bringing him to Ottawa," Day said in a phone call.

Stockwell Day, then Alberta's finance minister, delivers a speech to the United Alternative Convention at the Congress Centre in Ottawa in 2000. Day said the split between the Reform Party and the Progressive Conservative Party is part of what has been a constant challenge for conservatives in Canada. (Fred Chartrand/The Canadian Press)

Poilievrehas stayed in politics.He wonelection as amember of Parliament in 2004 and hasremainedin the House of Commons since. Brown would join him in Parliament two years later, although he is now the mayor of Brampton, Ont.

That initial feud may have died down, but 22years later, Poilievre and Brown considered for much of the federal Conservative leadership campaign to beits front-runners, along with Charest are embroiled in another spat that goes beyond traditional politicking.

Brown was ejected from the leadership race last week over allegations he broke financing rules. However, heclaims members of the Conservative Party establishment and supporters ofPoilievreworked to disqualify him from the race.Poilievre's campaign disputes that claim.

Poilievre's background and education set the stage for the candidate he is today, said Bratt, the political scientist at Mount Royal University,and is unlikely to change even should he secure the nomination.

"I don't think he can make a pivot, because this is who he is," Bratt said. "This is who Poilievre was when he was in Harper's cabinet, this is who Poilievre was when he was in university, this is who Poilievre is now. There will be no pivot for Pierre Poilievre."

After his speech, flanked by pool tables andWimbledon TV highlightsas Toby Keith played on the sound system,Poilievrespokewith young members of the conservative club. "Don't give up," he told them, before grabbing his cowboy hat and bidding them farewell.