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MPP Monte McNaughton drops out of Ontario PC leadership race

The race to become leader of Ontario's Progressive Conservative party is down to just two candidates after London-area MPP Monte McNaughton withdrew Thursday.

London-area MPP endorses Barrie MP Patrick Brown

McNaughton bows out

9 years ago
Duration 1:41
With the exit of Monte McNaughton, there are just two people running for the Ontario PC leadership.

There are now just two candidates left in the Ontario Progressive Conservative leadership race after London-areaMPP Monte McNaughton withdrew on Thursday.

The race to become lead the party is now shaping up to be a tilt between Barrie MP Patrick Brown and Deputy Leader Christine Elliott. Some see that as a contest between an outsider candidate to the Ontario PCs in Brown and the establishment candidate in Elliott.

McNaughton threw his support behind Brown, but it is Elliott, thewidow of former finance minister Jim Flaherty, who has the majority of support with sitting MPPs.

McNaughton was a distant third in membership sales andfundraising. He says Brown has "the energy and ability" to reform theTories, who lost the last four Ontario elections.

McNaughton had some support for his now-suspended PC leadership bid: former mayor Rob Ford was a proponent of the London-area MPP's campaign. (McNaughton campaign)

Brown quickly took a shot at Elliott as the favoured candidate ofthe PC establishment, saying the race is now "a choice between thesame old, same old, and a fresh start to rebuild the party."

Brown surprised everyone by selling some 41,000 PC memberships,but the Elliott campaign says their support is much broader and basedacross the entire province.

Elliott fired back at Brown, calling him untested.

"Progressive Conservatives can choose my positive, pragmatic and truly progressive conservative vision that will resonate with all Ontarians and win the next election," she says. "Or they can choose Patrick Brown, an untested candidate with nothing more to offer than a life lived as a career politician."

Elliott did not stop there, going on to say Brown has done nothing as a politician. "Worse yet, over the course of his time spent in office he has done little of significance and has no substantive record," she says.

'The blades are going to get sharpened'

Patrice Dutil, a professor in the department of politics and public administration at Ryerson University, expects that the fighting will intensify in the final weeks of the leadership race.

"The blades are going to get sharpened and they're going to be deployed accordingly," Dutil said Thursday. "This is a political race. Part of the game is to promote yourself and to promote your ideas, but part of the game is also to make sure that your adversary is as weakened as possible."

On Thursday, Premier Kathleen Wynne said that whoever the Tories pick as their next leader, "our priorities are very different from what theirs are."

PC party members will vote for their leadership choice in early May. The winner will be announced on May 9.

With files from The Canadian Press and the CBC's Lorenda Reddekopp