Edmonton Journal

OTTAWA FAILING COUNTRY ON RESOURCE LEADERSHIP

Canada’s prosperity is slipping thorough our collective fingers, Ken Kobly writes.

- Ken Kobly is president and CEO of the Alberta Chambers of Commerce.

“Canada’s elected leaders represent Team Canada with excellence”

That is not a current headline of political leadership. But it could be.

To the contrary, Canadians are subjected to reading the recent opinion piece penned by Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr and Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna titled: Benefits and impact of Trans Mountain transcend any one province.

The headline is bang on. That’s where the leadership stops. This is not a work of inspired commitment to advance the national interest. It’s about a political agenda. It glosses over the bigger issues and distorts the opportunit­ies which should be the focus — and inspiratio­n — for our elected representa­tives.

So, ministers, let us be clear: getting Trans Mountain built is like an aspiring Olympian winning a regional qualifying competitio­n. Crucial to Canadian prosperity? Yes. But let’s not delude ourselves.

The estimated discount Canadians have paid — lost — over the last seven years is $147 billion. If we’re going to point fingers, that makes this federal government responsibl­e for $33 billion of those losses, with more to come. Trans Mountain alone won’t solve the bleed.

So, what are we doing to resolve the bigger issue? More than 30 First Nation government­s are trying to build a new pipeline from Alberta to the West Coast to support Canadians’ prosperity. Are we working with them? No. Their biggest obstacle to advance our national interest is a federal moratorium on oil tanker traffic. Energy East, Northern Gateway, LNG plants in B.C. — there is a long list of capacity-building initiative­s which lay dead on the doorstep of our current prime minister.

A national climate leadership plan? If it is an ethical imperative and moral responsibi­lity to the future of humankind, just do it. Canadians don’t need to be stroked into believing politician­s today are transcendi­ng our nation into a new stratum of enlightene­d leadership.

When our Olympians return from setting new global standards of excellence, what standards of leadership will they return to? The kind which expects medals for using clean energy and childcare funding — our children’s welfare — as cattle prods to mobilize action in the collective interest.

Canadians deserve actions which produce results. Actions that honour our Olympians’ dedication to be excellent when they wear the Team Canada jersey. No compromise is involved in this level of commitment so a reciprocal standard of public service is simple: get full value for all our resources and invest the wealth so future generation­s prosper. Until those responsibi­lities are fulfilled, please keep the politics to yourself.

Canada, B.C. and Alberta all have new government­s. Subsequent­ly, some commentato­rs think political self-promotion is acceptable, even necessary, to act in the national interest. To those who think real leadership stems from popularity — we disagree.

As the leader of a new governing party, Peter Lougheed won successive elections with increasing support. Not because of populist appeals but because he led in the best interest of citizens.

In the past, Alberta invested our non-renewable wealth superbly.

We invested in B.C. and helped build the port at Prince Rupert. It was an investment which contribute­d $1.6 billion to that province in 2016 alone. We invested in grain cars to ensure our prairie crops could feed the world’s largest population­s in Asia. We helped build infrastruc­ture for Canadians in eastern provinces. Medical research funded by the Alberta Heritage Fund continues to benefit Canadians and people around the world each and every day.

It’s a legacy of advancing the public good with class.

But, right now, Canadians’ inheritanc­e and opportunit­ies for prosperity slip through our fingers with each second that passes.

So, are our political efforts to serve the national interest Olympic-worthy? Canadians, you be the judge: Gold, silver, bronze, or Did Not Qualify.

Canadians deserve actions which produce results.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada