Pipeline and politics: Notley used Trans Mountain mess to attack Jason Kenney - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:16 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Pipeline and politics: Notley used Trans Mountain mess to attack Jason Kenney

The Alberta NDP government used the mess around the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion as an opportunity to malign United Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney.

Speaking notes, key messages show a strategy to lambast Kenney's policies and political chops

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley used the controversy around the TransMountain pipeline to stage another political offensive on Jason Kenney. (CBC/Canadian Press)

The Alberta NDP government used the TransMountain pipeline expansion mess as an opportunity to try and score political points againstUnited Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney.

Internal documents detailing the NDP government's talking points on the pipeline this spring demonstrate the government's doggedattemptsto paint Kenney as slick and capricious, said Calgary-based pollster Janet Brown.

"They've been trying really hard to back Jason Kenney into a corner, they've been trying really hard to vilify him," Brown said in an interview with CBC Radio's Edmonton AM.

"They're attacking him for things that people admire about him his tenacity, his long history in politics, his slickness and determination as a politician."

Through a freedom of information request,CBCNews obtained 28 pages of internal documents mostlyemails, speech notes and talking points for media scrums.

The Opposition Leader has no strategyonly temper tantrums.- NDP talking points

The documents account for all communications between Energy Minister MargaretMcCuaig-Boydand her chief of staff from April 8, when Kinder Morgan issued an ultimatum on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, to May 29, the day the federal government announced it would buy the embattled pipeline.

Pages of the talking points are dedicated to lambastingKenney'spolicies and political chops. One section of the suggested talking points is titled "Kenney'sEnergy Flip flops.'

The documents describeKenneyas "just another Ottawa politician" who "can't keep his story straight" and who "has no strategy only temper tantrums."

"The Opposition Leader sat on his hands for a decade in Ottawa He failed to do his job so we'll do it for him," reads the document.

But Brown said the strategy might backfire againstNotleyin the next election, which must be held on or before May 31, 2019.

"All they're doing is reminding people about the things they begrudgingly respect about JasonKenney," Brown said.

A series of focus groups conducted by CBC in May suggested that Notley is more popular than her party, while Kenney is not as popular as the UCP.

I feel sorry for this government.-WarrenKinsella

"The more they (the NDP)harp on Kenney on a personal level, it will leave Albertans wondering whether they are really focused on the key issues" said Brown.

Political strategist WarrenKinsellaagrees that keeping Kenneyin the crosshairs is not the strategy to keep Notley from failure in the next election.

Long before the Trans Mountain controversy erupted this spring,plummeting oil priceshad already played havoc with the NDP government's re-election efforts, he said.

"They're nervous, they're concerned," said Kinsella, who noted that the reigning NDPis acting like they're in opposition."The polls have been showing for months that Kenney is the one to beat.

"I feel sorry for this government because I think Notley is a decent and effective leader. But just the bottom line is,she's likely to lose because of something completely beyond her control."

With files from Clare Bonnyman, producer with CBC Edmonton AM