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Heart of Alberta Content : Penguins April Fool ... (1) by snouto - April 03, 2008, 11:21:11 PM| Election Wrap |
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| Tuesday, 11 March 2008 | |
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by Christopher Walsh
![]() “A good opposition makes a good government.” Doug Griffiths
There
is no dignity these days for men who were beaten in the streets by a
fickle electorate nobody understands. It was certainly a mob mentality
Monday night as Conservatives across this province came out in droves
to vote for what they probably saw as the continuation of “Alberta's
Century”. The Tories have done well branding themselves with the mark
of prosperity and good times. Everybody else can curl up and die....
The
Liberals won't return phone calls, the NDP never mattered and their
leader conceded the election the day before the vote, the Wildrose
Alliance have been put back into crazed, fringe party status and the
Greens think they accomplished something with their slate of university
punks running through the internet in real-life ridings.
Somewhere
around 42 per cent of Albertans turned out for the big show Monday
night, marking the lowest voter turnout in provincial history. A sad
commentary they say, for democracy and those veterans who fought and
died for the right to vote. Nobody would go to war these days for that
mess....
But there could be a new war for Stelmach approaching. And since there is no real opposition to speak of, that conflict may...come...from...within...The Party.
There's still a group of pissed-off
influential Calgarians who were counting on a poor showing by Stelmach
in this election and a leadership review in the fall. The “Calgary
Mafia”, Ted Morton calls it, and they are still angry about the royalty
regime changes. (Something Stelmach has hinted could be addressed
again). But a leadership review will not be happening now, not after
the Tories, under Stelmach's stewardship, won one of the biggest
majorities in provincial history.
Some
may recall years ago, during those heady days of the Klein
administration, a group of Tory backbenchers called the “Deep Six”.
They questioned Klein on every dollar he spent and were credited with
helping to balance the province's books. Five of six became cabinet
ministers and the other guy, a quiet farmer from Fort
Saskatchewan-Vegreville just won a landslide election victory. Some
might even call this the only effective opposition the province has
seen in 37 years.
There is some
talk this type of group could be re-established to hold the premier to
account for any number of things. The “Fantastic Eight”, the “Filthy
Fifteen” or the “Hard-Inquiry 23” or something like that might pop up
over the next few years. Maybe they would eventually wrestle power away
from Stelmach, and start another chapter in the long and storied Tory
tradition here....
But all of
that bores me and we have no proof at this point. But I wouldn't put it
past some of Stelmach's apostles to get even uglier and turn a knife on
him at some point, if the timing looked right and the issue finally
presented itself....
Anyway, I
want to talk about the “Opposition” or lack thereof. Stelmach's showing
surprised everyone, but some say it wasn't a huge groundswell of
support, it was the lack of anything else. The lack of a real
alternative, someone or something that could capture the political mood
and bring about change. I won't say discontent here, because Albertans
are generally happy with their lives and the state of things. But
change is necessary at some point, if for no other reason than to show
people the difference.
Kevin
Taft's men admitted he was certainly no Peter Lougheed – whatever that
means – and probably failed to connect with voters. That is the type of
political bullshit often espoused by party insiders or journalists who
don't want to admit the truth, or have to look for it.
I
was out with Taft door-knocking in Calgary and just about every person
who came to the door or approached him in a mall parking lot were
talking about the need for change and vowing to – although they were
Tories – vote Liberal this time because they weren't happy with
politics as usual. Those people voted Liberal Monday night, but they
also voted NDP and Green Party, too. A quick look at the riding by
riding results suggests there could have been a huge change in
government if there was one clear non-Tory choice.
Vote
splitting between the three opposition parties was best demonstrated in
the Edmonton-Calder riding where NDP incumbent David Eggen was defeated
by 204 votes by PC challenger Doug Elniski. The Green Party candidate
took home 399 votes; almost double the difference. If you add up the
numbers in a lot of ridings throughout the province you'll find the
same queer equation. Hardly the Tory landslide it was heralded as,
mixed with the low voter turnout.
