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Kenney’s plan to step down as UCP leader shows how hard merging 2 parties is: political commentator

Click to play video: 'Political scientist weighs in on Kenney’s decision to resign following UCP leadership review'
Political scientist weighs in on Kenney’s decision to resign following UCP leadership review
WATCH ABOVE: Mount Royal political scientist Lori Williams weighs in on the results of the UCP leadership review, Jason Kenney's plan to resign as leader and what happens next. – May 18, 2022

The difficulty that can result from merging two political parties was underscored by Premier Jason Kenney’s announcement Wednesday that he intends to step down as leader of Alberta’s United Conservative Party, according to one political commentator.

“The first problem that has to be acknowledged, and we’re seeing this at the federal level as well, is that combined conservative parties are difficult to lead,” Lori Williams, an associate professor of policy studies at Mount Royal University, told Global News on Wednesday night.

Earlier in the evening, Kenney spoke to UCP members immediately following the party releasing results from his leadership review vote which saw his leadership earn support from only 51.4 per cent of those who cast a vote.

READ MORE: Alberta Premier Jason Kenney intends to step down as UCP leader after narrow leadership win

“(Combined conservative parties are) difficult to govern, they’re difficult to manage and indeed the only recent leader that’s been successful in doing so was (former prime minister) Stephen Harper,” Williams said.

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“It has to be said that this was a difficult job to be done, and the fact that Jason Kenney brought the parties together and got them to agree to go forward was quite an accomplishment, but a difficult thing to sustain.”

Click to play video: 'Reaction to UCP leadership vote results'
Reaction to UCP leadership vote results

Last year, several UCP constituency associations had pushed to have Kenney face an early leadership review. He had faced growing and more vocal dissent with some party members being angered by his response to the COVID-19 pandemic, seeing many of his government’s public health restrictions as unreasonably infringing on personal liberties.

Two constituency association presidents Global News spoke with Wednesday indicated they understand and respect Kenney’s decision.

“I wish him all the best and well and hopefully he’s right, we’ll clear the air and the future leadership race will set a new tone for our party and we’ll hopefully all come together under the new leader,” said Victor Vargas of the Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview UCP Constituency Association

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“I think Jason Kenney didn’t often get a lot of the credit he deserved… still, he made the decision that is probably best for our party and our province going forward.”

Conrad van Hierden of the Livingstone-Macleod UCP Constituency Association said he knew the leadership review vote “could be close, could be controversial, but at the end we wanted unity and at 51 or 52 per cent or whatever it was, it wouldn’t have been that.”

“He’s such a smart man,” he said of the premier. “He knows what’s probably best for the party and we do need to unite because we can’t divide.

“We can’t have two conservative parties.”

“The people who came together (when the Wildrose Party and Progressive Conservative Party merged to form the UCP) didn’t agree with one another on a lot of different points,” Williams said. “And in some cases, they didn’t like or respect one another, and I think the combative style of leadership that Jason Kenney chose to deal with, that magnified some of the divisions.

“There are a lot of folks in this party who are grassroots democracy advocates who want the government to actually listen to and respond to them, (and) I think a lot of folks in that party were saying, ‘What’s the point in being part of the governing party if the government doesn’t listen to us? Why not just have our own party and speak our minds?'”

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READ MORE: Kenney seriously considered leaving his post before deciding to fight for his job: audio recording

Williams added that she believes Kenney was expecting to have to face some hostile colleagues at a caucus meeting Thursday after the results of the vote were released, and realized “the future wasn’t going to get any better for him.”

The premier’s most high-profile political foe, a UCP MLA who lost the party’s 2017 leadership race to Kenney, told 630 CHED on Wednesday that the leader’s announcement was “the right thing to do and it was the honourable, decent thing for him to do and very professional.”

“I want to thank Jason Kenney for his quarter-century of public service for Albertans and Canadians,” Brian Jean said. “I’ve said it for several weeks now that if he could not get a survivable number, the members have clearly spoken.

“They want a United Conservative Party that listens, that consults and that thoughtfully implements practical and effective conservative policies that will benefit all Albertans, and I think that’s what’s important — tonight they’ve had their say.”

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The 2017 leadership race in which Jean lost to Kenney remains under RCMP investigation after allegations of criminal identity fraud were made. Jean has also raised concerns about allegations this month’s leadership review saw illegal bulk buying of memberships. The Canadian Press has reported that documents leaked to them indicate Elections Alberta is investigating those concerns.

READ MORE: MLA Brian Jean says 8 credit cards allegedly bought thousands of UCP memberships

“We have some great talented people — Albertans — that can take the reins from here and I think the best thing for Jason Kenney to do now is to step out of the limelight and leave us to try and rebuild and renew this party,” Jean said, adding that he still plans to put his name forward for the next UCP leadership race.

Jean noted the UCP was created in part with the intent of gaining support from “all types of conservatives” to avoid another electoral win by the NDP, which won a majority in the 2015 election.

Another frequent target of Kenney thanked the premier for his service when Opposition Leader Rachel Notley acknowledged “his long service to the people of our country and our province.”

“I know what it’s like to be premier. I know the toll that it takes and the sacrifice that it calls for. And I know that Jason Kenney has experienced both of those things,” she said.

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Click to play video: 'Edmonton MP says Kenney’s resignation shows ‘disturbing trend’ of rise in extreme conservatism'
Edmonton MP says Kenney’s resignation shows ‘disturbing trend’ of rise in extreme conservatism

Notley made a campaign-style appeal to Albertans Thursday while at a news conference in front of other Alberta NDP candidates readied for the next provincial election.

“We didn’t have a government focused on governing for months and months and months leading up to yesterday,” she said. “And now I suppose what’s changed is we know definitely that we won’t have that for months and months and months going forward, and that probably would have been the case no matter what happened yesterday.

“The UCP has been missing in action, they’ve been absentee, and now they officially have to go into caretaker mode.”

Williams suggested that with a provincial election expected to take place about a year from now, Kenney’s announcement Wednesday still gives the UCP an opportunity to regroup before voters head to the polls.

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“(The coming UCP) leadership race probably won’t be concluded until the fall,” she said. “That might be enough for them to stick together to make it through the next election, but much is going to depend on who that leader is.”

–With files from Adam Toy, Global News, and Dean Bennett and Colette Derworiz, The Canadian Press

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