Journal Pioneer

Alberta premier endorses Erin O’Toole for Conservati­ve leader

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OTTAWA — Erin O’Toole has secured one of the biggest endorsemen­ts available in the Conservati­ve leadership race, as Alberta Premier Jason Kenney called him the “strong leader” the party needs as it looks to win the next election.

“We need a leader who is competent and principled,” Kenney wrote in a message to Conservati­ve Party members. “A leader who won’t run away from conservati­ve principles under pressure from the media or the

Left. A leader who will unite our party, who speaks French, who can win in suburban Ontario, and who will fight for a fair deal for Western Canada.”

Kenney’s message also takes a shot at his former cabinet colleague Peter MacKay, who’s widely considered to be the frontrunne­r in the race.

“Every conservati­ve would be welcome in a party led by Erin,” Kenney wrote. “No one will have their deeply-held beliefs dismissed as ‘stinking albatrosse­s’ under Erin O’Toole’s leadership.”

That’s a reference to public comments MacKay made after the 2019 election about Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer’s inability to clearly answer questions about same-sex marriage and abortion. “That was thrust onto the agenda and hung around Andrew Scheer’s neck like a stinking albatross, and he wasn’t able to deftly deal with those issues when the opportunit­ies arose,” MacKay told a Washington, D.C., audience.

In a statement Thursday evening, MacKay’s campaign spokespers­on Julie Vaux said MacKay would still work respectful­ly with

Kenney. She noted MacKay has been doing his own campaignin­g in Alberta this week.

“Politics is about making choices — and Peter respects the Premier’s choice,” Vaux said. “As the next Prime Minister, he will work with Premier Kenney and every other Premier across this country, regardless of who they endorse. He made it very clear this week in Alberta that he would fight for the interests of Albertans and got over 500 endorsemen­ts at an event on Tuesday night in Calgary — that is what really matters in this campaign.”

Kenney and MacKay were among the highest-profile ministers during Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government from 2006 to 2015. Kenney has often been talked about himself as a potential federal leader, but instead he united the right-wing parties in Alberta and went on to a dominant victory in the 2019 provincial election.

During the Harper years, Kenney was also crucial to the party’s electoral success in the Greater Toronto Area, building up strong relationsh­ips with ethnic communitie­s in the region.

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