ICYMI: UCP confirms Livingstone-Macleod candidate is ineligible to run for party abpoli
from running in the Livingstone-Macleod riding due to past social media posts she had made, and that she was planning to appeal that decision. UCP spokesman Dave Prisco told Postmedia Saturday that the appeal has been dismissed.Sign up to receive daily headline news from the Calgary Herald, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.
“Sadly, rural ridings are and will continue to be overshadowed and undervalued; their votes taken for granted, and their money spent to gain favour in urban centres,” Wellwood wrote.Article content The now-disqualified candidate had previously written that the UCP’s election committee had expressed concern over her social media posts.
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UCP confirms Livingstone-Macleod candidate is ineligible to run for partyNadine Wellwood said last week she had been disqualified by the UCP to run in the Livingstone\u002DMacleod riding due to past social media posts.
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UCP confirms Livingstone-MacLeod candidate is ineligible to run for partyNadine Wellwood said last week she had been disqualified by the UCP to run in the Livingstone\u002DMacLeod riding due to past social media posts.
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UCP confirms Livignstone-MacLeod candidate is ineligible to run for partyNadine Wellwood said last week she had been disqualified by the UCP to run in the Livingstone\u002DMacLeod riding due to past social media posts.
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UCP disqualifies candidate who equated vaccine rules to Nazi regime | CBC NewsThe United Conservative Party (UCP) board has disqualified a potential candidate who had advocated for debunked COVID-19 treatments like ivermectin and compared vaccine passports to policies enacted by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime.
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Choosing the party leader: should it be left to the caucus?OTTAWA—There is almost universal agreement that the United Kingdom’s Conservative party made a disastrous choice both for themselves and for the country when they selected Liz Truss to replace Boris Johnson as the party leader. Her policy of generous unfunded tax cuts for the most affluent in a time of high and rising inflation helped her defeat Rishi Sunak among the party membership during the leadership race. But once she enacted it as prime minister, it unnerved the markets, caused economic chaos, divided her caucus, sank the party’s popularity in the polls to historic lows and led to her resignation after less than six weeks in office. In a recent opinion piece, Globe and Mail columnist Andrew Coyne places the blame for this disastrous result squarely on the party’s leadership selection process. The U.K. Conservative Party chooses its leaders in two steps. First, a vote in the parliamentary caucus narrows the field of prospective leaders to two candidates. Then, those holding party memberships at the date the leadership becomes vacant make the final decision. Current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak led Truss in the caucus vote. But party members resoundingly chose Truss over Sunak when it cam to their vote. In Coyne’s view, the caucus rather than the party membership should choose the leader because it is “made up of people who have won first a nomination race and then a general election. With years of experience and accumulated political judgment—and, as important, with skin in the game—they are more likely to choose a leader who is not only acceptable to them, but acceptable to the electorate.” Coyne believes that the members of the caucus are also more likely than the general party membership to be able to assess which of the prospective candidates is best able to form and sustain a competent and effective government. The current process used by the Conservative Party of Canada to select its leaders is, in Coyne’s opinion, even worse than that of the U.K. Conserva
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Voting for Green leadership begins Saturday as candidates look to revitalize party - National | Globalnews.caAfter a disappointing federal election result last year, the federal Green Party is getting ready to install a new leader-- or leaders.
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