TORONTO — The turmoil continued at Ontario’s Progressive Conservative party on Sunday, with party president Rick Dykstra announcing his resignation just hours after being contacted by media about an alleged sexual assault.
Dykstra’s lawyers, Chris Murphy and John Phillips, said Monday in a brief release that he was first contacted about the allegations at 6.12 p.m. Sunday night .
“By 10.45 p.m., Maclean’s had published an online story that Mr. Dykstra categorically denies.”
The lawyers said strongly that a fair process requires “more than four hours on a Sunday evening to respond to ruinous accusations.”
In a post on his verified Twitter account Sunday evening, Dykstra announced he’s stepping down after nearly two years in the position. His resignation also followed that of Patrick Brown, who quit as party leader last week amid allegations of sexual misconduct.
“It has been a wonderful experience to watch the party’s renewal,” wrote Dykstra Sunday night. “And over the next couple of months, we will see the party coalesce around a new leader.”
According to Maclean’s, Dykstra’s resignation followed receiving an email from the magazine asking him about accusations from 2014 that he sexually assaulted a young female staffer.
The magazine says the woman filed a report with Ottawa police complaining that he sexually assaulted her after a party. The woman, in her early 20s, ultimately decided not to lay charges.
Maclean’s says that senior members of the Conservative party discussed dropping him as a candidate in the 2015 federal election because of the allegation but decided to allow him to continue to run. He lost the St. Catharines riding and became PC president.
Dykstra’s resignation came on the same day of a major shakeup that included two key staff members returning to jobs they had quit just days earlier.
Chief of Staff Alykhan Velshi and communications director Nick Bergamini were among four key party members who resigned Wednesday night, just minutes before CTV News aired graphic allegations made against Brown by two women. The allegations have not been independently verified by The Canadian Press, and Brown has said they are “categorically untrue.”
A staff memo obtained by The Canadian Press, says Velshi and Bergamini are now back in their old roles, while several other high-level positions have been eliminated in a “reorganization” following the Brown debacle. An executive director, two deputy chiefs of staff, a party adviser and a number of junior and mid-level jobs are being slashed, according to the email sent by Velshi on Sunday.
“With any change in leadership comes a need for reorganization,” Velshi wrote. “While reorganizations are always difficult, they are also sometimes necessary.”
The staffing changes come as a political race takes shape to determine Brown’s successor, who will attempt to lead the Tories to victory in June.
The Tory caucus chose Vic Fedeli as its interim leader on Friday, and caucus members had hoped the Nipissing MPP would maintain the leadership role throughout the campaign. But later Friday, the party’s executive voted to hold a leadership race and select a new leader sometime before March.
Fedeli told reporters he would be a candidate for the permanent role.
Among the other names currently circulating as potential leadership candidates are several Tory members who aren’t part of the legislative caucus.
They include Rod Phillips, a former executive at Postmedia and star candidate for the party in Ajax, as well as Caroline Mulroney and Christine Elliott, who lost to Brown in the 2015 leadership contest.
Mulroney, the daughter of former prime minister Brian Mulroney and another PC candidate, greeted the news of a leadership race positively.
“Our party is stronger when all of our members across the province have their voices heard about who will lead us into the next election,” she said in a statement on Twitter.
Toronto Mayor John Tory and Conservative MP Lisa Raitt, meanwhile, have shot down speculation about their interest in leading the provincial party.
Tory broke the news on Twitter Sunday evening, saying he’s had people approach him about seeking the PC leadership.
“I have the privilege of being mayor of a city I love, and I hope to continue to do that job,” Tory wrote.
Raitt announced earlier that she would not be running.
Ottawa-area MPP Lisa MacLeod, who hasn’t said whether she plans to run for the top job, appeared to welcome Dykstra’s resignation Sunday night.
“This is good news for taking back our PC party,” MacLeod wrote on Twitter.