A series of videos uploaded to TikTok (used @jay_of_sunshine / @Jay) regarding the ongoing UCP leadership race purports to show a money motive behind the campaign to removed Alberta Premier Jason Kenney as the UCP leader and then elect former Wildrose leader Danielle Smith in his place.
At the end of the day, Danielle Smith talks a lot and dictates to government officials about how they should have gotten punted from their jobs to stand for freedom, while she never actually put anything on the line herself, and enforced strict COVID-19 measures at her restaurant, and only gained popularity from her grandstanding.
When asked about the WEF Toews agreed that the influential non-profit’s left-wing values and syndicalist/corporatist economic policies were completely out-of-line with what a Conservative should believe and stated “Ministers in my cabinet will not be allowed to attend WEF events.”
At a 10 am press conference this morning, UCP leadership candidates Brian Jean, Travis Toews, Leela Aheer, and Rajan Sawhney, united together to criticize Danielle Smith’s proposed Sovereignty Act plan, which she says will allow the Alberta government to ignore federal policies that in some way infringe on provincial jurisdiction.
UCP influencer and Alberta political commentator Ambrose Ralph recently uncovered an old podcast recording featuring former Wildrose Party leader and current UCP leadership candidate back in 2012 saying Hillary Clinton “would have been a terrific president actually.”
Recently both Kenney and Lakhani have spoken out against the hypothetical Sovereignty Act proposal that former Wildrose leader and current UCP leadership candidate Danielle Smith has been putting forward.
In a move that demonstrates how radical the legacy media has become in Canada, CTV News and woke social activists attacked UCP leadership candidate Brian Jean for saying that biological men and women should compete in separate sports leagues to safeguard competitiveness.
Well, that seems to be a load of bologna, seeing as The National Telegraph has been made aware of the fact that Butler was still doing work for the BC NDP in July of 2022, a year after he supposedly had moved away from the left-wing pro-mandate parties.
In response to the article, as well as the video that Alberta political commentator Ambrose Ralph made on his show Alberta To The Point, Smith and her campaign launched a chaotic defense strategy. They acted as if Ambrose and TNT had personally attacked Butler, likely because they know Smith is the real subject matter of both of the reports.
[Smith] already indicated that someone like Butler is part of the “big tent party” she wants to lead, which should make UCP members question what the party will look like if someone who is “obviously a strong federal Liberal” will be perfectly comfortable inside a United Conservative Party led by Smith.
[…] National Telegraph […]