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John Kenney: Evolution Of A Self-Proclaimed Attack Dog

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  • John Kenney: Evolution Of A Self-Proclaimed Attack Dog

    JASON KENNEY: EVOLUTION OF A SELF-PROCLAIMED ATTACK DOG
    By John Geddes

    Maclean's
    May 25, 2009
    Canada

    It's not surprising that the phrase "attack dog" crops up in an
    interview about Immigration Minister Jason Kenney. The Calgary MP
    is, after all, a hard-hitting House debater known for dropping the
    rhetorical gloves. What is unexpected is that Kenney applies the
    term to himself. Asked about his parliamentary style, he volunteers,
    "I think when I was in opposition I developed a reputation as an
    attack dog."

    Not that he's regretful. "Even if I threw some rhetorical bombs across
    the aisle," he says, "it was never personal." Now that he's in the
    Conservative cabinet on the government side, Kenney, who turns 41
    later this month, claims he doesn't mind being the target of question
    period salvos. "It's an adversarial system," he says. "We shouldn't
    cringe at that fact." He even argues that if cameras had been around
    since the start of the British parliamentary system, every era's
    "rhetorical excesses" would have shocked outsiders as much as today's
    often bitterly partisan tone in Ottawa.

    That is, of course, a debatable claim. Many veteran MPs say they've
    never seen the House so uncivil as it is these days. But Kenney has
    more credibility than other combative Tory MPs when he makes the
    case that bruising debate is compatible with a healthy House. In the
    recent Maclean's survey of all 308 members of Parliament--which this
    year saw responses from 214 MPs representing every party--he emerged
    triumphant with by far the highest score for best MP overall.

    How does that high standing square with his tough streak? Well,
    many MPs know his other side. For all Kenney's partisanship, he's
    willing to see the good in his rivals. Asked about role models, he
    cites Bill Blaikie, the former NDP MP from Winnipeg, who retired last
    year after nearly 30 years in federal politics (capped by being voted
    top MP in the 2007 Parliamentarian of the Year Awards). "I regarded
    Bill Blaikie as a model parliamentarian," Kenney says. "He managed
    to keep his strong convictions intact without compromising them."

    Blaikie's convictions were rooted in the Prairie "social gospel"
    tradition. Kenney is, in part, a product of the contrasting Western
    tradition--right-wing populism. Although born in Ontario, he grew up in
    Winnipeg and little Wilcox, Sask. (pop. 262), where he finished high
    school at Notre Dame College. He went on to study philosophy at the
    University of San Francisco, where he picked up his neo-conservative
    doctrine, but not before a stint as an undergraduate Liberal volunteer
    in Saskatchewan. He even served briefly as executive assistant to
    Liberal Ralph Goodale (who was voted top MP in the 2006 Parliamentarian
    of the Year Awards).

    He flushed Liberalism out of his system early. At only 23, he was
    making a name for himself in conservative circles as the firebrand
    president of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. He was a natural
    recruit for Manning's party in the 1997 election. But Kenney says
    he never saw himself as a hardcore Reformer, but rather as a bridge
    between the Western upstarts and the old Tories.

    After Harper reunited the right in 2003, however, Kenney's place
    in the new Conservatives' top tier didn't appear assured. He was
    passed over for cabinet after Harper won the 2006 election, serving
    first as the Prime Minister's parliamentary secretary and then as
    secretary of state for multiculturalism. His tireless work reaching
    out to traditionally Liberal-voting urban ethnic communities was a
    natural stepping stone to his appointment, after last fall's election,
    to the citizenship and immigration portfolio.

    Already he's shaping up to be the most controversial immigration
    minister in recent memory, calling for newcomers to speak better
    English or French, and absorb Canadian values faster and more
    fully. Still, MPs facing him detect a shift toward restraint. "He
    certainly used to be very much attack-doggish," says Liberal MP Martha
    Hall Findlay. "It seems to me that he has toned it down." Respected
    NDP MP Joe Comartin says, "you still sometimes see ideology overwhelm
    him," citing what Comartin views as Kenney's unsubstantiated claims
    about ethnic groups abusing the federal refugee system. But Comartin
    also respects Kenney as "very bright and an extremely hard worker."

    Even by the frenetic standard set by ambitious politicians, Kenney's
    work ethic is indeed astonishing. His typical weekday routine has him
    booked for meetings from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m, then chained to his desk to
    handle paperwork and emails until midnight. His weekend schedule is
    often packed with ethnic group events that are important both to his
    department and his party. (He does try to leave Sunday mornings free to
    attend Catholic mass.) His secret: "I can sleep any place, any time."

    Asked about their leisure hours, most politicians stress average-guy
    tastes--hit movies, mainstream biographies, classic rock. Not
    Kenney. When his briefcase was stolen in late March, it contained
    American author Mark Helprin's challenging novel Winter's Tale and
    Canadian poet David Manicom's collection Theology of Swallows. He
    raves about the new Russian art-house film 12, a retelling of the
    1957 classic 12 Angry Men. On the inevitable question about his latest
    iPod listening, he laughs before admitting it was "medieval Armenian
    music," hastening to add that "U2 or something" was on just before.

    So Kenney is personally idiosyncratic, politically intense. All the
    more surprising, then, that he's also won the respect of so many of
    his peers. In a cabinet short on stars, his name is one of the few
    kicked around as a possible Harper successor, but he won't speculate
    about next steps. "I've always wanted to avoid being one of those
    politicians who maps out an entire career," he says. But even if he's
    not looking down the road, now that Kenney has made an impression
    on Parliament, the question is what sort of mark he will leave on
    politics beyond Parliament Hill.
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