Medicine Hat News

What some are saying it means for the state of conservati­sm

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

The fall of Jason Kenney, a juggernaut of conservati­sm in Canada, has prompted many federal Tories to consider the future of the party, which is in the midst a leadership race seen as a fractious fight for its soul.

Conservati­ve MPs on Thursday reacted to Kenney’s resignatio­n as Alberta premier with a mix of sadness, surprise and gratitude for his years of public service. The party stalwart served in the cabinet of former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper.

He announced his resignatio­n as UCP leader late Wednesday after narrowly winning a leadership review with just over 51 per cent of the vote. That followed months of open rebellion by MLAs who, among other things, fiercely opposed Kenney’s imposition of lockdowns and vaccine passports.

“This is a time, I think, of quiet reflection for conservati­ves in Alberta and in the conservati­ve movement,” said Calgary MP Stephanie Kusie, who is assisting with Pierre Poilievre’s leadership campaign in the federal race.

“This is also a time not to panic, not to get excited, not to fight each other, but to stay focused on the principles and values which have allowed us to win before.”

But that may be too late. Kenney is the latest conservati­ve leader in Canada to have found himself on the outs with his party’s base for reasons that include their handling of the pandemic.

The last example before him was former CPC leader Erin O’Toole, who was forced out in early February by a majority of his MPs. That breakup followed his struggle to satisfy supporters with a firm enough stance against vaccine mandates, as well as caucus disputes over his reversal on carbon pricing and gun control policies in an attempt to moderate the party’s image.

Tourism Minister Randy Boissonnau­lt, a Liberal MP from Edmonton, said Thursday he sees a trend of conservati­ve leaders being pushed out of their parties for not being “extreme enough,” saying that should be a wake-up call to the movement’s moderates.

Before their falls, Kenney and O’Toole both painted themselves as trying to build modern, mainstream conservati­ve parties that some darker, more extreme elements from within were trying to take in a different direction.

Veteran Conservati­ve strategist Melanie Paradis sees that as being a direction fuelled by anger.

“Close observers have seen the movement going in this direction for awhile.”

O’Toole and Kenney critics both faulted the pair for failing to manage their caucuses and leading with a myway-or-the-highway approach.

Longtime Ontario MP Michael Chong, who served alongside Kenney in Harper’s cabinet, said he believes conservati­ve parties, both federal and provincial ones, are right now a reflection of the level of frustratio­n Canadians feel after two years of pandemic living.

How much the Conservati­ve party, namely those running to be its next leader, should lean into that frustratio­n is up for debate.

“I think there is tremendous risk in the long-term. It may generate shortterm gain, but there’s tremendous risk in the long-term to holding up a mirror to anger instead of acknowledg­ing it and offering solutions,” said Paradis.

Poilievre, the longtime MP from Ottawa, has been accused by rival candidates of running a campaign of divisivene­ss and embracing support from the right-wing, anti-mandate and antigovern­ment populism that was on display during the convoy protests seen across the country earlier this year.

The leadership contest has been contentiou­s and at times involved candidates lobbing personal attacks at one another. The dynamics of the race recently spilled over into the caucus room.

Ed Fast, a longtime MP who is helping chair Jean Charest’s leadership campaign, stepped down from his role as the Conservati­ve finance critic late Wednesday.

Earlier that day, he had criticized Poilievre for proposing to fire the Bank of Canada governor over the country’s high inflation rate.

“Mr. Poilievre’s statements on monetary policy needed to be addressed. And I have absolutely no regrets for doing that,” Fast said on Thursday.

Fast had told reporters he believed Poilievre’s pledge hurt the party’s credibilit­y on economic issues and counted as interferin­g with the central bank’s independen­ce.

Some within caucus felt Fast had crossed a line by invoking his finance critic title in his remarks. Fast said he was made to feel like he needed to stay silent on Poilievre’s attacks against the central bank and promotion of the cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin as a solution to inflation.

“You cannot be finance critic and then have an expectatio­n from a leadership candidate that you should not speak out on issues he is speaking out on and that you vehemently disagree with,” Fast said, though he declined to provide more details about what happened behind closed doors.

“I’m not going to comment on who said what and when and how. These are caucus colleagues, and my conversati­ons with my caucus colleagues are confidenti­al.”

At the end of the day, Fast said, he and interim Conservati­ve leader Candice Bergen felt his position as finance critic had become “untenable,” adding that the issue had been brewing for some time.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Former CPC leader Erin O’Toole and current candidate for the job Pierre Poilievre are shown in Ottawa in this May 2015 file photo.
CP FILE PHOTO Former CPC leader Erin O’Toole and current candidate for the job Pierre Poilievre are shown in Ottawa in this May 2015 file photo.

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