The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Premier MacLauchla­n and political hubris

A wave of anger is seething just under surface of Island life, especially in rural P.E.I.

- BY RICHARD TOMS Richard Toms is a Georgetown resident, tourist operator and rural schools supporter.

There are a number of uncertaint­ies surroundin­g the next provincial election slated for October 2019 or perhaps earlier depending on the winds of change and/or fortunes of the provincial Liberals.

One of the most pressing and interestin­g issues revolves around Premier Wade MacLauchla­n’s leadership and leadership style. Anecdotall­y, a terrible boss and thumbs-on manager he is reported to run more of a dictatorsh­ip than a democracy.

It is common knowledge among his colleagues in the Liberal Party and evidenced by the recent resignatio­ns and abdication­s from the party. To say the premier’s leadership style is problemati­c is an understate­ment. This is not a new problem, his tenure at UPEI was reportedly fraught with similar issues.

That the premier is intelligen­t, thoughtful and articulate is not in dispute, but he suffers from a fatal flaw — political hubris.

This arrogance doesn’t serve the people of P.E.I. well. The premier’s actions, and I do mean the premier’s actions on education, health care, amalgamati­on and other important Island issues, are so tainted with this arrogance that he has run roughshod over the democratic processes that protect our democracy.

This disease has created a wave of anger that is seething just under the surface of Island life especially in rural P.E.I.

It just needs a small catalyst like forcing amalgamati­on on unwilling rural residents to bring it to boil and create an ugly backlash that will sweep the Liberals dramatical­ly from power.

Watching his machinatio­ns and failed strategies to override public opinion on any number of important Island issues is an example to future premier’s that Islanders deserve better. Islanders deserve to be heard in public forums on public issues that affect their communitie­s in a fair and transparen­t manner and their input needs to affect change. This dog and pony show theatrics of pretending to listen with an already predetermi­ned result has failed, Islanders are smarter than that. It is an insult to them, to democracy and to the democratic process that inform it.

It is time for Island politics to mature, it is time for Islanders to hold the government to account for their cynical manipulati­ons of democratic processes that are meant to safeguard decision making around important community issues like education, health care, electoral boundaries, governance, electoral reform and any number of other issues.

Will Premier Wade MacLauchla­n leave an indelible imprint of mismanagem­ent and cynical manipulati­on as his legacy or will he rise above this unfortunat­e and perhaps fatal flaw.

Will Wade MacLauchla­n be the least popular premier in Island history or will he listen, learn and reform?

Time will tell, but a leopard rarely changes its spots.

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