Calgary Herald

CANADA NEEDS MORE CANADA

Despite all the polarizati­on, it’s time to find the ‘and’, writes Sandip Lalli

- Sandip Lalli is president and CEO of the Calgary Chamber of Commerce

It seems we are more polarized every day. Newsfeeds are customized to confirm our worldviews. Opinions become more entrenched. And elections surface deep divides.

At the start of this election year, a study by Abacus Data for Maclean’s found that one in four Canadians are deeply entrenched in their political views. Just last month, the Digital Democracy Project found evidence of affected polarizati­on — defined as a dislike of parties or their supporters on the other end of the political spectrum simply because they belong to an opposing group.

Further, a recent Angus Reid poll showed that once Canadians learned about the number of immigrants that Canada welcomes every year, they fell almost entirely and equally into two opposing camps: 39 per cent who felt the number is just right and 40 per cent who felt the number was too high.

Meanwhile, although climate change is the second-most important issue to Canadians in the upcoming election and 90 per cent of Canadians agree climate action is important, any balanced approach to solutions draws criticism from opposite ends of the political spectrum.

The divisivene­ss on some of the most important issues of our time has a significan­t impact on our ability to unite as a country. While it is a privilege of the democratic process to have the freedom to debate, to discuss and to choose the Canada we want, there is a danger polarizati­on can persist long after election day. And that we further erode Canadian identity.

Being Canadian is not an artifact; it is a feeling. The feeling of living in a free society, not having to look a certain way or be a certain way to have the opportunit­y to reach our full potential. Without vision, without leadership, without inspiratio­n and connection, we risk losing our identity as Canada.

As we head into the final stretch of our federal election, let’s look for vision, inspiratio­n and connection to what Canada and being Canadian means to you. Canada’s future must include alignment of voice, alignment in action and a commitment to execute based on a foundation of trust and the betterment of humanity.

Why do we need to do this? Because it’s within us. We can be leaders on the global stage — economic leaders and environmen­tal leaders. Our politician­s work for us; therefore it is imperative we vote to ensure our society remains competitiv­e, relevant, and nationally and globally responsibl­e. This is our obligation, and this is the obligation of the politician­s we elect. Nation-building is required in order to hold true what is Canadian.

As a citizen, a mother and a business leader, I believe we are at a crossroads as a country. We have the opportunit­y to plan how best to move forward. We must move forward together with ‘AND’ conversati­ons that enable growth of our civil society, economy and academia. What I mean by this is we can no longer get results with half of the equation. We can no longer have conversati­ons and political actions that further entrench our biases.

For instance, this past spring the Canadian Global Cities Council, a coalition of CEOS of eight of Canada’s largest urban chambers of commerce and boards of trade coast-to-coast launched the Canadians for Natural Resources initiative.

The goal of the initiative, which was spearheade­d by the Calgary Chamber, was to start a conversati­on about Canada’s potential to be a global leader in both natural resources developmen­t AND fighting climate change.

The initiative has encouraged Canadians to talk with each other and their elected leaders about how Canada’s natural resources can be further developed to successful­ly position Canada as a leader in the fight against climate change.

Today, we can have natural resources developmen­t AND solve climate change. We can feed the world AND have sustainabl­e agricultur­e. We can respect each other’s heritage AND still be patriots. We can be in business AND be socially accountabl­e.

Whatever your polarizing issue is, find the AND. Find the people in your community and rally. Rally to the AND. Better is within us. And we will find it because Canada needs more Canada.

Global demand for reliable and affordable energy continues to rise and despite major growth in renewables, oil and natural gas will remain essential parts of the energy mix for decades. Chris Bloomer

 ?? BRENDAN MILLER ?? There’s danger polarizati­on will persist after election day, and we further erode Canadian identity, Sandip Lalli writes.
BRENDAN MILLER There’s danger polarizati­on will persist after election day, and we further erode Canadian identity, Sandip Lalli writes.

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