| Welcome Guest. |
| Lost Password? |
| No account yet? Register |
General Discussion : Break Open Your Head (0) by Gundar Veebor - July 23, 2008, 07:53:08 AM
Heart of Alberta Content : New 7 wonders galler... (0) by Admin - July 10, 2008, 11:32:42 AM
General Discussion : Talk vs. appeasement (0) by Posy - May 16, 2008, 10:42:20 AM
General Discussion : The Empire Strikes B... (0) by Posy - May 08, 2008, 11:43:57 AM
General Discussion : Bill Maher greets th... (0) by hermetic - April 21, 2008, 01:12:09 PM
HoA General Discussion : Site mascot (13) by snouto - April 06, 2008, 05:16:38 PM
Heart of Alberta Content : Penguins April Fool ... (1) by snouto - April 03, 2008, 11:21:11 PM| Victory ( heavy on the "Tory") |
|
|
|
| Thursday, 06 March 2008 | |
|
By Christopher Walsh
A group of fanatical Indians break
into chants and interpretive dance outside the entrance to the Chateau
Louis Convention Centre, shortly after Ed Stelmach's victory speech
Monday night. The blaring Hindu music from the Cadillac Escalade, mixed
with their gyrations and chants, was enough for some middle-aged white
Conservative supporters to seek safety back in the hotel, away from the
noise and frolicking.
One chubby Conservative was bent on finishing his smoke and stayed until it was done, against his better judgment.
“Don't worry,” I told him, after noticing his nervous looks. “They're on your side tonight.”
He
said he understood and explained that he was here in Edmonton from
Vegreville where he had volunteered on Stelmach's campaign.
The Indians (and I mean real Indians, people from India) were chanting and dancing around us
as the man explained his joy with tonight's outcome.
“We knew he'd do well,” the troubled man said, “we just didn't know that he'd do this well.”Nobody did. Not even the screaming Punjabis expressing their jubilation in every direction. They were celebrating Peter Sandhu's win in the Edmonton-Manning riding, but what the hell? This was the real start of “Alberta's Century” after all, and why not include everyone?
That
seems to be Stelmach's plan for these next four years or so. He's
promised to include opposition members (although now significantly
reduced) in policy matters and his speech on election night came across
as an acknowledgment to every thinking person in this province that ol'
Ed understands, “one thing [is] very important ... we know that
governing is a privilege, it's not a right.”
That's
what he said during his victory speech and perhaps he means it. The
election results were such a shock that anyone who didn't vote
Conservative was inconsolable. I had left a message on the Liberal
campaign manager's cell phone at 8 pm confirming the location of the
Liberal's celebration headquarters. By 8:30, that message was a cruel
joke. The vote was over and every major network had already declared a
Tory majority, the likes of which had not been seen since Ralph Klein
and Peter Lougheed.
It
ranked among the strongest Tory majorities ever in Alberta and caught
everyone by surprise, including Stelmach and his boys. Polls had them
leading, sure, but that undecided vote – in some polls gauged in the 30
percentile – was to be the difference. It was, in the end, but in a
much different way than anyone expected: those hesitant Albertans did
finally make a choice and it was to stay home. Stelmach's overwhelming
majority came in with the lowest voter turnout in provincial history at
close to 42 per cent, bringing with it 72 seats and cutting the Liberal
seats from 16 to 9 and the NDP seats in half to two ... (More on that
tomorrow).
Back
at Stelmach election night headquarters, the mood was celebratory.
Nobody there had any idea before 8:30 that things were going to go like
this. They would have put on the same glad-faces even with a minority
(as some had predicted), but now it was real, we can be happy and mean
it. Those whispers in certain corners within the party (most prominent
in Calgary) about a leadership review within six months were silenced.
Stelmach had done it, and in much stronger terms than anyone expected.
The
great man, the leader, was making the rounds in the back of the
convention centre next to the $5 a beer bar. My new photographer was
following him and griping about the price.
“This is a goddamn Tory fundraiser,” he said. “What kind of perogies do you think Stelmach eats?”
We
stopped to regroup at the bar and snack table. Neither one of us could
explain what we had seen or what it all meant. A man near the premier
yelled at us: “You fuckers in the media were all wrong. Albertans like
Ed!”
