Calgary Herald

UNITED RIGHT

Leadership race begins

- KEITH GEREIN kgerein@postmedia.com twitter.com/keithgerei­n

Former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve and Wildrose MLAs started putting aside old rivalries Monday, holding their first joint caucus meeting and selecting Nathan Cooper as interim leader of the new United Conservati­ve Party.

“We have been working well together over the last number of months and certainly the last session,” Cooper said following the meeting at the Federal Building.

“There’s so many great people who are part of both organizati­ons and so the relationsh­ips are strong. I really look forward to the future of not only this caucus, but our party and what’s in store for the conservati­ve movement in the province of Alberta.”

Cooper, MLA for Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills, had been serving as the Wildrose house leader for the past two years.

He has not publicly declared support for Brian Jean, Jason Kenney or anyone else mulling a run for leadership of the new party, making him a palatable choice for all sides.

“I think he is going to do a fantastic job,” said Derek Fildebrand­t, a Wildrose MLA who has yet to decide if he will run for leader.

“I think he had broad support across the two legacy caucuses.”

It was not disclosed who else in caucus sought the position.

Cooper will serve as interim leader until the UCP’s full-time leader is chosen in October.

He said his mission is “to be a team builder, to work to build our caucus, our constituen­cy associatio­ns, and to reach out to all conservati­ves all across our province and let them know there is a home for them in the United Conservati­ve Party.”

All 22 Wildrose MLAs and seven of the eight PC MLAs participat­ed in Monday’s session, giving the new party a caucus of 29 people.

The lone holdout was PC member Richard Starke, who announced he would not be joining his colleagues.

Jean attended the meeting for a short time — sitting beside former interim PC leader Ric McIver — before departing to announce his leadership candidacy.

Both Cooper and Fildebrand­t described the tenor of the meeting as “fantastic.”

While tensions will likely persist for awhile, no serious problems are expected, Fildebrand­t said.

“Some people probably held their nose on both sides and weren’t enthusiast­ic about working together, but I think in very short order we are going to see people working seamlessly as a single party,” he said.

He said he signed his papers to become a UCP MLA alongside PC member Mike Ellis.

The two held a joint beer night in Calgary back in December 2015 to begin talks about conservati­ve unity.

“It was a very long road,” Fildebrand­t said. “I am extremely glad to see everybody working in the same direction.”

The caucus meeting followed weekend votes that saw members of both parties endorse a merger under the UCP banner.

Kenney declined an interview Monday, but sent out a Twitter post congratula­ting Cooper.

I really look forward to the future of not only this caucus, but our party and what’s in store for the conservati­ve movement in the province of Alberta.

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 ?? SHAUGHN BUTTS ?? Former Wildrose leader Brian Jean and former Conservati­ve interim leader Ric McIver sat next to each other Monday as members of the legacy Wildrose and PC caucuses held their first joint meeting in Edmonton as the United Conservati­ve Party.
SHAUGHN BUTTS Former Wildrose leader Brian Jean and former Conservati­ve interim leader Ric McIver sat next to each other Monday as members of the legacy Wildrose and PC caucuses held their first joint meeting in Edmonton as the United Conservati­ve Party.

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