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After Monday’s vote, the federal Conservative caucus will be 95 per cent white

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Only seven┬аof the Conservative candidates leading or elected in 119 ridings across the country are Black, Indigenous or a person of colour (BIPOC) тАФ a share of the total┬аthat’s even lower now that it was before the election┬аbecause some Conservative┬аincumbents lost their seats.

A CBC News analysis of the preliminary results shows┬аthe vast majority of the MPs making up the┬аnew Conservative caucus┬атАФ nearly 95 per cent тАФ are white, even as┬аthe country’s racial makeup is diversifying. Before┬аthis election, nine┬аper cent┬аof Tory MPs were BIPOC.

The Conservatives retained seats in rural areas and picked up some support in Atlantic Canada тАФ parts of the country that are, generally speaking, whiter than others. But the party struggled in Canada’s urban and suburban areas, regions where racial demographics have changed dramatically over the last 40 years due to waves of non-white immigration.

The Tory caucus will be┬аless diverse than the class of 2019 because at least five Conservative MPs тАФ Kenny Chiu, Nelly Shin and Alice Wong from Vancouver-area ridings, Bob Saroya from the riding of Markham-Unionville (a suburb of Toronto) and┬аCalgary’s Jag Sahota┬атАФ are on track to lose to Liberal or NDP candidates.

A Liberal spokesperson said the party is still awaiting┬аfinal results, with special ballots still left to be counted in some ridings. The spokesperson said that, based on preliminary results, more than 30 per cent of the Liberal caucus will be┬аMPs who identify as┬аBlack, Indigenous or a┬аperson of colour.

A spokesperson for the NDP said of the four new NDP MPs elected in Monday’s vote, two are Indigenous.

Conservative MP Alice Wong speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on June 14, 2018. Wong lost her seat in the election. (David Kawai/Canadian Press)

Under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the Liberal Party has had a lock on many of the country’s urban and suburban ridings and there’s some NDP representation in cities like Edmonton, Hamilton, Winnipeg and Vancouver.

Over the past three election cycles, the Conservatives have struggled to reach the high-water mark set in 2011 when former prime minister Stephen Harper cruised to victory thanks in part to strong suburban support in the Toronto and Vancouver areas.

The seven┬аracially diverse Conservative candidates who were elected on Monday are┬аLeslyn Lewis in HaldimandтАФNorfolk and Michael Chong in WellingtonтАФHalton Hills (two more rural parts of Ontario),┬аJasraj Singh Hallan in Calgary Forest Lawn,┬аZiad Aboultaif and Tim Uppal in Edmonton-area seats,┬аAlain Rayes┬аfrom┬аRichmondтАФArthabaska┬аin Quebec and┬аMarc Dalton, who identifies as M├йtis, in the B.C. riding of┬аPitt MeadowsтАФMaple Ridge.

It’s a disappointing result for Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole, who sought to bring more BIPOC Canadians into the Conservative fold as part of a push to unseat the governing Liberals.

O’Toole stressed the importance of diversity in his Monday concession speech after it became┬аclear that┬аthe party was poised to lose some of the diversity in its caucus.

Conservative MP Bob Saroya rises during question period in the House of Commons on March 22, 2021 in Ottawa. Saroya lost his Markham-Unionville seat in the election. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

“We will continue to put in the time showing more Canadians that they are welcome in the Conservative Party of Canada,” O’Toole said at his event in Oshawa, Ont.

“Above all, we must continue to show Canadians, whether you’re black, white, brown or from any race or creed, whether you’re LGBTQ or straight, whether you are an Indigenous Canadian or came to Canada five weeks ago or five generations ago … you have a place in the Conservative Party.”

Some racialized voters ‘nervous’ about voting┬аConservative: activist

Sukhi Sandhu is a former Liberal voter from Surrey, B.C. who backed the Conservatives in this campaign. He’s also┬аco-founder of Wake Up Surrey, a grassroots anti-gang violence┬аgroup.

He said he has soured on what he calls Liberal “lip-service” and “performative politics” on issues that matter to his┬аSouth Asian community, such as┬аcrime and gang violence, immigration fraud and international student exploitation.

Sandhu┬аsaid many racialized Canadians are frustrated with the Liberal government’s record in office тАФ and O’Toole and his team failed to capitalize on their disillusionment.

He said that, based on conversations with his neighbours, some Canadians from diverse backgrounds are still skeptical┬аof┬аthe Conservatives.

The party’s platform made no mention of racism or systemic discrimination тАФ a red flag for some would-be Conservative voters, Sandhu said. During the campaign, O’Toole faced pointed questions about why “Canada’s recovery plan”┬аhad more to say about dogs and animal welfare than marginalized communities.

Sukhi Sandhu, an organizer with Wake Up Surrey, an anti-gang group, says he’s supported Liberals in the past but voted Conservative in this election. He said some racialized Canadians are reluctant to back the Tories. (Sukhi Sandhu/Facebook)

“People were still nervous about what the Conservative brand stood for. They were asking, ‘Do they actually value inclusion and equity?’ I’m sure many second- and third-generation immigrants were looking for a political home and the Conservative approach wasn’t compelling enough,” Sandhu told┬аCBC News.

“The issues of systemic racism, inequity and social justice тАФ those issues have to be paramount in every party. There’s a responsibility for the Conservative Party to engage with these issues. It’s not just about star candidates from an immigrant background. It’s not about tokenism. You’ve got to understand what your potential voter pool really cares about.

“If you’re out to lunch on this or if you have your head in the sand,┬аthen you’re going to lose at the ballot box. On systemic racism, the Conservatives need to wrap their heads around it. It’s about setting the foundation and building trusting relationships,┬аnot hollow words.”

Sandhu said he’s not surprised to hear the Conservative caucus in the Commons will be 95 per cent white. He said the party hasn’t built strong relationships with racial and ethnic community leaders in the swing ridings that often decide which party will be in power in Ottawa.

“It tells me the Conservative Party is struggling. You need to develop a pipeline of activists from marginalized communities тАФ and there’s still some concern that this party does not respect or understand our unique identity as racialized Canadians,” he said.

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