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Investigate fake party memberships, Ottawa PCs urge

There are calls for Ontario's Progressive Conservative party to take a closer look at alleged membership fraud in Ottawa West-Nepean after the party's interim leader announced that a third of members across the province had been disqualified.

Sources say party officials have a meeting about the issue on Friday night

Ontario PC party interim leader Vic Fedeli has committed to "root out any rot" in the party leading up to the June election. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Some local Progressive Conservative supportersare calling on theparty to investigatefake membershipsin Ottawa West-Nepeanafter the party'sinterim leader announced that a third of PCmembers across the province had been disqualified.

Witnesses to the contentious nomination meeting in Ottawa West-Nepean last May toldCBC thatmany new members signed up to join the partythe same day they voted for a candidate.

A number of the new voting members had the same Ottawa address, only showed proof of ID onmobile phones and had Toronto area phone numbers, according to several longtime Progressive Conservative supporters.

'I've never seen anything like that'

"I've been involved in politics for a long time and I've seen a lot of funny things, but I've never seen anything like that," said Marjory LeBreton, a retired Conservative Senator who said she called months ago for the nomination meeting to be declared void.

"A lot of the people who voted without even proper ID had 905 and Toronto area codes. That was their phone number. They were just brought in. I saw it with my own eyes."

Retired Conservative senator Marjory LeBreton is concerned about the membership irregularities she witnessed at the nomination in Ottawa West-Nepean in May 2017. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

200 letters from the party returned to sender

Evidence of a problem also appeared when hundreds of letters from the party were returned to sender last spring, shortly after the nomination contest.

The Ottawa West-Nepeanriding associationsent letters to 1,466 party members on May 16, 2017, and 200 came back because of problems with the addresses.

"The most blatant and questionable entries involve one address: 25 Woodridge," said a letter to the PC party's lawyer from former riding association president Emma McLennan.

"There are 73 individuals listed as members in this building. This is an unbelievable high number ... 58 people have phone numbers with Toronto/GTA area codes."

McLennan feared the returned letters were "evidence of serious, suspicious irregularities" with the Ottawa West-Nepean membership list.

Friday meeting

Party sources tellCBCNews there is a meeting Friday evening where officials will discuss evidence of ballot stuffing and invalid memberships.

The nominations in dispute include OttawaWest-NepeanandScarborough Centre, where a chaotic 2017 nomination meeting led to official complaints to the party.

As many as six candidates are under review.

Vic Fedeli, the Progressive Conservatives' interim leader,said last week that a third of the party's members across the province have been disqualified as illegitimate.

The Tories have just over 133,000 members, Fedeli said,which is about 67,000 fewer than the numberclaimed by former leader Patrick Brown less than a month ago.

Fedeli has committed to "root out any rot" in the party leading up to the June 7thprovincial election.

Full membership audit needed, says critic

Fedeli's effort should entaila complete audit of the membership list before members choose a party leader, according to Jim Karahalios, corporate lawyer and PC supporter in Cambridge, Ont.

"PC party members have to have confidence in this membership list and have confidence in the process that's used to vote," said Karahalios, who was soangered by various nomination processes in Ontario last summer thathe started a protest group calledTake Back our PC Party.

Ontario Progressive Conservative candidates Doug Ford, left, Caroline Mulroney and Christine Elliott, right. ( Frank Gunn, Christopher Katsarov, Chris Young/Canadian Press)

The party is pulling together to deal with these issues, according to leadership contender Christine Elliot.

"To me a fair process is very important. You only sign up people who want to be members," Elliot said."I'm assuming that's how the process went for everybody, but there's questions now, obviously," said Elliot.


But not all party supporters believe there are problems with membership lists.

ConservativeMP Alex Nuttall called themove to vet the provincial party's membership lists an unnecessary tactic by "Toronto elites".

"They've doubled down, seeking to expel tens of thousands of paid memberships of the PC party of Ontario," said Nuttall.

"The elites in Toronto need to stop making decisions in their own best interest to seek power and start making decisions in the best interest of the people of Ontario."

MarjoryLeBreton doesn't buy that.

She said whilesome worry aparty clean-up will give the rival Liberals ammunition, she believes it will prove the party is open and honest.