- Warren Kinsella should not be confused with Canadian author W. P. Kinsella.
J. Warren Kinsella, (born August 1960 in Montreal, Quebec), is a Toronto-based Canadian non-practicing lawyer, author, musician, political consultant, lobbyist and commentator.
Education and Career History
After receiving a bachelor's degree in journalism from Carleton University, Kinsella worked at the
Ottawa Citizen newspaper. He subsequently earned a law degree from the University of Calgary and was a partner at the law firm McMillan Binch.
[ National Post (date of copyright unknown). Warren Kinsella leaving McMillan Binch for Navigator Ltd (Google Cache). Retrieved from Google Cache Apr 30, 2006.] He left McMillan Binch in 2002 to work for the Toronto-based lobbying firm Navigator.
[ National Post, 2002. Retrieved July 3, 2006] In April 2006, Kinsella launched his own political consulting firm, the Daisy Consulting Group.
[ Globe and Mail (2006). [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060508.wdancookblogaprarch2006/BNStory Warren Kinsella and Co. have launched Daisy Consulting Group. Retrieved July 2, 2006.] Kinsella is also a media columnist for the
National Post.
Politics
Kinsella worked as a staffer in opposition leader
Jean Chrétien's office, a strategy advisor in the Canadian federal
Liberal Party's
1993 election campaign "task force", and chief of staff to federal Public Works minister David Dingwall.
In his book
Kicking Ass in Canadian Politics, Kinsella describes how he cultivates the image of "Liberal attack dog", and the "
James Carville" and "Prince of Darkness" of Canadian politics. Kinsella gained national exposure during the 2000 federal election when, acting on an idea by Liberal campaign staffer Sophie Galarneau
, he appeared on television brandishing a toy Barney dinosaur to highlight
Stockwell Day's creationist beliefs. Kinsella ran as a Liberal candidate in the
1997 federal election in the
riding of
North Vancouver and lost.
While a practicing Roman Catholic, he is a member of the board of the Canada Israel Committee.[Canada-Israel Committee (2006). Board of Directors. Retrieved June 30, 2006.]
Gomery Inquiry
Kinsella's work as a political aide figured in a
2004 Canadian sponsorship scandal. In
1995, while working for
David Dingwall, then
Minister of Public Works, Kinsella wrote a memo to deputy minister Ran Quail recommending that the government's communications be reorganized under a centralized delivery system and that
Charles Guité be assigned to head the new agency. However, Ran Quail dismissed the memo as a "mistake by an inexperienced staffer." Dingwall testified that he didn't remember the incident, but assumed that he must have instructed Kinsella to write the memo. Interestingly, the Communications Co-ordination Services Branch that was created in November 1997 consisted of almost exactly the consolidation of functions that had been advocated by Kinsella and was headed Charles Guité. In his report on the scandal, Justice John Gomery noted that the memo was "a highly inappropriate attempt by political staff to interfere in the internal administration" of the department.
[Commission of Inquiry into the Sponsorship Program and Advertising Activities (2005). Who is Responsible? Fact Finding Chapter VI - Administration of the Sponsorship Program Retrieved July 3, 2006.] Kinsella was a witness at the
Gomery Commission[Gomery.ca (2005).Schedule of Witnesses Retrieved July 3, 2006.] and frequently mocked Judge Gomery on his web site. In 2006, Guite was convicted of defrauding the federal government and sentenced to 42 months in prison.
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Legal action against bloggers
In 2004, Kinsella threatened legal action against Canadian bloggers who he alleged libelled him. The matter was eventually settled without litigation when most parties involved came to compromise. The issue aroused controversy in the Canadian blogging community. In January, 2006, he filed a statement of claim for $600,000 against blogger
Mark Bourrie over a post by Bourrie regarding Kinsella's role in hiring Chuck Guite in the lead-up to the sponsorship scandal.
Bourrie apologized and paid $1000 of Kinsella's costs.
[Ottawa Watch (2006). Kinsella v. Bourrie (Google Cache). Retrieved from Google Cache June 30, 2006.]
Involvement in Punk Music
In his youth, Kinsella was the bassist of the Canadian punk band, "The
Hot Nasties".
[Punk History CanadaThe Hot Nasties Retrieved July 3, 2006.] In 2005, Kinsella wrote
Fury's Hour: A (sort-of) Punk-Rock Manifesto (Random House, 2005), a history of the early days of punk. Kinsella wrote the song,
Barney Rubble is My Double recorded on
The Evaporator's Ripple Rock album.''
Personal
He is son of physician and medical ethicist Douglas Kinsella,(
C.M.), founder of the National Council on Ethics in Human Research (NCEHR)
//www.ccac.ca/en/Publications/PUBLICAT/Annualre/Annual01(2).htm. He and his wife have four children. In late 2000, he established a
weblog, "Latest Musings".
[Warrenkinsella.com (2006). Latest Musings June 2006. Retrieved June 30, 2006.]
Works
References
External links
1960 births | Living people | Canadian political strategists | Canadian lawyers | Candidates for the Canadian House of Commons | Canadian bloggers | Anti-neo-Nazi activism | People from Quebec