Nutty Jason Kenney, A History: Part 1
Jason as nationalist cowboy. |
Jason Kenney’s an interesting guy. He’s not
likeable like Ralph Klein or Justin Trudeau. He’s not a policy wonk like his
mentor, Stephen Harper. And, like Jim Prentice, he's a federal politician who's come to Alberta to make it big in provincial politics.
So, what
does he have going for him? First, he works 80 hour days. Second, he’s kind of
nutty and in this day and age of populist rhetoric, people like nutty.
Just think of Donald Trump’s brag when he
was running for president. “I will build a Great Wall – and nobody builds walls
better than me, believe me – and I’ll build them very inexpensively. I will
build a great, Great Wall on our southern border, and I will make Mexico pay
for that wall. Mark my words” Who talks like that and who believes it? Nutty right? But the
people ate it up chanting “Build the wall. Build the wall” in many of his
speeches.
Jason doesn’t say anything that nutty
because, even here in Alberta, we don’t have the U.S. appetite for misogynist, racist crazies who have answers to all the world problems without having picked up a book. However,
that doesn’t mean we don't like nutty within reason.
Take for example, Jason’s claim that he
speaks for the average Albertan. Yet, he’s spent less time in Alberta than either
of his major rivals, Brian Jean or Rachel Notley. In fact, one could argue that
Alberta is a home of convenience for Jason Kenney; political opportunism if you
will.
Jason was born in 1968 in Oakville, Ontario but didn’t move to
Alberta until 1993. In 1976, he moved
to
Saskatchewan, when his dad, Martin, took the position of president at Notre Dame College in the tiny town of Wilcox, population 339. As
well as being an oasis of academia in the middle of nowhere, Notre Dame was
known for its athletics program.
Martin Kenney |
Martin continued a focus on athletics by
raising enough money from donations to build an Olympic sized hockey rink. His
efforts resulted in more than a few NHL stars graduating from his program;
guys like Wendel Clark, Brad Richards, Curtis
Joseph, Jordan Eberle and Vincent Lecavalier. Ron Maclean even paid tribute to
Martin on Hockey Night in Canada when he died in 2010.
But Jason had no interest in hockey. He loved politics so much that his childhood hero was John Diefenbaker who he’d met at the school.
He memorized election results, both federal and provincial that he can still
recall with surprising accuracy, says Canadian journalist Paul Wells.
Jason’s
other big interest was religion. Despite being raised Anglican, he studied
Catholic history and theology in a monastic community and regularly attended
mass. Some thought he even had his heart set on becoming a priest. Yet, he
didn’t convert to Catholicism until his third year of university.
After
graduating from high school, Jason followed this passion for religion by
entering St. Ignatius Institute at the Jesuit run University of San Francisco.
St. Ignatius had been started in 1971 by a right-wing priest by the name of
Father Joseph Fessio who didn’t think the university was following Catholic
doctrine. The institute attracted only 150 of the university’s 6600 students
yet caused controversy out of all proportion to its numbers.
Pope John Paul II, Ron & Nancy |
Compared to Pope Francis of today, Pope John Paul II was a pretty pious dude. In 1990, he signed a decree that stipulated all professors get a mandate from the bishop proving they followed the church’s proclamations regarding contraception, abortion and homosexuality. St. Ignatius institute signed the decree. The department of theology at USF did nor did many other Catholic theology departments in the U.S.
Back in
1987, Jason Kenney, let everyone know where he stood on the issue of
homosexuality, abortion and contraception in an opinion piece he wrote for the
campus paper, The San Francisco Foghorn.
In it, he criticized American Catholics for picking and
choosing what Catholic teachings they would obey and ridiculed them for their
"blatant dissent of Papal teaching authority." Yet, he wasn’t even
Catholic at the time.
His pious pomposity
made him popular among the tiny group of students at St. Ignatius. As a result, his
classmates elected him freshman class president. From there, he’d take his self-righteous
rigour to the student senate where he began advocating for the saying of a
traditional Catholic prayer before every session of the student senate. Father
Christopher Cartwright, who disagreed with Jason at the time, said that he was
one of those people who believe “there’s right, and there’s wrong—no grey
areas. If you don’t agree with them, then you’re pretty much the enemy.”
When the Woman's
Law Association set up a table at a USF campus fair to collect signatures for a
national abortion rights petition, Jason and a bunch of his henchmen showed up demanding
that the women leave. One of the women, Laurie Moore said, “we knew we had to
go—we were afraid—but we knew this was wrong.” Jason
didn’t. He demanded that the student senate suspend the Association's charter,
which they did. (Video of the CNN report of the UFS campus controversy.)
Then the
American Civil Liberties Union got involved and Jason was accused of infringing
on free speech. He responded by saying, "there are certain absolute
values” and called abortion, “the legalized
mass-murder of innocent unborn children.” To Jason’s chagrin, the university
acquiesced to demands for free speech and instituted a policy to that effect in
1989. The Women’s Law Association could continue to advocate for women’s right
to an abortion
So, Jason, with
a bunch of his St. Ignatius buddies, made an ecclesiastical petition to the
archbishop demanding that he remove the Catholic designation from the university.
The controversy got the attention of the media and, in an interview with CNN,
Jason stated that the women were “essentially destroying the mission and
purpose of the university.” The archbishop refused to remove USF’s Catholic
designation so Jason and one other student said they would appeal the
archbishop’s decision by sending a petition to the Vatican.
Jason went away
on summer break and the petition was never sent because he and the other
petitioning student were no longer attending the institution. The
administrators at USF were getting a little tired of Jason and St. Ignatius
Institute in general. In 2001, Father Stephen Privett, the president of the
university, fired the entire staff at the institute.
Without
university, Jason decided to pursue politics that may have become more than a
passion for him at this time. In a cyclical, Pope John Paul II had argued
that politicians had an important role in fostering “a culture of life” and the
use of abortion, contraception and assisted suicide. After reading it, Jason
told USF Republicans, that, like the priesthood, he would make politics a
vocation. He said, “I was called to politics, not qua [for the
sake of] politics but…as a promotion of the message of the gospel of life.”
More to come.
More to come.
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