Family lawyer learns he'll be running for Tories in Tuxedo byelection via FaceTime from Israel - Action News
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Manitoba

Family lawyer learns he'll be running for Tories in Tuxedo byelection via FaceTime from Israel

Lawrence Pinskywas sleeping in Israel the moment it was announced Progressive Conservative membersplaced their trust in him to win the upcoming Tuxedo byelection.

Lawrence Pinsky looking to succeed former premier Heather Stefanson as next MLA in PC stronghold

A man holds a phone and speaks to another man by video chat.
Interim PC Party leader Wayne Ewasko congratulates Lawrence Pinsky, who's on FaceTime because he was in Israel due to the death of a family friend. (Ian Froese/CBC)

Lawrence Pinskywas sleeping in Israel the moment it was announced Progressive Conservative members had placed their trust in him to win the upcoming Tuxedo byelection.

Pinsky was selected as the PC candidateat a nomination meeting Thursday night, despite the family lawyer being fast asleep half a world awayfrom the Varsity View Community Centre.

He had travelled to Israel after the death of a family friend.He made the trip before the governing NDP caught their rivals off-guard by calling the byelection earlier than many political observers expected.

Back in Winnipeg, hisfamily and supporters cheered and hugged each otheras Pinsky was announced as the Tories' hopeful.

His sons immediately called their dad overFaceTime, waking him up. It was after 4 a.m. in Israel.

"You did it," Raffey Levitt-Pinsky, Lawrence's son, said, asothersupporters crowded around the phone.

A man in a beige suit holds a phone, while putting his hand over the man in a black suit.
Lawrence Pinsky's sons, Raffey Levitt-Pinsky and Hershey Levitt-Pinsky, call up their father moments after it was announced that the longtime lawyer would be the Progressive Conservative candidate in the upcoming Tuxedo byelection. (Ian Froese/CBC)

Levitt-Pinskythen quipped his dad, who wasrising out of bed and still shirtless, wasn't ready for thelimelight.

"Dad, you don't dress up for the occasion?" he joked.

Dressed moments later in a buttoned-up shirt, Pinsky said in an interview through FaceTimeit was an honour to earn the support of PC members. He defeated real estate agent LoriShenkarowandformer ToryMLA Shannon Martin in the contested nomination.

"Everyone is a proud Progressive Conservative who was working there they're amazing people, their hearts were in it, their souls were in it, and I think we're going to take Tuxedo the way it ought to be:make it Progressive Conservative," he said.

Tuxedo has historically been a PCstronghold, with its two mostrecent MLAs, Heather Stefanson and Gary Filmon, being elevated to the premiership, but the party's longstanding grasp on the seat was loosened in the 2023 election when Stefanson's margin of victory was less than 300 votes.

NDP Premier Wab Kinew said recentlyhe wished he spenttime during the election canvassing in the area.

The NDP is now acting like it believes Tuxedo is winnable. Itcalled the byelection on Monday, before any other party had a candidate in place.

The PCs responded by moving up their nomination meeting by nearly two weeks.

Voters will go to the polls on June 18.

3 decades of legal experience

Pinskyis seeking elected officeafter serving as a lawyer for more than three decades.He was called to the bar in 1993, appointed to the King's Counsel in 2023, and served as an adjudicatoron the Manitoba Human Rights Commission under both PC and NDP governments.

The lawyer has also founded an association dedicated to helping individualsresolve their family law disputes outside the court system.

Pinsky, who is Jewish, has told supporters that theHamasattack on Israel on Oct. 7 led him to run for office.

In an interview Thursday, Pinsky said he asked five other people in the riding with a sizeable Jewish contingent to consider running, and two of them declined because they were concerned aboutthe anti-Semitism they and their families would face.

"To me, that's unacceptable for all," Pinsky said.

He said he's grateful that party membersunderstood how important that message is "not just for the Jewish community, but the entire community that nobody be afraid to run."

Pinsky added NDP cabinet ministers have been silent about the "rampant hate" going on, but he said there's a "wide buffet of issues" Manitoba must also contend with, ranging from the state of the economy to the health-care system and safety inneighbourhoods like Osborne Village, once a "jewel in Winnipeg's crown."

"We have to bring people together and grow the amazing capital assets we have here, which are the people of Manitoba," he said. "There's lots to do and I'm ready to do it."

He said he's scheduled to fly back to Winnipeg this coming Tuesday, but willlook to book an earlier flight.

"We don't have any voters here where I am," he said, chuckling,"but we'll do whatever we can."

Other candidates in the Tuxedo byelectionare nurseCarla Compton for the NDP, foster parent Jamie Pfau for the Manitoba Liberals and Green Party LeaderJanine Gibson.