Medicine Hat News

ALBERTA LEGISLATUR­E

Last PC MLA calling it quits

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EDMONTON The last remaining Progressiv­e Conservati­ve politician in the Alberta legislatur­e is calling it quits.

Richard Starke announced Wednesday that he will not be running in the spring election.

The two-term member for Vermilion-Lloydminst­er said it’s time to move on to new challenges and perhaps resume his veterinary practice.

Or perhaps write about the current troubled state of politics in Alberta.

“I might write a book. I’ve already got a title picked out. It’s going to be ‘That’s just Stupid: A Look Behind the Scenes at the Alberta Legislatur­e.’”

Starke said he is dismayed at the hyper-partisan nature of politics that he believes is overriding good policy decisions.

“Albertans would be dismayed if they knew just in some ways how dysfunctio­nal this place is. And how party politics and the emphasis on winning that next election supersedes the need to provide good governance.”

He said the parties could start by sending more work to legislatur­e committees that could dig deeper on bills and get more informatio­n to make better decisions.

Starke has been sitting with the Independen­t members in the legislatur­e. He declined to join the United Conservati­ves after the Tories voted last year to merge with the Wildrose to form the new party.

Asked if he regrets that decision, he said: “Zero regrets. Absolutely zero regrets. And ... for me at least the correctnes­s of that decision has been confirmed time, and time, and time again.

“I wasn’t welcome in the new party to begin with, and it was very clear that had I made the decision to join the new party, I would be very, very uncomforta­ble with a lot of what they were pursuing.”

Prior to the merger, Starke ran and loss against current UCP Leader Jason Kenney in the race to become leader of the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

He left the UCP shortly after the merger was approved in July 2017, saying he wasn’t pleased with Kenney’s stance on LGBTQ issues, particular­ly relating to gay-straight alliances in schools.

Kenney has said parents should be notified if a child joins a gay-straight alliance at school if not doing so could bring harm to the child. Proponents of the support groups say even the possibilit­y that a parent would be told could stop children from joining.

Starke’s time in politics included stints in cabinet, on the backbench and in opposition. He served as tourism minister under former premier Alison Redford.

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Richard Starke

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