Kerry Diotte

Canadian politician (born 1956) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kerry Thomas Diotte MP (born 1956) is a Canadian politician and media personality who serves as member of Parliament (MP) for Edmonton Griesbach in the House of Commons of Canada and sat on the Edmonton City Council from 2010 to 2013. A Conservative, Diotte was elected twice–in the 2015 and 2019 elections–but lost his seat to New Democratic Party (NDP) candidate Blake Desjarlais in 2021. Diotte defeated incumbent MP Blake Desjarlais in the 2025 Canadian federal election. He ran for mayor of Edmonton in 2013, placing third. In June 2022 he joined Rebel News to become their Alberta Legislature reporter and political correspondent.[1][2]

Preceded byBlake Desjarlais
Preceded byRiding established
Succeeded byBlake Desjarlais
Preceded byWard established
Quick facts MP, Member of Parliament for Edmonton Griesbach ...
Kerry Diotte
Diotte in 2013
Member of Parliament
for Edmonton Griesbach
Assumed office
April 28, 2025
Preceded byBlake Desjarlais
In office
October 19, 2015  September 20, 2021
Preceded byRiding established
Succeeded byBlake Desjarlais
Edmonton City Councillor for the 11th Ward
In office
October 26, 2010  October 29, 2013
Preceded byWard established
Succeeded byMike Nickel
Personal details
BornKerry Thomas Diotte
(1956-02-26) February 26, 1956 (age 70)
PartyConservative
Alma materCarleton University
OccupationJournalist
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Early life and career

Diotte was born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, on February 26, 1956. He was educated at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario.

Diotte was employed at the Edmonton Sun from 1985 until October 2009 where he worked as Legislature bureau chief, as well as a copy editor, reporter, and assignment editor. Prior to that, he worked for the Calgary Sun and newsmagazines, including Alberta Report and Maclean's. He has also worked for a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation affiliate where he was an on-camera television reporter. For many years, Diotte was president of the Edmonton chapter of the Canadian Association of Journalists and a national director of the organization. He resigned those positions to campaign for a city council seat in the 2010 Edmonton municipal election.[3]

2004 police sting

On November 18, 2004, seven members of the Edmonton Police Service targeted Diotte along with then-police commission chairman Martin Ignasiak in a controversial undercover drunk-driving operation at an Edmonton bar, the Overtime Broiler & Taproom. Police were staked out in anticipation of catching the two men driving home drunk, but both took cabs home.

Subsequent legal proceedings produced evidence, including police radio conversations from that night, showing officers set up the operation because they were upset by Diotte's newspaper columns about policing, including criticism of photo radar operations. After an internal police investigation exonerated the officers involved in the unwarranted would-be sting, then-police chief Fred Rayner was fired from his position by the Edmonton Police Commission.

In September 2008, Alberta's Law Enforcement Review Board ruled a senior police officer abused his power by targeting Diotte because the law enforcement official was frustrated by the columnist's viewpoints on police matters. The panel decided there was "no credible evidence" to suggest Diotte would drive drunk when leaving the November 18, 2004 function and noted the journalist has no criminal record.[4] In the decision, the panel chair wrote: "Mr. Diotte had the right, without fear of police reprisal, to freedom of speech, which includes the freedom to write critical articles about policing in his community."[5]

Political career

Municipal politics

Diotte ran for city council in the 2010 Edmonton municipal election, winning Ward 11 with 44.3% of the vote.[3] On May 16, 2013, Diotte announced his candidacy for the mayoralty of Edmonton.[6] He finished in third with 32,917 votes.[7]

Member of Parliament

On February 26, 2014, Diotte announced his intention to seek the Conservative Party of Canada nomination in the new federal riding of Edmonton Griesbach.[8] Diotte won the nomination election on December 6, 2014.[9] In the 2015 election, Diotte won the seat, defeating his closest opponent, Janis Irwin, by 2,848 votes.[10][11][12]

On September 15, 2016, he was appointed deputy critic of Urban Affairs in Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose's shadow cabinet.[13]

Diotte was a member of the Standing Joint Committee for the Scrutiny of Regulations in the 42nd Parliament.[14]

He was appointed in September 2018 as a member of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities.[15]

Diotte sponsored private member's Bill C-306, An Act to establish a Crimean Tatar Deportation ("Sürgünlik") Memorial Day and to recognize the mass deportation of the Crimean Tatars in 1944 as an act of genocide. This bill sought to recognize the mass deportations of Crimean Tatars in 1944 by the Soviet Union as genocide and establish May 18 as a day of commemoration.[16] Bill C-306 was defeated at second reading.[17]

Diotte was appointed Deputy Shadow Minister for Public Services and Procurement in Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer's shadow cabinet.[18]

On February 6, 2020, Diotte voted in support of Bill C-233 – an act to amend the Criminal Code (sex-selective abortion), which would make it an indictable or a summary offence for a medical practitioner to knowingly perform an abortion solely on the grounds of the child's genetic sex.[19][non-primary source needed]

On October 28, 2020, Diotte voted in favour of Bill C-6 in the second reading, which proposed amending the Criminal Code to include a ban on conversion therapy.[20] However, on June 21, 2021, he voted against the bill during the third reading, expressing concerns that the legislation wasn't worded precisely enough to exclude certain conversations in religious counselling. After losing his seat in the 2021 Canadian federal election, the amendment passed in the first session of the next Parliament in Bill C-4.[21]

Diotte lost his Edmonton-Griesbach seat to the NDP's Blake Desjarlais in the 2021 federal election.[22][23] He would later in June 2022 he joined Rebel News to become their Alberta Legislature reporter and political correspondent until he regained his seat in the 2025 federal election.

