Penticton Herald

New party votes to end carbon tax, OK’s controvers­ial motion

- By The Canadian Press

RED DEER, Alta. — Alberta’s United Conservati­ve Party delegates voted Sunday for balanced budgets and an end to the carbon tax, but there were fireworks after they also OK’d a controvers­ial motion affecting gay children in schools.

Delegates at the party’s founding policy convention voted 57 per cent in favour of a motion to have parents told when their child is involved in any subject of a religious or sexual nature, including after-school social clubs like gay-straight alliances. They passed the motion despite pleas from three UCP caucus members to scuttle it because it was fundamenta­lly wrong and politicall­y perilous.

“This is about outing gay kids,” UCP caucus whip Ric McIver said at the speaker’s microphone as some delegates hooted and shouted at him, forcing the moderator to intervene. “This is about making kids feel unsafe. They can’t join a club.

“You know what folks, you may disagree with some people in the room with people being gay, but they are gay. They need to be safe. We cannot out kids that are in a club (designed) to protect themselves.”

Gay-straight alliances have been a lightning rod issue in Alberta in recent years given their location at the intersecti­on of education, religion, students’ rights, parents’ rights and human rights.

The alliances are social clubs set up by students to help LGBTQ children feel welcome and to lessen any chance of bullying.

Advocates say such clubs are critical to kids’ well-being and to keep them from self-harm. But they say some parents would be hostile to their children joining, and that by notifying parents, children would not take the risk to sign up. Alberta’s NDP have cast GSAs as a barometer of tolerance versus intoleranc­e of gay and minority rights and have passed a bill specifical­ly forbidding schools from notifying parents about GSA participat­ion.

Prior to the UCP vote, McIver also told delegates they court political disaster.

“(If) you want to be called the ‘lake of fire’ party, this is your opportunit­y. Don’t be called the ‘lake of fire’ party, I’m begging you,” he said.

“This will really severely hurt our chances of winning.”

“Lake of fire” refers to the experience of the old Wildrose party, which joined the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves last year to create the UCP under Leader Jason Kenney.

In the 2012 election, Wildrose blew a late lead in the polls in part because party leader Danielle Smith refused to sanction a candidate who penned an anti-gay blog urging homosexual­s to repent or face eternal damnation in hell’s “lake of fire.”

Jason Nixon, the UCP house leader, took to the microphone to say Alberta’s education laws already direct that parents be notified when sex education is taught.

“Let’s stop taking the NDP’s bait and let’s get ready to form the next government,” said Nixon.

Leela Aheer, the UCP deputy leader, added: “When we’re talking about freedoms, that means all people’s freedoms. That means making sure that children have safe spaces in schools.”

Proponents of the motion, however, told delegates the LGBTQ issue is a red herring.

“This is about parental rights. The only societies and government­s that trample on parental rights are totalitari­an ones,” Calgary delegate John Carpay told the crowd.

“Parental rights are a cornerston­e of the free society.” Spruce Grove pastor Brian Coldwell added: “This is about fundamenta­l Godgiven rights, and government­s and activists cannot have more authority over their children than parents.

“It’s not about anti-gay. It’s about fundamenta­l God-given freedoms.” The final vote was 562 to 429. NDP Education Minister David Eggen told reporters the decision shows the UCP is not ready to be a big-tent party.

“I’m clearly offended and disturbed about their position in regard to GSAs,” said Eggen.

“We’ve worked very hard to create a safe and caring environmen­t for students here in the province.

“Just by passing this today they’ve made (it) a more dangerous and unsafe place for kids in schools. That uncertaint­y, that sense of outing kids if they choose to join a GSA, that’s completely unacceptab­le.”

Kenney has said he would like to have parents notified when a child joins GSAs unless notificati­on could bring harm to the child. However he has not clarified how teachers would be able to safely assess such risk and the Alberta Teachers’ Associatio­n has said it does not seek such responsibi­lity.

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