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Alberta Politics

In or Out? Jason Kenney could have a rough landing into Alberta politics

CBC reports that after 19 years as a Member of Parliament in Ottawa, former federal cabinet minister Jason Kenney, 48, is considering entering provincial politics in Alberta. Postmedia’s Jen Gerson writes that he will not confirm whether this is true.

It was a prediction first made by Postmedia’s Graham Thomson in January 2016.

Premier Rachel Notley Calgary Stampede Alberta
Rachel Notley

Mr. Kenney is reportedly backed by a cadre of federal Conservative strategists and insiders, including former Reform Party and Wildrose Party campaign strategist Tom Flanagan, who told CBC that the group discussed whether “he could win the PC leadership then negotiate a merger [with Wildrose].

So, Mr. Kenney, who just this week was appointed to the parliamentary committee studying electoral reform, could be abandoning plans to replace Rona Ambrose as leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and setting his sights on uniting-the-right and challenging Rachel Notley‘s moderate New Democratic Party government in 2019. If Mr. Kenney is going to enter Alberta politics, he will need to decide quick because the Progressive Conservative Party will be choosing its new leader before April 30, 2017.

Jim Prentice Premier Alberta
Jim Prentice

Mr. Kenney is a skilled politician, but he would ominously follow in the footsteps of another former federal Conservative cabinet minister, Jim Prentice, who jumped into provincial politics in 2014 before leading the 44-year old PC government to defeat in May 2015.

New rules approved by the PC Party at its recent annual general meeting could make a leadership bid challenging for an outsider candidate. The PCs replaced the one-member one-vote system that existed from 1992 to 2014 with a new closed delegate system. This will require candidates to build broad support in 87 constituencies across the province, rather than relying on the ability to sign up large groups of voters in concentrated regions.

Sandra Jansen
Sandra Jansen

If federal Conservative MPs decided to back Mr. Kenney’s bid, an orchestrated takeover could be possible, but there is significant animosity among rank and file PC members to a merger with the more hard-line Wildrose Party. And he would undoubtedly face a strong challenge from the moderate wing of the PC Party, most vocally represented by Calgary-North West MLA Sandra Jansen and Vermilion-Lloydminster MLA Richard Starke.

Mr. Kenney’s supporters may have been connected to a recent attempt by a conservative lobby group to hijack the one-MLA Alberta Party. The takeover was thwarted when the party’s executive quickly rescheduled its annual general meeting to an earlier date. It is likely that the marauding band of conservatives were coveting the party’s brand name rather than its moderate-conservative platform.

Brian Jean Wildrose
Brian Jean

A bid for the PC Party or the Alberta Party leadership might seem odd for Mr. Kenney, who is likely more comfortable in the social conservative wing of the Wildrose Party and with his former colleagues at the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. The historical success of the PC Party in Alberta between 1971 and 2015 was not based on adherence to conservative ideology but on the ability of its leaders to build a big blue tent of conservative, moderate and liberal voters.

Despite strong support for sending federal Conservatives to Ottawa, Alberta is now a much more progressive and moderate province than it was 20 years ago, when a young Mr. Kenney was roaming the halls of the Legislature as the spokesperson for the taxpayers federation.

Naheed Nenshi
Naheed Nenshi

Mr. Kenney is not well-known for his conciliatory approach to Alberta politics. In 2015, he argued that “people like” Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi were to blame for the politicization of the niqab ban instituted by the federal Conservative government. In 2014, he engaged in a  public spat with Ron Liepert when the former finance minister defeated long-time MP Rob Anders for the Conservative nomination in Calgary-Signal Hill. And in 2012, Mr. Kenney’s true feelings about then-deputy premier Thomas Lukaszuk were made known in a leaked reply-all email.

There is also the inconvenient fact that Alberta’s elections laws make it impossible to actually merge the financial assets of the two political parties. Those laws also make it unlikely that the Wildrose Party could change its name to the Conservative Party of Alberta. This does not mean that there could not be one dominant conservative party to face the NDP in the next election, it just means that any sort of actual merger of parties is unlikely to happen.

