Medicine Hat News

UNITED? CONSERVATI­VES

MLA cites divisivene­ss as he quits UCP caucus

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EDMONTON Another member of Alberta’s new United Conservati­ve Party has quit caucus to sit as an Independen­t.

Rick Fraser, the legislatur­e member for Calgary South East, said the current party leadership race makes it clear Alberta will continue down the unproducti­ve road of angry, reactionar­y, polarized politics.

“I have much respect for many of those in the United Conservati­ve caucus. It’s not a judgment on them and they mean well,” said Fraser in an interview Thursday.

“But as they figure out what the United Conservati­ves will be as a party and what policies they’re going to foster, I don’t believe we’re talking about what Alberta needs today.

“It’s just another stopgap to the next election.”

He said Albertans are being whipsawed into choosing between political extremes from the two major parties on crucial issues like the economy and the environmen­t as the province rebounds from years of sluggish oil prices.

He said Premier Rachel Notley’s NDP government is pursuing an unsustaina­ble policy of heavy debt just to keep day-to-day operations going. But he said the United Conservati­ve leadership candidates are promising big cuts and austerity without explaining how that could affect a fragile economy.

On the environmen­t, he said the party’s leadership candidates are castigatin­g and promising to scrap Alberta’s carbon tax but aren’t spelling out what they will do instead to fight climate change.

The solutions likely lie somewhere in the middle, but he said that can’t take root when all issues are framed as us-versus-them.

“My constituen­ts deserve somebody that can talk about policies unfettered by party lines,” he said.

Fraser said he hasn’t decided whether he will join another party or if he will run in the 2019 election.

“At this point I’m keeping all my options open,” he said. “It’s not my job to get re-elected.

“It’s my job to represent my constituen­ts and put forward the issues that they’re facing.”

The United Conservati­ve Party was created in July when members of the Wildrose and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve parties voted overwhelmi­ngly to merge.

Fraser is a two-term MLA formerly representi­ng the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

He is the third member of the United Conservati­ve caucus to leave since the merger. Richard Starke refused to join the new party and remains a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve in the house.

United Conservati­ve finance critic Derek Fildebrand­t, formerly of the Wildrose, resigned last month after it came out he rented out his taxpayer-subsidized apartment and questions arose about his expenses.

Fildebrand­t is also accused of hitting a van in a parking lot and leaving the scene. A decision in that case will be delivered Dec. 18 in traffic court in Edmonton.

United Conservati­ve interim leader Nathan Cooper said in a statement he was “disappoint­ed to learn that Rick has chosen to leave caucus but respect his decision and wish him the best.”

The party picks a new leader Oct. 28 and the four candidates include former Wildrose leader Brian Jean and former PC leader Jason Kenney.

On Twitter, Jean echoed Cooper’s comments.

“Sad to see Rick Fraser leaving caucus,” he wrote. “Conservati­ves are stronger united and his voice will be missed at the table.”

Kenney said he was disappoint­ed in Fraser’s decision.

“PC members in his riding voted 662 to 13 (98%) in favour of creating the UCP,” he posted on Twitter. “I respect their decision, and look forward to electing a Conservati­ve MLA there in 2019.”

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Rick Fraser

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