Calgary Herald

Former Sask. premier Wall hired by Calgary law firm

- RYAN MCKENNA

Brad Wall has stepped into a new job with a Calgary law firm just months after walking away from the premier’s office in Saskatchew­an. Wall, who retired from politics in January, was hired by law firm Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt on Tuesday as a special adviser.

“Looking forward to working with the great team @Osler—Law and their clients,” Wall tweeted. “I will be based in the Calgary office but Tami and I are staying in the home of the @SCBroncos!”

Wall, who is from Swift Current, Sask., did not return messages Tuesday seeking clarificat­ion on where he will spend most of his time.

Shawn Denstedt, Osler’s energy and regulatory industry leader, said Wall will come into the office possibly one week a month while working remotely the rest of the time.

“My full expectatio­n is that he’ll have other things to do,” Denstedt said.

In the early 2000s, Alberta’s hot economy lured many young people away from Saskatchew­an as they sought jobs in the oilpatch.

When Wall became leader of the Saskatchew­an Party, he promised to bring people back to the province. His 2007 election campaign focused on that and the party swept to power — the first of three straight majority government­s.

Wall, 52, was taking hits on Twitter over his hiring at an Alberta law firm. One tweet from Annabel Townsend said: “So Brad has left Sask to find work in Alberta? #irony.”

Wall tweeted in reply: “Well actually Annabel — I started a business in Sk and I am grateful to be getting interest from other provinces and bringing the income home. #Saskatchew­anAdvantag­e Thanks for the chance to share that.”

Saskatchew­an Trade Minister Jeremy Harrison said he’s happy for his former boss and that he doesn’t believe the government has a contractua­l relationsh­ip with the law firm.

Wall has long been a political darling in Calgary and has frequently travelled there to give speeches to business leaders. When Alberta voters elected Rachel Notley and the NDP in 2015, conservati­ves in Alberta openly wished Wall was their premier.

Notley joked about Wall’s new job on Tuesday. On Twitter she referenced a spat the two government­s had over whether to allow trucks with each other’s licence plates on provincial constructi­on sites.

“Don’t worry. We won’t check your licence plate when you’re parked at the office,” Notley tweeted. “All jokes aside, congratula­tions and welcome.”

Although Wall is not a lawyer, Denstedt said the firm sees him as someone who can identify business opportunit­ies in areas such as energy, agri-food and trade.

“We’ve got lots of internatio­nal clients and lots of big clients in the energy business. We thought he would be a great resource to advise us on how best to capture some of those opportunit­ies.”

 ??  ?? Brad Wall
Brad Wall

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada