Calgary Herald

O’Leary slammed for attack on premier

Criticized for lack of qualificat­ions

- JAMES WOOD jwood@postmedia.com

New Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Jason Kenney condemned federal leadership candidate Kevin O’Leary’s attacks on Premier Rachel Notley on Tuesday, and said his stance on federalism makes little sense.

And Kenney — the former MP elected PC leader just over a week ago — said O’Leary should be ruled out as the new Conservati­ve leader because of his lack of French.

In a meeting with the Postmedia editorial board in Calgary, Kenney said the next leader of the federal Conservati­ves must be bilingual in Canada’s official languages, and O’Leary doesn’t qualify.

“I think he speaks American English, if that counts, but I don’t think he speaks French,” Kenney said of O’Leary, who retains his residence in the United States even as he campaigns for Conservati­ve leader.

O’Leary, a bombastic businessma­n and reality television personalit­y, is viewed as one of the frontrunne­rs in the race to succeed Stephen Harper as the permanent leader of the Conservati­ve party.

He has generated headlines with his rhetoric, which has included describing Notley as a “vicious, poisonous, toxic cocktail of mediocrity (and) incompeten­ce.”

O’Leary has also vowed to “go to war” with Notley and other premiers by cutting equalizati­on or federal transfer payments if he believes their economic policies — such as Alberta’s carbon tax — curb his quest for three per cent annual economic growth.

Kenney said O’Leary’s language isn’t “helpful or useful.”

“There needs to be a consistent standard of rhetorical responsibi­lity across the spectrum and I don’t think Kevin O’Leary is helping in that at all. I think his comments are over the top.”

On O’Leary’s threats to provinces, Kenney said: “I don’t actually understand what it is he’s proposing to do.”

“If he’s trying to tie totally extraneous issues into . . . health and social transfers, that doesn’t make much sense to me.”

Kenney, an MP between 1997 and 2016 who was a key player in Harper’s cabinets, said he would not endorse any of the 14 candidates running for the Conservati­ve leadership.

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