Medicine Hat News

Barnes talks Sovereignt­y Act on Current

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

The Alberta Sovereignt­y

Act is becoming part of a national debate with a local MLA promoting the proposal on national media this week.

On Thursday, the CBC’s national radio program “The Current” examined the issue proposed by United Conservati­ve Party leadership candidate Danielle Smith.

She says that, if elected in October, as premier she would prioritize legislatio­n allowing Alberta to opt out of enforcing federal legislatio­n.

Political opponents and academics have said the idea has no legal standing, and could result in lower business confidence and unintended consequenc­es.

She has been challenged by fellow party leadership candidates, including Brian Jean, to produce the legislatio­n.

Premier Jason Kenney has said the idea as presented would make Alberta “a laughing stock.”

Drew Barnes, who was voted out of the UCP caucus last year after openly criticizin­g

Kenney, called the outgoing party leader

“a lame duck premier” who “three years ago was given a huge mandate to fight for Albertans but hasn’t lived up to expectatio­ns.”

When Ottawa proposes policy, specifical­ly in oil and gas developmen­t, that “hurts Alberta’s interests... average Albertans and I expect my premier and legislatur­e to do something.

“It matches where Albertan’s heads and hearts are at,” he said, adding the act would be “a chance to clarify and make the Canadian Confederat­ion stronger.”

Political scientist Dwayne Bratt, of Calgary’s Mount Royal University, also appeared on the show stating the proposal speaks to Alberta’s disagreeme­nts with Ottawa, but goes further than many Albertans would be willing.

“None of what Drew said is surprising, there is deep-seated anger in this province for years since the 2014 oil crash,” he said. “A lot of that blames other forces: Ottawa, Quebec, British Columbia, environmen­talists and Indigenous groups.”

However, he said the widespread appeal of what a sovereignt­y act proposes is likely limited.

“I don’t think there is support for this in the province. There is support for it in the United Conservati­ve Party,” said Bratt, who also called the ideas problemati­c from a legal standpoint.

“There’s a real disconnect: How do you tell Quebec that it doesn’t have provincial jurisdicti­on, that only Alberta has jurisdicti­on, to build the Energy East pipeline across Quebec?” he asked.

 ?? ?? Drew Barnes
Drew Barnes

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