1998 Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership bid In 1998, Pallister campaigned for the leadership of the federal Progressive Conservative Party on a platform designed to win back voters who had left the party for Reform. His supporters included former cabinet ministers
Don Mazankowski and
Charlie Mayer,
Senator Consiglio Di Nino, and
Jim Jones, the sole Progressive Conservative representative in the House of Commons from
Ontario. He finished fourth on the first ballot of the 1998
Progressive Conservative leadership election with 12.5% support, behind
David Orchard,
Hugh Segal, and the eventual winner, former
Prime Minister Joe Clark. He withdrew from the contest a few days later. Pallister said that Progressive Conservatives had "voted for the past" and missed an opportunity to renew themselves.
Canadian Alliance MP In July 2000, Pallister wrote an open letter to Joe Clark announcing his candidacy in the next federal election with a dual endorsement from the Progressive Conservative and
Canadian Alliance associations in Portage-Lisgar. The latter party was a successor to Reform, and emerged from the efforts of Reformers to merge with
Blue Tory elements in the Progressive Conservative Party who opposed Clark's
Red Tory leadership. Clark had previously rejected Pallister's proposal as a violation of the Progressive Conservative Party's constitution, and did not respond to the letter. As a result, Pallister left the Progressive Conservatives and joined the Alliance on August 17, 2000. He won his new party's nomination for Portage—Lisgar over Dennis Desrochers and former MP
Felix Holtmann, in a contest marked by some bitterness. Pallister was elected to the House of Commons in the
2000 general election, defeating his nearest opponent by over 10,000 votes. Hoeppner, running as an independent, finished in a distant fourth place. The Liberal Party won a
majority government, and Pallister served on the opposition benches. He did not openly endorse anyone in the 2002
Canadian Alliance leadership election.
Conservative MP The Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservative parties merged on December 7, 2003, and Pallister became a member of the resulting
Conservative Party of Canada. He considered launching a bid for the new party's leadership, but instead endorsed outgoing Alliance leader
Stephen Harper for the position. He was easily reelected in the
2004 election, in which the Liberals were reduced to a
minority government. In July 2004, he was appointed to the
Official Opposition Shadow Cabinet as critic for
National Revenue. Pallister gained increased national prominence in September 2005 after drawing attention to $750,000 of apparent spending irregularities in the office of
David Dingwall, the Chief Executive Officer of the
Royal Canadian Mint. Dingwall resigned after the accusations were publicized, but later claimed that his expenditures were inaccurately reported and fell within official guidelines. An independent review completed in late October 2005 found only minor discrepancies in Dingwall's expenses, amounting to less than $7,000. Pallister criticized this review as "little more than a whitewash", and argued that the auditors failed to include numerous ambiguous expenses. Pallister sang a parody of
Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall, Part Two" in the House of Commons on October 3, 2005, during the "Statements by Members" session before
Question Period. The adjusted lyrics attacked
David Dingwall and the Liberal government. The Speaker ruled him out of order. Before the
2006 federal election, the
Winnipeg Free Press reported that some Manitoba Progressive Conservatives were trying to persuade Pallister to challenge
Stuart Murray for the provincial leadership. Murray subsequently resigned, after 45% of delegates at the party's November 2005 convention voted for a leadership review. A subsequent
Free Press poll showed Pallister as the second-most popular choice to succeed Murray, after fellow MP
Vic Toews. Pallister campaigned for reelection at the federal level and was noncommittal about his provincial ambitions. Pallister was easily reelected in 2006. The Conservatives won a minority government, and Pallister requested that incoming
Prime Minister Stephen Harper not consider him for a
cabinet portfolio while he was making his decision about entering provincial politics. On February 17, 2006, he announced that he would not seek the provincial party leadership and would remain a federal MP. He was appointed chair of the House of Commons standing committee on Finance, and in 2007 indicated that he wanted to remove financial access to offshore tax havens such as
Barbados. Later in the year, he was appointed
parliamentary secretary to the
Minister of International Trade and to the
Minister for International Cooperation. Pallister surprised political observers in January 2008 by announcing that he would not run in the
next federal election. == Return to provincial politics ==