Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Troubling To Hear Woman Candidate Allege Harassment In PC Race: Alberta Premier

The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 12:49 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says it's troubling to hear a female candidate say she dropped out of the Progressive Conservative leadership contest due to abuse and intimidation.
     
    Notley says the PC party needs to seriously investigate and report back.
     
    "If a party or a campaign cannot conduct itself in a way to ensure the most basic of rules around inclusivity — for instance anti-harassment — then quite frankly that party or that campaign is not equipped to govern the province," Notley told reporters at the legislature Wednesday.
     
    On Tuesday, the two female candidates in the PC leadership race dropped out.
     
    One of them, Sandra Jansen, said in a statement she had been harassed and intimidated by supporters of another candidate, and accused fellow leadership candidate Jason Kenney of bringing "Trump-style politics" to Alberta.
     
    In a statement issued Wednesday, Kenney said, "I regret to hear of MLA Sandra Jansen’s allegations of having been treated disrespectfully at the recent PC policy conference and through social media.
     
    "My campaign has exhibited a positive and respectful tone since it began. Neither I nor any member of our campaign team has engaged in personal attacks against other candidates.
     
     
    "I condemn any disrespectful comments or conduct directed at people in public life.
     
    "If anyone supporting my campaign has made personally disparaging remarks about other candidates, I would ask them to apologize and to participate in a positive and respectful manner."
     
    The other candidate to drop out, former Calgary PC MLA Donna Kennedy-Glans, has said she was concerned the party was moving too far to the right on social issues, but didn't mention being harassed.
     
    Progressive Conservative party president Katherine O'Neill said the committee overseeing the leadership race is investigating Jansen's claims.
     
    "We need to get to the bottom of this as soon as possible," said O'Neill in an interview.
     
    "We want to have an answer, not just for our membership, but (for) the public to know what's going on here.
     
    "As a woman, I'm very disappointed that there's a feeling out there that this party doesn't welcome females or that we're not inclusive. That can't be further from the truth."
     
    Jansen, in her letter, stated the harassment she received from opposition supporters in the hallway at last weekend's policy convention was "the final straw" in an ongoing social media smear and insult campaign attacking her progressive views.
     
    Both Kennedy-Glans and Jansen have also criticized Kenney for busing in delegates to the convention to vote for members of the youth executive. The youth wing has been given a number of votes for the delegated leadership convention, which takes place March 18 in Calgary.
     
    Kenney said having young members involved in the process is good for the party and democracy.
     
     
    There are now four candidates in the race: Kenney, PC MLA Richard Starke, former PC MLA Stephen Khan, and Calgary lawyer Byron Nelson.
     
    Kenney, a former Calgary MP, has polarized debate in the PC leadership race.
     
    He is running on a promise to call for a membership vote to collapse the party, then seek to merge it with the right-centre Wildrose Party and create a new big tent conservative coalition he said is critical to defeating Notley in the 2019 election.
     
    The Wildrose is viewed as more socially conservative than the PCs, and both Jansen and Kennedy-Glans have said they worry Kenney is taking the PCs down the same path.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    South Asian community raises over $483,000 for BC Children’s Hospital

    Members of BC’s South Asian community and other guests raised over $483,000 at the eighth annual A Night of Miracles (ANOM) gala November 5 at the Vancouver Marriott Pinnacle Downtown Hotel.

    South Asian community raises over $483,000 for BC Children’s Hospital

    B.C. Judge Rules Woman Must Pay City $58,000 For Repairs To Home Damaged 8 Years Ago

    B.C. Judge Rules Woman Must Pay City $58,000 For Repairs To Home Damaged 8 Years Ago
    B.c. Supreme Court Justice Hope Hyslop Ruled Against Lynda Watt, Who Must Pay The City $58,000 For Repairs.

    B.C. Judge Rules Woman Must Pay City $58,000 For Repairs To Home Damaged 8 Years Ago

    Air Canada Sorry After Telling Attendants Not To Wear Poppies

    Air Canada says it has revised its uniform policy to make it clear that in-flight crews can wear poppy pins in honour of Remembrance Day.

    Air Canada Sorry After Telling Attendants Not To Wear Poppies

    Kamloops, B.C. Woman Who Bilked Senior To Get Breast-enhancement Surgery Faces New Charges

    An arrest warrant was issued for 40-year-old Brandie Bloor in provincial court on Monday.

    Kamloops, B.C. Woman Who Bilked Senior To Get Breast-enhancement Surgery Faces New Charges

    B.C. College Of Veterinarians Bans Members From Docking Tails Of Dogs, Horses

    B.C. College Of Veterinarians Bans Members From Docking Tails Of Dogs, Horses
    VANCOUVER — Members of British Columbia's College of Veterinarians have voted to ban cosmetic tail docking of dogs, horses and cattle. The college says the more than 91 per cent of members who took part in a recent vote cast ballots against tail docking.

    B.C. College Of Veterinarians Bans Members From Docking Tails Of Dogs, Horses

    Justin Trudeau To Retrace Father's Historic Steps On Upcoming Cuba Visit

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will retrace some of his father's most historic footsteps next week when he travels to Cuba and quite possibly meets an old family friend — retired Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

    Justin Trudeau To Retrace Father's Historic Steps On Upcoming Cuba Visit