Tuesday, November 02, 2021

The Fall Of Jason Kenney

 


Jason Kenney once bestrode Alberta like a colossus. Now, Jason Markusoff writes, he's on the way out:

When he first rode into Alberta in his blue pickup truck, Kenney seemed a canny long-term thinker, perfectly executing a complex plan to take the reins of the province. Within three years, he won leadership of the once-invincible Alberta Progressive Conservatives, merged them with the right-wing Wildrose Party, became leader of the United Conservatives and easily ousted the NDP in the April 2019 election. He did it all with a mix of cheery populism and screw-our-enemies combativeness, but governing has proven far trickier. Among other things, the man who won by promising to fight “unapologetically” for Albertans has had to issue three apologies to them in 2021, all for COVID-related debacles.

COVID has changed Kenney's fortunes:

The stunning wrongness of his pandemic approach worsened a brutal fourth wave and triggered a health-care catastrophe, while uncorking political anger that had been building since before the pandemic. By disappointing people on both sides of this polarizing issue, Kenney has infuriated not only those who never voted for him, but also the deeply conservative Albertans who voted for the idea of a supercharged right-wing leader.

It’s crippled Kenney’s leadership of the United Conservative Party, where quiet internal grumbles about the premier’s high-handedness have devolved into open hostility and demands—not least from his own MLAs—for his resignation. Barring a miraculous turnaround, his days as premier appear numbered. Even his loyalists say so. And his political demise, later this year or early next, would mark a stunning reversal of fortune. Only two years ago, voters had embraced Kenney as a political colossus who’d make Alberta muscular again. He’d swooped westward from Ottawa, where he had dazzled with his smarts, steadfastness, tactical cunning and communications savvy. Those talents have now either abandoned him or proven to be overblown, while his calamitous mistakes have taken a toll—on his reputation, his party and his province. It’s a downfall story whose operatic scale is eclipsed only by the gravity of its real-world consequences, measured in human suffering and lives lost. How did one of Canada’s most successful politicians—a conservative star whose entire career seemed to lead him to a top job—fail so badly, just when Alberta needed him most?

All politicians have a best before date. Kenney has long since passed his.

Image: Global News

10 comments:

Northern PoV said...

Kenney arrived in the Canadian consciousness when he was already well beyond his bbd.

And his rottenness has spoiled all the barrels he jumped into.

Anonymous said...

A couple of things:

1. The UCP is a bad marriage of rural Wild Rose wingnuts and urban Progressive Conservatives. The rural population remains largely anti-vax and its MLAs agitate accordingly. The urban population is largely vaccinated and its MLAs want vaccine mandates and other public health precautions. So far, Kenney has sided mostly with the wingnuts, and Alberta's Covid numbers prove it. I wouldn't be surprised if the UCP experiment ends in divorce.

2. Kenney gets far too much credit from the press for tactical cunning. Since his "curry in a hurry" days, Kenney has been taking credit for Harper's ideas. But Kenney doesn't have Harper's ability to control his minions, which is why the UCP is showing divisions. Even Ford had the good sense to make an example of Hillier, kicking him out of caucus for his anti-vax lunacy. Kenney will pay the price for trying to please everyone.

Cap

Owen Gray said...

I agree, Cap. And the quicker he exits the stage, the better.

Owen Gray said...

Some people have a talent for destroying everything they touch, PoV.

The Disaffected Lib said...

I caught a TV spot from Alberta's health ministry. It featured actors portraying people with cancer or heart conditions or other calamities who can't get diagnostics or therapy or surgery because the hospitals are crippled by Covid cases.

A breathtaking volte face by the UCP.

Owen Gray said...

That's Trumpian politics at its best, Mound: Deny the patently obvious.

e.a.f. said...

Kenny never was as advertised. He looked good, to some as part of Harper's cabinet, but that was it. Harper called the tunes and the rest danced. Kenny never did come up with an original thought. He not only had Harper but experienced deputy ministers and other staff.

There isn't much to driving around in a pick up truck and meeting with those who already like you and there is a great difference between campaigning and "governing". Unfortunately Jason believed his own press. That is always a bad thing and there was no one to tell him he was wrong. No one to tell him NO. He was like a kid in a candy store. Then he decided to go to war with the medical staff in the province. That is always a bad thing to do because every one needs a health care professional. The majority of people like their doctors and nurses so when they're being attacked, people take it seriously.

Now COVID wasn't something any government was able to plan for, but some did get it right and did things which helped the citizens of their bailey wick. Trudeau sent out cheques. Smart move. B.C. got it right, so did the Maritimes. Ontario did fine as did Quebec. There were way too many deaths of seniors in Care homes in Ontario and Quebec, but the premiers got out in front of it. Kenny seemed so pre occupied by "the economy", it seemed like people didn't matter. Then there was his constant foot stamping on oil and gas. He couldn't come up with a new plan for the Alberta economy. He wasn't on friendly terms with the mayors of either large city which didn't help.

My take on Jason Kenny is he didn't have much real life experience and that is what did him in when things got tough. A monkey can run a province when the times are good. It takes a really good politician to run a province when the chips are down.

It will be better for all if Jason makes a quick exit and joins the rest of the boys at the Manning not so thinking tanks.

Owen Gray said...

I suspect Jason thinks he can survive, e.a.f. The truth hasn't dawned on him yet.

Anonymous said...

!?

David Climenhaga shows how Kenney shamelessly tries to throw Chief Medical Officer of Health Deena Hinshaw under the bus for his asinine decision to drop all common sense on July 1.
https://albertapolitics.ca/2021/11/jason-kenney-throws-chief-medical-officer-of-health-under-the-bus-for-albertas-vicious-fourth-wave-of-covid-19/

Owen Gray said...

Climenhaga has seen through Kenney from the beginning, !