It should be noted that the last time an attempt was made to unite-the-right in Alberta, former Reform Party leader Preston Manning (pictured above with Mr. Kenney) was forced to apologize for his role in nudging 9 Wildrose MLAs across the floor to the PCs. That was in December 2014.

There is also the question of how his former federal colleague Brian Jean, now leader of the official opposition Wildrose Party, will feel about Mr. Kenney stealing the spotlight, and potentially his leadership. Despite being constantly undermined by internal party disputes and self-inflicted embarrassment, Mr. Jean deserves credit for leading his party from the brink of extinction to 22 MLAs in 2015. The inconvenient truth that his party still only sits at 35 percent in the latest public opinion poll could add momentum to those pushing to replace the Wildrose leader.

The decision by Mr. Prentice, Mr. Jean and now maybe Mr. Kenney, gives the impression that Conservative party politics in Alberta is becoming a grazing plot for Conservative politicians whose careers in Ottawa have stalled. It was widely believed that Mr. Prentice was using his job as premier to springboard into a future bid for the federal Conservative leadership. I expect the same would be suspected about Mr. Kenney, if he does actually jump into provincial politics in Alberta.

8 replies on “In or Out? Jason Kenney could have a rough landing into Alberta politics”

Establishment Tories are NOT. HAPPY. They’re used to GETTING. THEIR. WAY. Huge money at stake and the grassroots populist Wildrose and the vestigial progressive remnants of the PCs are so far non-compliant. They’ve recruited Jason Kenney (whos likely hit his ceiling in Ottawa) to do their bidding. Unsure whether it works out at this point. I think Alberta has matured into a regular cycle of non-dynastic politics.

I read that article. It was quite interesting, and a bit frightening. There a couple of points that stood out for me, and sent a chill down the back of my neck at the thought that Mr Kenney might enter provincial politics in Alberta.

First, there is the odd notion that someone like Mr Kenney, who is seemingly terminally single, might have something to say about family values and family life. As someone once said, if you don’t play the game, you can’t make the rules. What business is it of Mr Kenney’s what couples can fall in love and get married, or how families are structured or how they make decisions about their lives? (The same criticism, by the way, can also be levelled at a certain major Christian denomination that still insists that its clergy at all levels remain celibate for life … ).

Secondly, there is the obvious logical inconsistency of so-called small-government libertarians, those who would like to “drown the government in a bathtub”, and yet still want to set strict rules around personal social mores and morality, and expand the reach of government back into the bedrooms of the nation from which they were evicted by Trudeau pere back in 1968. What’s up with that?

I, for one, however, think the government should control at least some aspects of family life; for example, if a parent thinks striping their child’s back with a willow switch is an acceptable method of discipline, I want the government to bust down their doors, remove the children from that environment and send the parent(s) to prison. If a parent thinks it is appropriate to teach their children the values of the KKK, well maybe the parents don’t go to jail, but they still don’t get to keep the kids.

Children are our future, and if it takes a village to raise them, then the village can decide how…

I think that Alberta needs a leader that can come to terms with the permanent loss of revenues due to the decline of conventional oil. The oil sands will never fill that gap and the leaders need to get over the good old days and deal with the new realities. I do not believe the people of Alberta have come to grips with this?

Agreed! Long gone is the time when conservatives can coast on high oil prices. I’m personally glad that Notley is in charge. Unlike the Wildrosers she won’t save the farm by burning down the barn.

It was the Alberta Cant Wait lobby group that tried to hyjack the Alberta Party. They are a Wildrose-federal Conservative group that is trying to get Jaspn Kenney to run for the PC leadership. They were going to offer the Alberta party to Jason Kenney.

I , along with our family are very pleased he is running. There’s no doubt he will win.The fact is, I could run and beat Notley. Yes, she is that unpopular.

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