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VICTORIA — The B-C Conservatives will announce their new leader on Saturday in Vancouver six months after John Rustad was chased out of office, and two analysts say the final outcome will have long-term consequences for the party’s direction.

Former B.C. Liberal cabinet Iain Black, commentator Caroline Elliott, former M-P Kerry-Lynne Findlay, current M-L-A Peter Milobar and entrepreneur Yuri Fulmer are the final candidates in a race that dates back to December, when Rustad resigned following ideological squabbles and defections.

The new leader will take the party’s helm as the N-D-P government of Premier David Eby struggles in the polls, and Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute, says both parties find themselves at crossroads.

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She says Saturday’s vote could mark the start of the New Democrat’s decline, or represent a lost opportunity for the Conservatives.

David Black, who teaches at Royal Roads University, says the new leader must satisfy the party’s more populist base, while remaining electable for moderate, right-of-centre voters.

The race saw several sharp exchanges between candidates and multiple controversies, but out-going interim leader Trevor Halford says such clashes are normal, and most British Columbians do not care about ideological labels.

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