Now comes the hard part
Kenney win just the beginning for Alberta PCs
By a huge majority, Alberta Progressive Conservatives voted Saturday to dive into uncertain waters, with Jason Kenney at the helm.
The former federal minister campaigned for eight months, grabbed an unfamiliar delegate selection system by the lapels, and shook free 1,113 votes of 1,476 ballots cast at the weekend convention.
That was good for 75 per cent of the total vote — a thumping victory for Kenney’s agenda of unity between his party and Wildrose, the official opposition to the NDP government of Premier Rachel Notley.
The convention was marked by more passion than I’ve seen at a PC gathering in many years. The stakes were so high; both a new leader and a new future for conservatism and Alberta itself.
Kenney declared “springtime in Alberta,” but the road to union will not be any lighthearted stroll through the daffodils.
The PC campaign was fraught with controversy, cl ai ms of thuggishness on Kenney’s part, similar countercharges from him, and powerful emotions from what one delegate described as “a civil war.”
The party even banned l ongtime organizer Alan Hallman, who was arrested and charged with assault after an altercation at the convention Friday night.
Kenney said Sunday he won’t be running for a legislature seat in the near future but will focus on working on a merger plan.
He said he is exploring having the Wildrose and PC caucuses in the legislature work together, and is urging constituency boards to get to know each other.
There is a lot of bitterness to overcome.
For instance, former PC MLA Thomas Lukaszuk said there’s not a room in the province large enough to accommodate the distance between Kenney’s social conservatism and his own progressive views.
Kenney will have his way with the board eventually; his support among members is too massive to be challenged in any serious way. But the dynamics could be tricky.
More hostilities lurk in the Wildrose camp. The feeling between the two leaders’ groups is not exactly friendly.
Party leader Brian Jean issued a public invitation on Friday for the new leader to meet with him. Kenney’s people snorted; the meeting had already been arranged, they said, and Jean was just grandstanding, trying to look like he controls the agenda.
Kenney has a clear duty to try to forge a union with Wildrose. That was his campaign promise. Jean has the same obligation. Out of that would come a new party with a fresh name, although Jean i nsists it be built around the Wildrose legal structure.
There are legal serious complications to all this; for one thing, it’s almost impossible to take an Alberta party off the books.
When parties dissolve, all their assets go into trust for a year. After that, the money reverts to the Crown, meaning the NDP’s general revenue fund. NDP Finance Minister Joe Ceci would enjoy that.
Fully 75 per cent of Wildrose members will have to agree to union. Kenney promises PC members a referendum on the details of the plan, even though the party has no mechanism for doing that. Adherents of both parties would have to choose a new name.
All this is likely to be harder than anything Kenney has already done.
Kenney is an extremely hard worker who will push every button and pull every lever. Eventually, if a merger agreement does emerge, there will be a yet another leadership convention.
It has already occurred to many PCs that neither Kenney nor Jean would necessarily win, especially if they’re both tainted by difficult negotiations and infighting. The warriors who fight the early battles do not always win the war.
Not many conservatives expected Stephen Harper to win the federal Conservative leadership, you might recall.
Other candidates will emerge. Former minister Diana McQueen is said to be interested, although she won’t confirm it. There’s nothing to stop Richard Starke from trying again. Eventually, this race could draw serious talent.
Kenney has won a remarkable victory. He could be premier someday. But the truth is, nobody knows where it all goes from here.