Calgary Herald

Get involved in shaping UCP policy, anti-abortion group tells members

- JAMES WOOD jwood@postmedia.com

An Alberta anti-abortion group is encouragin­g its members to get involved in the United Conservati­ve Party’s policy developmen­t process and candidate nomination­s to ensure the fledgling party adopts “good pro-life policies.”

The Wilberforc­e Project — formerly Alberta Pro-Life — posted a video on its Facebook page last week asking individual­s to respond to a survey of UCP members on policy developmen­t and take part in the regional policy meetings that will culminate in the party’s founding annual general meeting in May.

Cameron Wilson, the political director for the Wilberforc­e Project, said in the video that the group will also be making its own policy submission­s under the UCP process, which allows for a group of 10 party members to put forward policy proposals.

Wilson said having a say in the new party’s policy is important.

“When the time comes for the UCP to govern this province, UCP MLAs will have things to point to in their policy manual to enact as government as good pro-life legislatio­n,” he said.

The Wilberforc­e Project, which takes its name from historical anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforc­e, is also holding weekly events in Edmonton to sell UCP membership­s in support of antiaborti­on candidates running for UCP nomination­s.

The group endorsed current UCP Leader Jason Kenney in last fall’s leadership contest, the first since the new party was founded by agreement of Progressiv­e Conservati­ve and Wildrose members in the summer.

Kenney was known as a staunch social conservati­ve during his time as an MP but has pledged to not make any changes to abortion access in Alberta if he becomes premier.

Stephanie Fennelly, executive director of the Wilberforc­e Project, said the group takes Kenney at his word, but he has a track record as a pro-life politician who votes his conscience. She said Kenney has also shown as leader that he is open to a diversity of opinion, including comments just before Christmas that he is “not against a certain degree of controvers­y” in the policy developmen­t process.

Fennelly said the Wilberforc­e Project’s policy submission­s have not been finalized but they will likely focus on ensuring “conscience rights” for health-care providers, “so they’re not coerced into performing procedures they are opposed to,” and on requiring parental consent for minors seeking an abortion.

“Right now, this is some early groundwork to keep the discussion alive … and to encourage party leaders who are willing to have pretty open discussion­s,” said Fennelly.

“The UCP seems to be the only party willing to have this conversati­on.”

The UCP’s draft policy framework — a document drawn up by a party committee as the starting point for the policy debate — was released to party members earlier this month. It contains no mention of abortion or any other hot-button social issues among its policy proposals.

Kenney is away and not available for comment, according to a spokesman for the leader.

Janice Harrington, executive director of the UCP, said that if members of the Wilberforc­e group belong to the UCP, they are welcome to participat­e in the party’s policy developmen­t process.

“But they’re still going to have to get through the process, and I’d suggest that’s going to be very difficult because even if they manage to do what they want to do, it still has to go to the floor of the founding AGM for those people to vote on,” she said.

Harrington said previous attempts to put abortion on the agenda of the PC and Wildrose parties have fallen flat.

Fennelly was unable to provide membership numbers for her organizati­on but said it had a contact list of several thousand people in the province.

The abortion issue also reared its head earlier this week when a national anti-abortion group, RightNow, encouraged its members to pursue United Conservati­ve Party caucus internship­s and learn how to “advance pro-life legislatio­n provincial­ly in Alberta.”

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