So what next? Is there a way to form a strong opposition, one that works and can be accepted by the electorate?
Maybe.
Joe
Anglin might even take a shot at it. The Green Party candidate lost his
seat by close to 5,000 votes in Lacombe-Ponoka, but that has only
strengthened his resolve. He has been talking with Liberal and NDP
insiders and hopes to get something off the ground. It is the last hope
here.
The Liberals know they're
doomed with that name. It hasn't worked here for decades because too
many still equate it with Trudeau and the feds. It's a private shame
for Taft and his colleagues, but so was the beating Monday night.
“Well,
there is a tide that overcame the province, without question,” Anglin
says, a few nights after the election. “But I gotta tell you something,
the opposition has to take a lot of the blame for that.
“They
were out selfishly looking to get power when it wasn't even attainable.
They undermined each other. When you look at the strength of the
current government, you have to realize you gotta form a coalition of
the opposition. They just went after each other and there was no
leadership out there in the opposition. They really didn't present
anything as far as an alternative.”
Anglin
had been asked by the Liberals to run for them prior to the campaign.
He declined and says now there needs to be an overhaul of the
opposition. Good people who think have to come together and get on the
same page.
“One is the Liberals
have to go,” Anglin says. “If they're smart, they would go. The [nine]
in there need to go independent and they need to implode that party. If
they just try to change their name, it's not gonna do them any good.
So, there needs to be a new party.”
How
exactly that would work, what the platform would be and who would be
involved has yet to be determined. A solid case has been made that if a
new, unified opposition party were to be formed, it would take a few
respected Tories to leave the flock and join it, for legitimacy's sake.
That will be difficult, concedes Anglin, because most in the Tory party know the name is the ticket to the legislature.
“I don't think you'd ever get them,” Anglin says.
I
posed the question to Battle River-Wainwright MLA Doug Griffiths
Thursday night after the first caucus meeting of the new government.
Griffiths won big Monday, as did the other PC big boys across the
province. His win was especially huge, percentage wise.
I've
always liked Griffiths. He has a good political mind and on some
beautiful evenings he doesn't hold the party line, he'll give you his
real thoughts on an issue. But he didn't support Stelmach's leadership
bid and has been suffering the consequences ever since. There won't be
a cabinet post offered to him next week. He knows this and other
political minds know it as well. If Griffiths were a political
opportunist, he would be the ideal man to make the leap out of the PC
fold and into a new opposition party. He's well-liked, intelligent,
young, energetic and actually cares about the province's future.
“They asked me,” he confesses Thursday night over the phone from Edmonton. “[But] I'm a conservative, I'm a Progressive
Conservative.”
He
was talking about Liberal party strategists who also figured out a
political talent like Griffiths was wasting away in the Stelmach Tory
government. Griffiths says the opposition did stink this campaign and
an opposition will be hard to come by.
“I
think it's actually regrettable the opposition didn't take a better
leader so that they would have a better showing. A good opposition
makes a good government,” he says.
And it doesn't matter what name a real opposition alternative would take, he's sticking it out with the Tories.
“I
don't care what you call it, I'm a conservative and quite frankly I
think Progressive Conservative has the best summary of my political
views,” Griffiths says.
That means Conservative on spending and savings, but Progressive on issues like
research, education and the environment, he says. He knows a portfolio is not on its way anytime soon.
“Yeah,
but I'm not about to leave and stomp my feet that I didn't get a
cabinet post. If it came to the point where we were spending obscenely,
like Liberals would do, and not budgeting for the future and saving for
the future, then I'd have some real issues. But so would 90 per cent of
the rest of the caucus. So, we'll see how things evolve....”
Evolution
is a strange term out here. Alberta has grown; been built and re-built
over the last century, seen huge ups and devastating downs and now
finds itself the richest province in the country and truly the place
where any hardworking sot can achieve riches. What does that do to the
mentality of its people? What is it about prosperity that makes people
think responsible government doesn't matter? Or if they do recognize
it, that one party is the ticket to continuing boom times?
It's all too much. “Alberta's Century” will be a wicked one, indeed....
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