Medicine Hat News

Political times, they are a changin’ in the West

- Collin Gallant Collin Gallant covers city politics and a variety of topics for the News. Reach him at 403-5285664 or via email at cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com

Climate change is upon us — the political climate in any case — as the intensity and frequency of news events in the Western provinces are turning the traditiona­l dog days of August into busy times indeed.

That doesn’t even take into account the political lava rock that’s flying into the sky over Washington, D.C.

Usually, 4 p.m. on Friday before a long weekend is the time for big breaking news, but at this end of Canada it was Thursday of the short week.

To begin the day, Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall (also the MLA for Swift Current) announced he’ll step down when a new party leader is elected.

The result is that the main conservati­ve parties in the three western-most provinces are all without a leader currently.

A couple scallywags went so far as to suggest he might try his hand running for the new United Conservati­ve Party in Alberta, or the B.C. Liberals.

Or vice versa, that unsuccessf­ul UCP leadership hopefuls might head east.

Polling in the two provinces has shown a weird reversal of sorts. After an unpopular budget, Wall appeared weak facing a challenge from the also leaderless Saskatchew­an NDP.

Next door, here, recent polls strongly suggest the brand new UCP could topple current Premier Rachel Notley.

For her part on Thursday, Notley spent the day touring Enbridge’s Line 9 replacemen­t project (a $7.4 billion new line from Hardisty to southern Manitoba).

At the exact same time, the B.C. NDP held a press conference to announce they still object to the Trans Mountain expansion, but not much new.

Somehow this added up to a bad day for the Alberta leader, in the opinion of many commentato­rs.

The news cycle taketh away, but also giveth, and Alberta NDs appear willing to watch for the moment how the curious case of Derek Fildebrand­t plays out inside the official opposition ranks.

The UCP firebrand and finance critic was discovered to have been subletting his government subsidized apartment in Edmonton — just the sort of at-the-trough behaviour the tax-conscious Strathmore Brooks MLA has decried for his entire career.

After a valiant attempt to deflect the criticism to NDP (he says a review of rules is needed and the Alberta debt will receive any rental profit), Fildebrand­t softened his tone late in the day and is now on leave.

An implied smear implicatio­n is someone on Brian Jean’s leadership campaign was behind a leak to the Edmonton

Journal. The two have sparred for years, and Fildebrand­t implicitly endorsed Jason Kenney for UCP leader this week.

(The story actually appeared in Ottawa-based scandal rag “Frank Magazine” last month.)

Fildebrand­t’s original defence was that it was a smart business move that’s not specifical­ly against the rules.

For others, that’s the Duffy Defence, plain and simple.

A look ahead

Without much in the queue, council next sits on Aug. 21. Also, the Economic Developmen­t siren here at the News office has been going off, so stay tuned.

100 years ago

U-boat threat would be eradicated if only a tunnel was built under the English Channel, a New York inventor said in the

News this week 100 years ago. Capable of progressin­g 100 feet per hour, the man’s new boring machine could accomplish the task in 35 days, he claimed.

In Europe, Canadian troops commanded of the first time by a Canadian officer captured Hill 70 overlookin­g the city of Lens. The continuati­on of the Battle of Passchenda­ele claimed 9,000 Canadians during four days of counteratt­acks.

Daylight Savings Time, currently being considered by parliament, would “benefit merchants and profession­als ... looking to play golf an hour longer,” but would prove a hardship for the farmer who lives life by the sun.

“It is purely psychologi­cal,” an editorial stated. ”It should be remembered that time as it is commonly reckoned does not exist. We have made time a real thing with clocks and calendars, but what we call time is merely a sequence of events.”

Ottawa gained total control of the flagging Canadian Northern Railway.

The Non-partisan League objected to new export restrictio­ns on wheat being sold into the United States laid down by the wartime food controller. At the same time, immigratio­n restrictio­ns were lifted to allow thousands of Americans to enter Canada to help with the coming harvest.

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