OTTAWA -- Conservative MP Erin O'Toole has joined the list of candidates to replace former prime minister Stephen Harper as party leader.

"As we look to the future, our priorities are clear: we need to reconnect with Canadians," O'Toole said in a statement issued Friday as he launched his leadership campaign from his home town of Bowmanville, Ont.

"We need to show Canadians that government can -- and must -- be so much more than sunny ways, slogans and photo ops," he said.

"We need to build on the strengths and successes of our past while actively seeking opportunities to win back the trust of Canadians."

The Ontario MP, who served as veterans affairs minister in the previous Conservative government, was joined by his family -- wife, Rebecca, their children, Jack and Mollie, and his father, John O'Toole, who was a Progressive Conservative MPP for the riding of Durham, Ont., from 1995 to 2014.

Erin O'Toole, a bilingual lawyer and former officer in the Royal Canadian Air Force, was elected to represent the federal riding of Durham in a 2012 by-election.

"From an early age my siblings and I were taught the importance and value of public service," O'Toole said in his statement. "We learned those lessons from our dad, who spent close to three decades serving the people of this community in government. And from our mom who was a school board trustee,"

The O'Toole campaign also announced endorsements from 10 Conservative MPs: Cathy McLeod, Todd Doherty, Blake Richards, Michael Cooper, Kevin Waugh, James Bezan, Robert Sopuck, Jamie Schmale, John Brassard and Colin Carrie.

O'Toole said he wants to focus his campaign on what a Conservative government would do for the economy. He also wants to rebuild party fortunes in Atlantic Canada, where the Conservatives were wiped out in the 2015 election as the Liberals took all 32 seats in the region.

"We lost bad in Atlantic Canada and my roots there, my family there, my time serving in the military, that will be a particular area of focus for me," he said.

O'Toole, who last year had put his name forward to become interim party leader, had originally said he had no immediate plans to join the main contest.

He changed his mind this after caucus colleagues encouraged him over the summer to enter.

The leadership race is crowded.

Earlier today, Conservative MP Lisa Raitt announced on Twitter she is stepping down from her role as finance critic to "continue discussions on the future leadership" of her party.

That development suggests the former cabinet minister is getting closer to declaring her intention to run, because interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose has asked all leadership candidates to abandon such roles.

The officially registered candidates in the Conservative leadership race are MPs Maxime Bernier, Andrew Scheer, Kellie Leitch, Michael Chong, Deepak Obhrai and Brad Trost.

The first debate will take place Nov. 10 in Saskatoon.

Conservatives will elect their new leader next May 27.