OTTAWA — The Conservative party says they have full confidence in last Saturday’s leadership vote, despite concerns raised publicly by Maxime Bernier’s supporters.

CTV News reported Thursday that there was a discrepancy between the total number of votes cast in the Conservative leadership race and the final voter ID list provided to the 13 leadership campaigns.

In all, the party counted roughly 141,000 votes and determined that Andrew Scheer won a razor-thin majority of support ahead of Bernier.

Unofficial lists provided to the campaigns culled from the party’s central database, however, listed approximately 133,000 voters — a large enough discrepancy to potentially alter the final outcome. The party chalked the discrepancy up to human error, with volunteers failing to upload some voters to that central database.

But Cory Hann, a spokesperson for the Conservative party, said that the party is confident the voting was accurate.

“We’re confident in the process, for sure,” Hann said in an interview Friday night.

The ballots cast by those 141,000 party members have been destroyed, making an official recount unlikely. However, the vote processing machines used by the party keep an image of each ballot scanned, meaning a challenge would be theoretically possible.

According to the leadership contest’s rules, the final results announced Saturday — and certified by Deloitte accountants — is final and binding. Andrew Scheer is likely to remain the Conservative leader.

Still, former cabinet minister and two-time leadership hopeful Tony Clement, who acted as a “senior adviser” to Bernier’s campaign, told the Globe and Mail on Friday he had concerns about the discrepancy between the lists.

“Obviously it is concerning, but I am hoping that the party is working very hard to provide a satisfactory answer to the candidates and the party,” Clement told the paper.

Clement did not immediately respond to the Star’s messages late Friday night.

The report suggested a party whistleblower was preparing a sworn affidavit, to be brought forward Monday, raising questions about last Saturday’s leadership vote.

It will either come to nothing — some Conservative sources were chalking it up to “sour grapes” from Bernier’s camp on Friday — or it will cast a shadow over Scheer’s surprising victory.

Either way, it will raise questions about Scheer’s hold over a Conservative caucus who already faces unity questions after a 13-person leadership contest that went down to the wire.

Marc-André Leclerc, a spokesman for Scheer, could not be reached for comment Friday night.

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