The Daily Courier

Day after historic merger vote, some lament death of PC party

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Members of Progressiv­e Conservati­ve, Wildrose parties vote to join forces

EDMONTON — The former president of Alberta’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves says some members feel adrift after a majority voted to embrace a new party, effectivel­y consigning one of Canada’s great political brands to the ash heap of history.

Katherine O’Neill, in an interview Sunday, said she’s been hearing from many PC volunteers and members who now feel “politicall­y homeless” in a party they feel is tacking too far right on social issues.

“There’s a lot of grieving going on today,” said O’Neill.

“(These) people have literally put their blood, sweat and tears into the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party, and I know a lot of these people and they’re heartbroke­n.

“There are a lot of memories, a lot of hard work. And now they’re not really sure where they could go and best use their efforts.”

O’Neill headed up the PCs during the recent leadership race that saw former federal Conservati­ve cabinet minister Jason Kenney elected on a platform to merge with the Wildrose, Alberta’s official Opposition.

That plan came to fruition Saturday night when members of both parties, in separate votes, chose overwhelmi­ngly to join forces as the new United Conservati­ve Party.

The Wildrose and the PC names will live on legally, but are effectivel­y husks with no candidates.

O’Neill and other members left soon after Kenney’s leadership victory in the spring.

O’Neill said she is fiscally conservati­ve but socially progressiv­e. She’s now heading up a political action committee called Alberta Together that is looking to back a party with similar values.

Many at the Alberta Together meetings have been embracing the centrist Alberta Party.

Dave Quest, a former PC legislatur­e member, said he was cutting up his PC party membership card after three decades.

“I don’t believe the UCP will be the party that I joined as a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve,” said Quest in an interview.

Quest said that under former PC premier Ed Stelmach, the government had to fast-track infrastruc­ture constructi­on that had been allowed to lag when the PCs, under Ralph Klein in the 1990s, focused exclusivel­y on debt reduction and budget cuts.

“Should (the UCP) form government, it will be a 1990s, fiscally driven agenda and it won’t be what’s best for the province,” said Quest.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves won power in 1971 and governed Alberta for almost 44 years before being defeated by Premier Rachel Notley and her NDP in 2015. The Wildrose lasted a decade.

Kenney has stressed vote splitting by the Wildrose and the PCs led to the NDP win and that only a coalition can prevent a repeat in the 2019 election.

Other PCs, including most of the eightperso­n caucus, have embraced the Wildrose merger, and the race for a leader for the new UCP has begun. That vote goes on Oct. 28.

Wildrose Leader Brian Jean, Kenney, and longtime conservati­ve and PC strategist Doug Schweitzer have already said they will run.

Schweitzer has been campaignin­g for weeks, anticipati­ng a positive vote on the referendum. His campaign focuses on fiscal conservati­sm but social progressiv­ism.

He said the die has not been cast on what the UCP will look like.

“Those (Progressiv­e Conservati­ve) values can still be in this new United Conservati­ve Party, and I think that they are,” said Schweitzer.

Jean said names and labels are important but can’t impede progress.

“I think we’ve got a great legacy (on both parties) and together we’re going to have more even than we’ve had as two separates,” said Jean.

“Unity is going to be extremely good for the province, extremely good for the conservati­ve movement in Canada and extremely good for Albertans — and that’s what it’s ultimately about.”

Alberta Party Leader Greg Clark said his party has offered alternativ­es on a range of issues from climate change to debt reduction, but said Albertans still don’t know what the UCP stands for.

“It’s a group that seems united in opposition to the NDP but have offered not a single positive policy that tells Albertans how they’re going to handle the challenges facing our province,” said Clark.

 ??  ?? Alberta PC Party Leader Jason Kenney announces the results of Saturday’s referendum on merging with the Wildrose party.
Alberta PC Party Leader Jason Kenney announces the results of Saturday’s referendum on merging with the Wildrose party.

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