Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fought To Unite Alberta Conservatives: Former MP Kenney Ready To Run For Premier

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2019 07:11 PM

    EDMONTON — Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney finally gets his title shot.


    It’s not a chance the former federal Conservative cabinet minister saw coming until he put together a plan in the summer of 2016 to unite the province's feuding right-of-centre Progressive Conservatives and Wildrose Party into what would become the United Conservatives.


    "If you had talked to me in March of 2016 and said I'm going to be the leader of a merged conservative party and leader of the Opposition and heading into an Alberta election now, I would have said you're nuts. I had zero inkling to do it,” Kenney said in an interview.


    “But as I got further into the spring and then summer of 2016 I just realized that somebody with the relevant profile, network and experience had to step forward with a plan."


    Kenney, 50, was born in Oakville, Ont., raised in Saskatchewan, and spent his adult years based in Alberta.


    He has lived much in the public eye as he has fought for conservative principles and the concept of ordered liberty, first as an anti-tax crusader and later as one of the key lieutenants in former prime minister Stephen Harper's cabinet.


    He is not married and happily recounts a life committed to public service. A day's politicking is followed by a night of campaigning and handshaking, followed by late-night reading from a stack of philosophy books at the bedside.


    He is schooled in the ground game of politics and had legendary campaign war chests as a Calgary MP.


    Some credit him with moving Harper's government into majority territory by reaching out to ethnic newcomers, breaking the shibboleth that they vote Liberal, so much so he gained the nickname of "the minister for curry in a hurry."


    He is a Catholic and has spoken out against gay marriage and abortion in the past, but promises not to act on those issues if he becomes premier.


    He has been dogged in recent months by allegations he secretly pulled the strings on a fellow candidate during the United Conservative leadership race to have him attack Kenney's main opponent, former Wildrose leader Brian Jean, before dropping out and supporting Kenney. Both deny any collusion.


    "The NDP is going to throw that stuff at me and at us. I don't get fazed by it. I just mute the crazies on Twitter and carry on," said Kenney.


    "(Voters) want to see a very serious sober debate on the economic future of the province, how we're going to fight for Alberta's place in the federation. And I think parties that engage in nasty, negative campaigns will be penalized by the voters."


    In the weeks leading up to the election, Kenney outlined the broad strokes of a policy platform that begins and ends with jobs and the economy.


    He has promised to balance Alberta’s multibillion-dollar budget deficits within four years by freezing current spending and cutting regulations, taxes and red tape to free up entrepreneurs to grow the economy by what he says would be three per cent a year.


    Kenney was just 10 years old, sitting on a couch minding his own business at a Saskatchewan school fundraiser, when politics first found him.


    John Diefenbaker, well over a decade removed from being prime minister, came up to young Kenney, asked him his name, and struck up a conversation: Do you know the mythical story of Jason and the Argonauts? What's your favourite subject at school? What are your future plans?


    "That 10-minute conversation made an indelible impression on me," said Kenney.


    "That a former prime minister would spend 10 minutes talking to a 10-year-old boy was remarkable to me. I never forgot the kindness that he showed. And that maybe gave me sort of my initial interest in politics and public service."


    Forty years later, even if he doesn't win the Golden Fleece, this Jason hopes he has Alberta’s conservatives all rowing in the same direction again.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Special Prosecutor Oversees Theft Case Involving B.C. MLA's Constituency Office

    Special Prosecutor Oversees Theft Case Involving B.C. MLA's Constituency Office
    A special prosecutor is conducting a charge assessment after the RCMP investigated allegations that money was stolen from the constituency office of a member of the British Columbia legislature.

    Special Prosecutor Oversees Theft Case Involving B.C. MLA's Constituency Office

    Cuba Criticizes Canada'S Diplomatic Downsize After Another Diplomat Falls Ill

    Cuba Criticizes Canada'S Diplomatic Downsize After Another Diplomat Falls Ill
    OTTAWA — The Cuban government is criticizing Canada's decision on Wednesday to halve its embassy staff after a 14th Canadian fell ill to an unexplained illness in Havana.    

    Cuba Criticizes Canada'S Diplomatic Downsize After Another Diplomat Falls Ill

    Merritt-Area Cattle Ranch Identifies Missing B.C. Cowboy As One Of Its Managers

    Merritt-Area Cattle Ranch Identifies Missing B.C. Cowboy As One Of Its Managers
    MERRITT, B.C. — The 32-year-old man missing in B.C.'s southern Interior area has been identified as Ben Tyner, a cowboy with the Nicola Ranch near Merritt.

    Merritt-Area Cattle Ranch Identifies Missing B.C. Cowboy As One Of Its Managers

    Crown Seeks 8 Years In Prison For Daesh-Supporter Rehab Dughmosh Found Guilty Of Terrorism Charges

    TORONTO — Prosecutors are seeking an eight-year sentence for a woman found guilty of terror charges after an attack at a Canadian Tire in east Toronto.    

    Crown Seeks 8 Years In Prison For Daesh-Supporter Rehab Dughmosh Found Guilty Of Terrorism Charges

    No-Waste Grocery Stores Not A Garbage Idea To Help Tackle Food Waste

    VANCOUVER — Customers at a boutique Vancouver grocery store won't find racks of individually packaged goods or rolls of plastic bags in which to lug their food home.    

    No-Waste Grocery Stores Not A Garbage Idea To Help Tackle Food Waste

    Once Populous Sea Stars Disappearing Because Of Warm Water And Disease

    Once Populous Sea Stars Disappearing Because Of Warm Water And Disease
    VANCOUVER — Warm waters and infectious disease have been determined as the causes of a die-off of sunflower starfish along the Pacific coast, says a newly released study.

    Once Populous Sea Stars Disappearing Because Of Warm Water And Disease