
Activist, author seeks to lead Manitoba NDP as it struggles for money, support
WINNIPEG — When indigenous activist and author Wab Kinew officially launches his bid for the leadership of Manitoba’s New Democrats this week, he will try to take the helm of a party struggling for money, unity and public support.
Kinew, who is 35 and was first elected to the legislature last April as a star candidate for the NDP, has been talking openly about putting together a leadership bid for months.
He will make it official Monday with the backing of some heavyweights from factions of the party that have been fighting since 2014.
Advisers to former premier Greg Selinger such as John Loxley and Todd Scarth are backing Kinew. So are Eugene Kostyra and Anna Rothney — advisers to Theresa Oswald, a former cabinet minister who led a failed coup against Selinger in 2014.