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With the House of Commons set to resume, the Liberals have launched a bid to get a secretive House of Commons committee to investigate UCP Leader Jason Kenney mere months before the Alberta election gets underway.

In a letter sent to Speaker Geoff Regan, chair of the powerful House of Commons’ Board of Internal Economy, Jennifer O’Connell, parliamentary secretary to Finance Minister Bill Morneau, asked for support from its members to launch an investigation into alleged misuses of housing allowances by Kenney while he was a Conservative MP.

READ MORE: Lawyer who made Kenney allegations declines to specify which housing rules were allegedly broken

While Kenney served from 1997 to 2016, an Ottawa-based lawyer with ties to the Liberal Party last week highlighted the $900/month housing allowance Kenney was claiming between 2013 and 2015, and argued Kenney should not have been claiming it. Kyle Morrow said travel records suggested Kenney spent little time in his claimed Calgary residence and that Ottawa should have been considered his primary residence.

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Kenney denies any misuse of the allowances.

O’Connell, though, said the allegations warrant a full investigation.

WATCH BELOW: UCP Leader Jason Kenney defends living expenses

2:04 UCP Leader Jason Kenney defends living expenses UCP Leader Jason Kenney defends living expenses

“The allegation that Mr. Kenney declared his primary residence to be the basement of his mother’s home at an assisted living facility in Calgary, Alberta, and that Mr. Kenney was very rarely travelling to Calgary from his home in Ottawa raises grave concerns about whether Mr. Kenney’s arrangement breached the rules,” she wrote in her letter to Regan.

“I urge the Board of Internal Economy, with support from the House of Commons administration, to investigate this matter, make appropriate recommendations, or seek appropriate penalties or reimbursements from Mr. Kenney, should the Board find that he contravened the rules.” Tweet This

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In a tweet posted shortly after the letter from O’Connell was announced, Kenney accused the Liberals of trying to “help out their Alberta NDP allies.”

Not at all surprised that the Trudeau Liberals are looking to help out their Alberta NDP allies. We all know the Liberals would rather have an Alberta Govt that continues to act as doormat for Justin Trudeau, as opposed to a UCP Govt that will actually stand up for Albertans. https://t.co/2U06iMPWoP — Jason Kenney (@jkenney) January 24, 2019

Over the weekend, Morrow — an anti-bribery and corruption lawyer who ran for the Alberta Liberals in 2012 — posted screenshots of Kenney’s travel and expense reports during the years in question, which are public records.

WATCH BELOW: ‘I think there are concerns about it’– Notley responds to Kenney residence expenses

1:01 ‘I think there are concerns about it’: Notley responds to Kenney residence expenses ‘I think there are concerns about it’: Notley responds to Kenney residence expenses

MPs are allowed to claim housing allowances if their primary residence is located outside of Ottawa.

That allowance is intended to cover the cost of accommodation for MPs when they have to be in Ottawa for work on Parliament Hill for weeks at a time before going back to their ridings.

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Morrow pointed to travel records that suggest Kenney only travelled back to his Calgary riding four times between April 1, 2014, and March 31, 2015, and questioned whether he should have been claiming a residence in Calgary as his primary one when he went back there so little during that time.

Question: Why did Jason Kenney (@jkenney) only travel to his riding four times if he was actually living in his riding? Michelle Rempel, Rob Anders, Devinder Shory and Joan Crockett traveled to their ridings 20 times, 21 times, 24 times and 26 times. #hoc #ableg #cdnpoli https://t.co/AxXFQUAeV0 — Kyle Morrow (@kylemmorrow) January 20, 2019

However, House of Commons rules don’t mandate what amount of time an MP should be living in a residence outside of Ottawa in order to claim allowances for maintaining a secondary one.

Instead, paying taxes or having a driver’s licence from the area they claim is their primary residence will let them qualify for the secondary residence allowance.

Morrow also pointed out that in seven filings to Elections Canada over two years, Kenney claimed his residence was a one-bedroom unit in the Lake Bonavista Retirement Village in Calgary, where Kenney’s team said he lived with his mother.

Morrow questioned that claim.

“The floor plan for the unit on Lake Fraser Common SE clearly shows that the unit is a one bedroom unit. So, where exactly was @ jkenney sleeping? This is sounding a lot like Mike Duffy 2.0.,” he wrote on Twitter, and later said he had referred the matter to the Board of Internal Economy.

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The floor plan for the unit on Lake Fraser Common SE clearly shows that the unit is a one bedroom unit. So, where exactly was @jkenney sleeping? This is sounding a lot like Mike Duffy 2.0. (2/2) #hoc #ableg #cdnpoli — Kyle Morrow (@kylemmorrow) January 19, 2019

Kenney’s staff have argued the questions about his housing allowances are politically motivated.

The Alberta provincial election must be called before May 31, but no date has yet been set.

Polls suggest Kenney’s United Conservative Party holds a commanding 25 per cent lead over the New Democrats led by Alberta Premier Rachel Notley.

Those results are in line with repeated polling done over the past year, suggesting Kenney holds a strong lead.

READ MORE: Survey finds United Conservatives a favourite; opinions of Notley improving

It is not clear when O’Connell’s request for an investigation could be considered by the Board of Internal Economy.

No date has been set for a meeting of the committee but the House of Commons returns on Jan. 28.

The Liberals hold four of seven seats on the Board of Internal Economy.

The Conservatives hold two, while the NDP hold one.