Regina Leader-Post

Kenney didn’t endorse in 2017 race

- National Post bplatt@postmedia.com

Kenney and Mackay were among the highest-profile ministers during Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government from 2006 to 2015. Kenney has often himself been talked about 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. During the 2019 campaign Kenney toured the Toronto suburbs to help draw the vote out for Scheer, making speeches in packed banquet halls and religious centres. (Regardless, the Liberals still swept most of the area.)

Kenney did not publicly endorse a candidate in the 2017 leadership race, though he is longtime friends with Scheer and was said to be

I SAW HIS PASSION FOR SERVING OUR VETERANS... THAT’S THE LEADERSHIP WE NEED.

lending Scheer his support. In 2020, he has already been vocal in encouragin­g potential challenger­s to Mackay; he publicly called for both Rona Ambrose and John Baird to run for leader, though both ultimately decided to stay out.

O’toole, meanwhile, has been trying to position himself as the race’s “true blue” candidate who’s more closely aligned with the party’s grassroots than Mackay. Kenney’s endorsemen­t lends significan­t credibilit­y to that strategy.

“I have thought long and hard about my decision to endorse a candidate,” Kenney wrote. “When I served as the Minister of National Defence in Stephen Harper’s Cabinet, I worked closely with Erin O’toole as the Minister of Veterans Affairs. I saw his passion for serving our veterans, his relentless work ethic, and his common sense in solving difficult political challenges. That’s the leadership we need.”

He also praised O’toole’s ability to speak French and said he understand­s “the challenges faced by the West and our energy industry.”

At this point, Mackay and O’toole are the only two candidates in the race to have qualified to be on the final ballot — meaning they’ve paid $300,000 in fees and collected 3,000 party member signatures.

Six other candidates are aiming to meet the March 25 deadline to get onto the final ballot: Marilyn Gladu, Leslyn Lewis, Derek Sloan, Rick Peterson, Jim Karahalios and Rudy Husny.

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