Gerry Rogers is smiling again now that Earle McCurdy has agreed to be the NDP Kevin Aylward.
If Earle had decided to stay retired, Gerry was the substitute leader the key inside factions of the party had tapped to fill-in until after the next election. Rogers would have had to take one for the team, just like her Liberal namesake did in 2007.
Now that McCurdy is in, the party executive will announce some leadership process that either completely avoids a convention (like the Conservatives in 2010) or puts up a sham competition (as in the NDP 2014 leadership review).
Drew Brown recently likened the next NDP leader to the Liberal’s last-minute substitute in 2011. Fair enough. Any possible change for the party will come in the future.