October 8, 1996 By Samer Muscati OTTAWA (CUP)-- Nini Krishnappa's commitment to conservatism has never been questioned. His bedroom walls are decorated with posters of his two political idols -- Ronald Reagan and Brian Mulroney and ever since he can remem- ber he has preached conserva- tive ideology. We must act toughon crime, enforce family values, remove restrictions from big-business and repeal all affirmative action and multiculturalism policies, the 25-year-old tells anyone who will listen. But after five years asa national executive of the Pro- gressive Conservative Youth Federation, Krishnappa's com- mitment to the Conservative party has run out. Two weeks ago, Krishnappa retired his mem- bership card to an old shoe- box in his closet. Now he waits for his Reform Party card to arrive in the mail. "It was a difficult deci- sion for me to make," says Krishnappa, who works for a Toronto Marketing firm. "But the issue for me now is policy, not party names." He is one of many disil- lusioned youth who are leav- ing the Tory Party in favour of Reform's "grassroots and con- servative" views. They are upset with Party leader Jean Charest's "moder- ate" stance, and would like to see him follow the budget- slashing ideology of Alberta Premier Ralph Klein and On- tario Premier Mike Harris. "I don't think the Con- servative Party is going in the right direction," said Kelly Sherwood, former Youth Co- ordinator for the Tories. "The Party is conservative in name only. Right now, even the Lib- erals are more conservative than the (Tories)." For many young Tories, the last straw came at the Au- gust policy convention when they saw less than a quarter of their motions and amendments passed by the Party. Even those that were passed have yet to be adopted as policy by Charest. "Everything that was brought to the convention was defeated, and defeated soundly," said Sherwood, who joined the Reform Party a week after th tio The policies that the youth were pushing for in- cluded a20 percent income tax cut, reinstating the death pen- alty, ending employment eq- uity, tightening up immigra- tion laws and ending funding for all multiculturalism pro- grams including anti-racism campaigns. Such views were too radical for many in the Tory party, but not for Reform. They have welcomed the defectors with open arms. "We recruit anyone we can," said Scott Mudford, the national youth coordinator of the Reform party. Mudford says that the exodus of youth from the To- ries shows no signs of slowing down and he expects it to in- crease dramatically until the next federal election. However, Charest MW elite mele Federal Tories Too Leftist For Radical Youth Wing staunchly denies that there is a problem with youth defections to the Reform party. "I think nothing of that because it's not happening," said Charest. "I don't see any evidence at all, apart from very mar- ginal cases, of young people going over tothe Reform. ..I'd have to challenge anyone to name me four people who have gone over." But the facts are clearly against Charest. Allacross the country, young Tories, the fu- ture of the Party, are jumping ship to Reform. In the four weeks following the conven- tion, over 10high-profile young Tories have called it quits and defected. Mostrecently, the presi- dent of the young Tories at Carleton University, Ben and joined Reform. elimination of all debt and downsizing government serv- ices and responsibilities. "We're not a bunch of extremists," said James. "We're just conservative." Much of the youth criti- cism is focused on Party leader Jean Charest, who they say lacks direction and is selling out the youth-wing in an at- tempt to appeal to Liberal vot- ers. "Jean Charest isn't a conservative. He's abandoned the right wing," said Krishnappa. "Ifthe messenger doesn't believe in the message, then the message will get lost." And many of the youth are adamant that the party can only survive by making a dra- matic right-ward shift in its philosophy, to attract conserva- tive voters. They say that if nothing changes, the catastro- phe of the 1993 federal elec- tion -- where Tories went from 169 seats to two -- will relived in the next one. "The people haven't cho- sen what the policies are, Jean Charest has chosen policy," said Andrew Stec, former President of the University of Ottawa young Tories who joined the Reform. He says that despite the traitor stigma attached to youth who leave the party, many more will leave unless things change drasti- cally. Charest admits that the youth wing is a vital to the Tories, but he believes they will stay because his party is the only national conservative political party. James, resigned on Sept. 16, | James says that the tha youth in the party essentially (ar believe in fiscal responsibility, | "The problem is that (the Reform Party) are not a national political party." said Charest. "They are regional in their views and deliberately maintain that regional perspec- tive and have presented pretty extremist views on a number of occasions." But Sherwood scoffs at the idea that the Tories are a more national party than Re- form. "We can't delude our- selves into thinking that the Conservatives are a national party," said Sherwood. "A party of two seats isn't a na- tional party." "Ask yourself whether you're married to a name or to & an ideology," is Sherwood's advice to young Tories still loyal to the party. "If you're married to an ideology, you're in the wrong party.” Krishnappa says that he is proud to be a young Re- former, and disagrees that he is a walking press release for the Party. He hopes that one day the political right will be uni- fied under one national con- servative banner. "It's just a matter of who's going to survive and which party is going to fade away." said Krishnappa. "I'm waiting for the day when the names Reform and Tory can be interchange- able." --With files from David Cochrane Bookshelf Unit HELPING THE WORLD WRITE NOW a Self-sufficiency through literacy in the developing world PLEASE SEND ME MORE INFORMATION Name Address MAIL TO: CODE, 321 Chapel St., Ottawa, ON, Canada, KIN 7Z2. FAX: (613) 232-7435 PHONE: 1-800-661-2633