Prairie Post (West Edition)

Frat house party time is over as (not) UCP need new head frat house leader

- BY RYAN DAHLMAN Ryan Dahlman is the managing editor of Prairie Post East and Prairie Post West

There is a lot of action behind the scenes within the Alberta government.

Gone are the days when the biggest controvers­ies were six old boys club buddies sitting on literally on the roof of Sky Palace without masks, enjoy a gourmet meal during a pandemic. Not great optics.

What’s worse now is even uglier optics which went from a steady trickle of numerous political faux pas to a tidal wave of face palming, heart racing and anger inducing blunders.

Jason Kenney is not only the least popular premier in all of Canada (down 9 per cent to 22 percent who like the job he is doing, according to a recent Angus Reid poll), he is not popular within his own party.

In his never-ending strategy of buying time (gave oil industry millionsbu­st; waited to the last minute on many pandemic-related restrictio­ns until it was too late; not addressing the controvers­y with the reports of drinking and bullying with staff), just to name a few.

He is also in trouble when he stated that he was in constant contact with Hinshaw when he took vacation and was not around during the time when Covid-19 cases were spiking. The NDP says that “according to a Nov. 3 letter from Executive Council to the Opposition, there was no email correspond­ence whatsoever between the Premier’s Office and the Office of the Chief Medical Officer of Health during that period.”

It was also released by Health Minister Jason Copping that 15,000 Albertans have had their surgeries delayed or cancelled in August during the fourth wave of COVID-19. Naturally, Kenney threw Chief Medical Officer Deena Hinshaw under the bus suggesting she had more power to make decisions during that time which was different take in 2020 when he said everything had to be cleared through he and then health minister Tyler Shandro. Shandro has been all but invisible since he changed portfolios.

Ugly. Real ugly. The legislatur­e sounds like a dysfunctio­nal frat house where the walls of the legislatur­e are getting worn out as politician­s and bureaucrat­s keep their backs tight against the wall so they aren’t stabbed in their backs with all the knives thrown.

Kenney was able to divert talk of a leadership review until January as he tries to buy some more time to figure all of this out but it is giving time for those who don’t like him to overthrow him and thus get someone in place before the next election which is scheduled for not later than between March 1 and May 31, 2023.

However in the shadows rises a challenger: Brian Jean. Word is he is trying to find a constituen­cy to run in so as to have a seat in the legislatur­e. Jean, you will remember lost to Kenney in the UCP leadership under suspicious circumstan­ces. In the end Kenney received 61.2 per cent of the leadership and Jean (31.5 per cent) and Doug Schweitzer (7.3 per cent).

Herein lies the problem from the UCP, there is a danger that that old never ending problem comes in. It is the Conservati­ves versus the Wildrose all over again and again and again… The infamous crossing over of the Wildrosers to the Conservati­ves (waving at former Wildrose leader Danielle Smith) and now a former Wildrose leader Brian Jean could take over. The thing to remember is that within its own party those who are Conservati­ve (moderately right wing) and the Wildrosers (who are extremely right wing) begrudging­ly work together but deep down don’t like or trust each other. Hence, this is why you have so many issues with leadership and direction.

Jean has leadership experience but will the likes of Schweitzer, or others who were considered but ultimately declined like Leela Aheer (who has been recently critical of Kenney, hmmm); Ric McIver (very silent); or even Rona Ambrose (does she miss politics) consider running if and when Kenney is shown the door.

Hard to know, this why politics can be fascinatin­g. The amount of emotion which has been created through some questionab­le, anger-inducing and sometimes tragic decisions made by the leadership has necessitat­ed a review by the UCP hierarchy.

Watch the political maneuverin­g, who says what and who stays silent… people may despise Kenney, but does this party have anyone who can take charge? They will have a few months to figure it out and a few years to see if it will work.

 ?? ??

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