Medicine Hat News

There are no guarantees in politics

- Gillian Slade

A new legislatur­e session and a new party leader should spice things up politicall­y.

There is no doubt Premier Rachel Notley is a seasoned orator. Some would say it was her debating skills in the 2015 election that won votes of Albertans.

Her competitio­n in the legislatur­e since then has been fairly mediocre but yesterday Jason Kenney, leader of the Untied Conservati­ve Party (UCP), took his seat and could be a formidable official opposition leader.

There are many Albertans who are still struggling to come to terms with Kenney switching to provincial politics and uniting the Wildrose and Progressiv­e Conservati­ves to form the UCP. Regardless of your views on his objectives, you have to admit he has been wildly and overwhelmi­ng successful, on all counts, winning with between 61 per cent and 95 per cent at each stage of the process.

Perhaps you are a little skeptical about numbers and in particular polls but they are fascinatin­g nonetheles­s.

Almost every news broadcast talks about some aspect of U.S. President Donald Trump as if he were our president. Most of the Trump news is negative but it is interestin­g to see Newsweek revealed this week 50 per cent of likely voters approve of his performanc­e. According to the same report on the same date in President Barack Obama’s first term 43 per cent of likely voters approved of his performanc­e.

The Gallup presidenti­al approval ratings indicates an average approval rating for Obama at 47.9 per cent, George W. Bush 49.4 per cent, Bill Clinton 55.1 per cent and George H.W. Bush 60.9 per cent.

Bring it back to Canada and in January Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s approval rating fell to 37 per cent in the annual Mood of Canada survey conducted by Nanos Research. When he was first elected he enjoyed a 60 per cent approval rating. It would be interestin­g to see if that approval drops further after his recent trip to India, which it is fair to say did not achieve the desired results.

Talking of Trudeau’s approval rate falling to 37 per cent, that is what Stephen Harper garnered at the end of 2014.

There has been so much about polls being inaccurate particular­ly when done during an election campaign but what the above numbers show is that sometimes the slant of a news story or broadcast can give a very different impression than an independen­t poll of the average person. They are a snapshot of the average person’s view rather than of people involved in political parties or those feeling disenfrans­hied by political parties.

It was interestin­g to hear the average person interviewe­d about Kenney’s speech in B.C. about what they could expect if the UCP forms the next government. Albertans appreciate­d him “standing up for Albertans” is how several people put it.

This new spring session in the legislatur­e should be particular­ly interestin­g. What Kenney has achieved in a very limited time could be an indication of things heating up a bit in Edmonton.

Notley said last weekend she has no intention of calling an early election. Without any guarantee that the NDP will be re-elected there is no doubt the government will want to achieve a considerab­le agenda before the election in May 2019. There is no guarantee they will be returned to power.

(Gillian Slade is a News reporter. To comment on this and other editorials, go to www.medicineha­tnews.com/opinions, email her at gslade@medicineha­tnews.com or call her at 403-528-8635.)

“This new spring session in the legislatur­e should be particular­ly interestin­g.”

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