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Analysis

United Conservative Party Members Keep Getting Fed Up With Jason Kenney and Quitting His Party

Lies, betrayals and mass resignations – welcome to Jason Kenney’s United Conservative Party

Jason Kenney is alienating party supporters across the province by failing to deliver on his “grassroots guarantee.”

Kenney won the leadership of the United Conservative Party largely by promising right-wingers he would give them decision-making power in the party.

After Kenney walked away with the leadership, many UCPers learned the new party was a lot more top-down than Kenney led them to believe.

The discontent within the UCP ranks has left the elections commissioner swamped with complaints. Elsewhere, the party has been plagued by resignations, protests and infighting.

Since this has been an ongoing pattern since the party’s founding AGM, here are some memorable grassroots betrayals from the last year:

17 UCP constituency members resign in over Kenney’s “dictatorial” leadership

As recently as last Friday, StarMetro Calgary reported seventeen members resigned from the constituency association board in Calgary-Falconridge in protest against the broken promise of grassroots participation.

Their letter, submitted to UCP Executive Director Janice Harrington, called party leadership “dictatorial” and said they were sidelined on candidate selection and memberships.

UCP constituency association levels accusations at Jason Kenney’s handpicked “parachute candidate”

A similar incident to the mass resignation happened last October when nine board members of a UCP constituency association accused Jason Kenney of parachuting a personal acquaintance into their local riding.

Caylan Ford, an Ontario resident who charmed Kenney at a meet-and-greet, moved to Alberta to run as a UCP candidate in Calgary-Mountainview.

When she won the nomination, the board accused her of deliberately misleading the party about her residential history in the province. The board also accused the party brass of sidelining the grassroots to cut “insider deals.”

UCP constituency board member resigns over Jason Kenney’s anti-gay activism

Cody Johnston, a former member of multiple UCP constituency association boards, resigned from the party in December, calling Kenney’s social conservative activism opposing LGBTQ rights “disgusting” and likening the UCP leader to a “troglodyte.”

Johnston’s resignation was triggered by a resurfaced audio clip of Kenney bragging about leading an initiative to deny hospital visitation rights to gay couples at the height of the 1980s AIDS epidemic in San Francisco.

Former UCP member accuses Kenney of scamming him

Bizarre allegations emerged against Jason Kenney in late 2018.

Apparently lured by the opportunity to run as a candidate in Kenney’s UCP, Edmonton entrepreneur Tariq Chaudhry worked hard to sign up members on the leader’s behalf.

In a sworn affidavit, Chaudhry asserts that he in fact paid for many of the membership fees himself at Kenney’s request.

Chaudhry says Kenney asked him to throw him an Eid banquet so that he could use it as a photo op. But Kenney wouldn’t speak to him at the banquet, stopped replying to his messages and never compensated him for the cost of the banquet.

This was the second event he’d organized for the UCP leader. Combined, he says the two events cost him $20,000, which the party made no effort to pay for.

Ballot stuffing chaos in Calgary-North

Then there was the infamous ballot stuffing scandal in Calgary-North that pitted grassroots members of the community against the party

After dramatic footage surfaced showing a large crowd of angry UCP members confronting party officials over voting irregularities, UCP MLA Prab Gil resigned from the party.

Gil later denied doing it and claimed Kenney’s party threatened to “bankrupt” him through an expensive legal battle if he didn’t take one for the team.

Outgoing UCP MLA points to “discrepancies” in nomination battle

Two nomination contestants in Calgary-Highwood questioned the validity of the nomination process after the riding was won by RJ Sigurdson.

Nomination hopeful Carrie Fischer submitted a complaint to the party, but UCP leadership declined to investigate.

But when Wayne Anderson, who also would have run as the incumbent MLA, noted similar “discrepancies,” he lodged his formal complaint with the elections commissioner.

Bernard the Roughneck is feeling alienated

Jason Kenney’s leadership has even strained the loyalty of “Bernard the Roughneck,” a former Rebel Media personality described as “Canada’s Joe the Plumber.”

The right-wing performance artist hasn’t been shy about his disappointment about how Kenney’s party is being run.

Must be a confusing time for Bernard.

 

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