There
seems to be little evidence to the contrary. Although many political
analysts were suggesting a defeat for Stelmach on some front, the
little guy surprised everybody. I was reminded of a comment Stelmach
had made to me the Saturday before the election. On the campaign trail,
I had asked Wildrose Alliance leader Paul Hinman (who lost his party's
only seat in Monday's landslide) and Liberal leader Kevin Taft to tell
me something about themselves that people probably didn't know. Hinman
said he rides a unicycle and Taft admitted to his lust of Peanut Buster
Parfaits. Stelmach was far more serious in his answer.
“My
resolve,” he responded after a few contemplative seconds. “As you see,
sometimes in the media, they say that 'Ed's a real nice guy, he's soft
spoken, but does he have a backbone?' I think people have known over
the last 14 months that when I make a commitment, I stick to it, I
deliver.”
Bars
in Alberta are full of guys who claim they're tough and your first
instinct is to laugh when someone tells you this. But nobody is
laughing at Stelmach these days....
I
was thinking about this an hour later, after speaking to Party
loyalists, as we made our way out front for another cigarette. The
premier was assumed to have left at least an hour ago, but a black
Buick Park Avenue had replaced the raging Indians' Escalade at the
entrance to the convention centre. We assumed it was a cab of some sort
and my photographer approached it.
Two SS-like agents ran out to offer a warning.
“Step away from the vehicle,” they instructed in their best authoritative tone.
“Why?” my photographer asked. “Whose car is it?”
They
didn't respond and went back inside. This prompted another chubby
Conservative to maul the car. He wanted his photo taken saddling the
side of it. We agreed to take it.
“Step away from the car,” the SS men chimed in on cue.
“Whose car is this anyway,” we
asked.
The
men with ear pieces, again, did not respond. A minute later they were
out to ask me and my photographer to vacate the premises.
“We need you to go to the street and leave,” they said. My photographer would not accommodate them.
“This is a public place,” he offered, “and I'm not doing anything wrong.”
They turned to me to ask if I'd assist in removing him.
“No,” I said. “I'm not going anywhere until we get a cab.”
The SS agents looked at eachother without saying anything and went back inside.
“Jesus, Peter,” I said. “They're gonna break our bones in a
minute.”
They
didn't. Instead, a couple of guys came out on their way to their car
acting aggressively. One of them turned on the plump Conservative like
he wanted to fight. We got him on his way quickly, but one of the SS
men had moved the car in the meantime and we never captured the shot of
who was riding in the back of the thing. They never appeared....
And
perhaps that's what the next four years will be like here. Agreeable
toughness on the surface and a distraction when the time is right.
I hope not and I hope Ed is as good as his word in re: the Great Gatsby rhetoric. It's obviously what sealed the deal for him.
“All
Albertans know, that our province is a beacon of hope and it's also a
beacon of inspiration,” Stelmach said in his acceptance speech. “And
that beacon must shine in every corner of this province, across our
country, across the world. We all know ... that in Alberta, you can
achieve your dreams.”
People were just too busy achieving the dream to vote....
A
few questions remain however, about this overwhelming majority, and I
don't mean the accusations of “voting irregularities” or the massive
voter apathy here. I'm curious as to who's driving the car.
The
Herald ran a story Wednesday about the oilpatch admitting they were
expecting change on election night, but now want the “unintended
consequences” of the premier's new royalty regime corrected. It's hard
to say if the oil companies really thought Albertans would vote in the
Wildrose Alliance (every other party was calling for increased
royalties), but there is a strong contingent within the Party that was
counting on Stelmach's poor showing this election....
At
this point, the driver of the black Buick – that car so safely guarded
by the secret service on election night – is ... Daisy Buchanan,
whoever she might come to be. She's the one who ran over the gas
attendant's wife and kept on booting it, retreating “back into their
money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was ... [to] let other
people clean up the mess they had made ...”
We'll
see. And a proper analysis of this election is yet to be completed.
Where do things go from here and who really cares? The answers will
truly be troubling and nobody will be dancing in the streets then....
|
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|