National Post (National Edition)

Time is ripe for conservati­ve Alberta premier

- JEN GERSON National Post jgerson@postmedia.com

If Alberta opts for a Conservati­ve premier in 2019, the rest of Canada should brace itself for an era of constituti­onal wrangling and inter-provincial conflict unseen since the 1970s.

All four potential leaders of the newly formed United Conservati­ve Party — the product of a union between the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve and Wildrose parties, and the most likely threat to NDP premier Rachel Notley’s reelection — have spent the campaign to date taking hard lines on trade, taxes and everything Ottawa. During the first debate between leadership candidates last week, a packed hall of revitalize­d provincial conservati­ve diehards cheered loudest when the candidates promised trade wars and constituti­onal legal battles.

Former MP and federal cabinet minister Jason Kenney, the race’s front-runner, and former Wildrose leader Brian Jean have proposed using an arcane Supreme Court of Canada ruling to force a re-negotiatio­n of the federal equalizati­on program, which transfers money to “have-not” provinces with the intention of assuring equal levels of government services across the country.

As Alberta continues to suffer an oil-bust economic downturn, a Conservati­ve premier would rankle much of the rest of Confederat­ion on behalf of a province increasing­ly embittered by pipeline politics. It’s the kind of muscular approach employed by premiers like Peter Lougheed and Ralph Klein, both of whom maintain a kind of mythical status in Alberta for their willingnes­s to square off against Ottawa and the other provinces.

There’s certainly an opportunit­y for a Conservati­ve Albertan to flex his or her muscles.

The environmen­tal movement is intractabl­y opposed to the developmen­t of Alberta’s oil sands, opposition from other premiers to pipelines like Trans Mountain and Energy East threaten Alberta’s ability to sell its oil in the U.S. and abroad. Meanwhile, under Justin Trudeau, the National Energy Board has expanded its mandate, stating that it will consider both upstream and downstream greenhouse gas emissions as part of the regulatory process.

The change at the NEB was sold as a bid to gain the kind of “social licence” necessary to earn Alberta’s oil industry the good will to expand; current NDP premier Rachel Notley has also invested in this more conciliato­ry approach, adopting a hard cap on greenhouse gas emissions in the oilsands and introducin­g a carbon tax.

But from the Conservati­ve point of view, the quest for social licence has proved fruitless; if B.C., Ontario and Quebec continue to oppose pipeline constructi­on, and the federal government proves unwilling to use its powers to make the projects happen, there is little reason for Albertans to play nice.

And that is where Kenney and Jean’s constituti­onal threats come into play.

“In 1998, the Supreme Court of Canada made a decision in what is called the Quebec Succession reference in which it determined that if a province holds a referendum on a constituti­onal question and if it is adopted by a clear majority on a clear question, there is a binding constituti­onal obligation on the federal government to negotiate that issue with the relevant province,” Kenney said after last week’s debate.

“If the federal government pursues a tax on our energy industry — the carbon tax — if it doesn’t roll back the NEB’s outrageous expansion of its mandate, and if it refuses to fundamenta­lly change the equalizati­on formula in 2019 I would be prepared to hold a referendum.”

According to several legal experts, this is no mere idle threat. But constituti­onal law is more complicate­d than sound bites allow, and the real question is whether triggering such a referendum would amount to anything more than a temporary legal headache for the federal government.

To craft this proposal, Kenney relied on a paper by retired University of Calgary political science professor and former Alberta cabinet minister Ted Morton, who said a referendum would likely force the federal government to negotiate on a constituti­onal issue in good faith.

While the principle of equalizati­on is enshrined in the Constituti­on, the actual formula by which the transfer is calculated is a matter of federal legislatio­n, and one that is up for review in 2019. The mere threat of a constituti­onal renegotiat­ion might be enough to earn Alberta some concession­s.

Even if it did, however, University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe warns that there is no likely new equalizati­on formula that would make any substantiv­e improvemen­ts to the red ink on Alberta’s balance sheet.

Even if Alberta were able to exclude resource revenue from the equalizati­on equation, “we have the highest level of fiscal capacity of any province,” Tombe said. “I think there’s lots of sensible changes that could be made, but Albertans shouldn’t be under the illusion that it would improve our own fiscal situation. Changing the formula affects how equalizati­on funds are allocated among have-not provinces, and we are not going to be a have not province.”

In short, all this bluster from Conservati­ve candidates would likely amount to little more than political theatre. But what theatre it could be.

 ??  ?? Brian Jean
Brian Jean
 ??  ?? Jason Kenney
Jason Kenney
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada