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VIDEO: Airdrie-Cochrane MLA calls for UCP leadership contest in wake of cancellation of in-person vote

A southern Alberta MLA says the move from an in-person vote to mail-in ballot in the UCP leadership review shows Kenney knows he is unlikely to remain the premier.
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Airdrie-Cochrane MLA Peter Guthrie.

Airdrie-Cochrane MLA Peter Guthrie has publicly declared his desire to see Jason Kenney face a leadership contest, after the UCP Board of Directors announced changes to how this April's leadership review will be conducted.

On March 24, Guthrie posted a statement on his social media condemning a move by the UCP Board of Directors to cancel an in-person leadership review slated for April 9, 2022, in favour of a mail-in ballot review process. 

"Membership signed up to the special general meeting in record-breaking fashion," Guthrie wrote. "However, after extensive polling and knowing full well that large numbers of registrations typically mean dissatisfaction, yesterday the UCP bard announced the cancellation of the in-person event — electing for mail-in balloting." 

The UCP stated their reasoning for changing the format was to accommodate an influx of new party registrations.

Guthrie went on to say that the decision to change the format of the review to a mail-in process was indicative of a premier who could not win said leadership review. 

"Obviously, it became clear that the premier could not win an in-person review and altering the rules was determined as the best course of action in hopes of salvaging a win," Guthrie said. "In my opinion, yesterday's announcement is the equivalent to tossing in the proverbial [sic] towel." 

Guthrie, claiming the integrity of the process is now tainted, threw his support behind the nuclear option: ousting Jason Kenney as leader. 

"The party should forgo the review fiasco and move immediately forward with a leadership contest to save the credibility of the party and find a new leader," Guthrie said. 

In the video portion of Guthrie's statement, he added further speculation as to why the UCP board chose this route, saying that the legal challenges that are sure to follow will keep the process in limbo long enough for any leadership review to be effectively toothless. 

"There will certainly be a court challenge," he said. "Based on the fact this is in contravention of the provincial Societies Act, not to mention the party's own bylaws. Those involved are counting on the fact that it will take months to find the resolution and most likely too late to take corrective action before the next general election." 

Guthrie did not mince words about Premier Kenney, claiming he was practising identity politics and invoked the spirit of the convoy protests to make his point, at one point comparing Kenney to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

"The premier has taken to the use of terminology such as extremist to define anyone who is in opposition to him,' Guthrie said. "It's a kind of politics of personal destruction and uses identity politics to classify people so their opinions can be dismissed or cancelled." 

"Similarities can easily be drawn to ... Justin Trudeau who has deemed those that oppose him the 'fringe minority.'"

Prime Minister Trudeau did not deem all those in opposition to his government as members of a fringe minority but did claim the majority of those involved in the trucker convoy protests represented a fringe minority of Canadians. 

Former Wildrose Party Leader Brian Jean has re-emerged as a contender seeking to take Premier Kenney's job in recent weeks. However, Guthrie did not directly state whether he supports Jean's ambitions or merely wants to see a leadership contest writ large.

"I believe there will be a lot of interested candidates from all across the province who will come forward to help restore faith in the process and repair trust in the role of leadership," Guthrie said. 

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