Controversy

On November 19, 2018, Diotte launched a lawsuit against University of Alberta student publication The Gateway for publishing two articles that the suit deemed "defamatory", objecting to claims that he is racist.[24] The Gateway issued a quick apology and retraction, stating: "That characterization of Mr. Diotte is false, damaging to his reputation, and caused Mr. Diotte and his family unwarranted embarrassment. The Gateway sincerely apologizes to Mr. Diotte for this wrongful characterization and retracts the offending articles."[25] In a statement, Diotte stated that he was “glad that my lawyer and theirs could come to a mutually agreeable solution without a protracted court fight,” and that he was “a strong believer in free speech, but it’s important to remember there are legal lines that can’t be crossed.”[26] On July 24, 2019, the Progress Report republished the story with the hope of triggering a SLAPP lawsuit. The podcast episode titled "Sue us Bitch" detailing this story still remains online.[27]

Electoral history

More information ** Preliminary results — Not yet official **, Party ...
2025 Canadian federal election: Edmonton Griesbach
** Preliminary results — Not yet official **
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeKerry Diotte22,25645.37+9.06
New DemocraticBlake Desjarlais16,71934.08–6.28
LiberalPatrick Lennox8,93618.22+3.05
People'sThomas Matty4400.90–5.04
GreenMichael Hunter3020.62–0.51
CommunistAlex Boykowich1440.29–0.01
IndependentCrystal Vargas1180.24N/A
Canadian FutureBrent Tyson740.15N/A
Marxist–LeninistMary Joyce640.13–0.07
Total valid votes/expense limit
Total rejected ballots
Turnout 49,05356.91
Eligible voters 86,199
Conservative notional gain from New Democratic Swing +7.67
Source: Elections Canada[28][29]
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More information Party, Candidate ...
2021 Canadian federal election: Edmonton Griesbach
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticBlake Desjarlais17,45740.5+15.4$83,759.98
ConservativeKerry Diotte15,95737.1-14.3$76,024.95
LiberalHabiba Mohamud5,97913.9+3.4$61,293.65
People'sThomas Matty2,6176.1+3.8$6,908.51
GreenHeather Lau5381.2-1.3$0.00
LibertarianMorgan Watson2680.6-none listed
CommunistAlex Boykowich1400.3-0.1$0.00
Marxist–LeninistMary Joyce1030.2-0.0$0.00
Total valid votes/expense limit 43,05999.9$111,212.30
Total rejected ballots 495
Turnout 43,55453.2%
Eligible voters 81,057
New Democratic gain from Conservative Swing -3.6
Source: Elections Canada[30][31]
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More information Party, Candidate ...
2019 Canadian federal election: Edmonton Griesbach
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeKerry Diotte24,12051.36+11.40$76,825.14
New DemocraticMark Cherrington11,80025.13-8.89$55,645.21
LiberalHabiba Mohamud8,10017.25-4.44$66,889.67
GreenSafi Khan1,1892.53+0.18none listed
People'sBarbara Ellen Nichols1,0742.29-none listed
IndependentAndrzej Gudanowski2160.46-none listed
Christian HeritageChristina Alva Armas2030.43-none listed
CommunistAlex Boykowich1700.36-none listed
Marxist–LeninistMary Joyce910.19-0.04$0.00
Total valid votes/expense limit 46,96399.33
Total rejected ballots 3190.67+0.08
Turnout 47,28256.84-2.51
Eligible voters 83,188
Conservative hold Swing +10.15
Source: Elections Canada[32][33]
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More information Party, Candidate ...
2015 Canadian federal election: Edmonton Griesbach
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeKerry Diotte19,15739.96–12.55$93,048.30
New DemocraticJanis Irwin16,30934.02–3.45$150,799.22
LiberalBrian Gold10,39721.69+15.11$14,575.14
GreenHeather Workman1,1292.35–1.08$1,404.61
LibertarianMaryna Goncharenko4150.87$150.44
MarijuanaLinda Northcott2790.58
RhinocerosBun Bun Thompson1440.30
Marxist–LeninistMary Joyce1120.23
Total valid votes/expense limit 47,94299.40 $214,842.90
Total rejected ballots 2890.60
Turnout 48,23159.35
Eligible voters 81,265
Conservative hold Swing –4.55
Source: Elections Canada[34][35]
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2013 Edmonton mayoral election[36]
CandidateVotes%
Don Iveson132,16262.2
Karen Leibovici41,18219.4
Kerry Diotte32,91715.5
Joshua Semotiuk2,5961.2
Gordon Ward2,2481.1
Kristine Acielo1,2920.6
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2010 Edmonton Ward 11 election
CandidateVotes%
Kerry Diotte7,34144.2
Chinwe Okelu4,72828.5
Brent Schaffrick1,78310.7
Shane Bergadhl1,4278.6
Vishal Luthra8905.4
Roberto Maglalang4382.6
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References

External sources

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