Jason Kenney wooed Alberta’s conservatives. Next, the rest of Alberta.Throwing red meat to the base is fun, but Kenney’s social conservatism could now be a liability
For Jason Kenney and Brian Jean, it’s Alberta versus the worldThe would-be leaders of Alberta’s new conservative party envision a province preoccupied with its own interests, powers and identity. Where could they have gotten an idea like that?
Jason Kenney, Brian Jean and the war to define Alberta conservatismA vote to merge will formally kick off the race to lead Alberta’s United Conservative Party. That’s where things get weird.
Now the fight to lead Alberta’s united right beginsBoth Jason Kenney and Brian Jean are eager to challenge each other to be the dismantler-in-chief of the Alberta NDP government
Lessons from Alberta’s disillusioned ToriesAppetite for a new Conservative party was modest at a Calgary dinner, where the bitter memory of vote-splitting is still a searing one.
Bill Morneau serves up a sleeper: Ottawa Power RankingsWho’s up in the nation’s capital? A Liberal backbencher wins big. Who’s down? The finance minister misses his big moment.
Kenney’s won the Tory crown. Now he needs to keep winning.Jason Kenney takes hold of the Progressive Conservatives. Next on his to-do list: merge with another party.
Why Canada’s status quo at the border can’t lastWith asylum-seekers risking everything to thwart it, how long can Canada’s safe-country deal with the U.S. survive?
A tougher refugee border pact? America said no.Jason Kenney says the Obama administration rebuffed his plea in 2010 to renegotiate the safe third-country agreement
The Alberta PCs are burning. That’s fine by Jason Kenney.Despite the drama inflaming the Alberta PCs, Jason Kenney continues to hurtle toward the party leadership—and a potential merger