The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Chantal Hébert

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What do Catherine Callbeck, Alison Redford, Pauline Marois, Kathy Dunderdale and Christy Clark have in common? They are all women who broke the political glass ceiling to become their province’s first elected female premier, only to have voters sour on them over just one term in office.

As expected by her own admission, Ontario’s Kathleen Wynne joined the club as a result of Thursday’s provincial vote.

Based on recent provincial history, it would be tempting to conclude that lingering gender discrimina­tion is the root cause of the relatively short tenures of the first women to be elected to their legislatur­e’s corner offices. It would also be simplistic.

These one-term premiers share more than their gender.

Along with their party’s leadership, Callbeck in P.E.I., Redford in Alberta, Dunderdale in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Clark in British Columbia and Wynne in Ontario all inherited government­s that were getting long in the tooth.

Changing the leadership of a party while it is in government has always been a hit-and-miss affair. Just ask John Turner, Ernie Eves or Bernard Landry, to name just those three. They all led the governing parties they had taken over from successful predecesso­rs, to the opposition benches.

As dismal as the re-election track record of Canada’s female premiers to date may be, they initially proved to be more adept at giving their parties a longer lease in government than many of the male counterpar­ts selected to lead in the same circumstan­ces.

The exercise of power is intellectu­ally depleting, and that goes Catherine Callbeck a long way to explain why most parties do not age well in government. That’s a reality even Canada’s most electorall­y successful political organizati­ons can attest to.

Think of the self-destructiv­e clan war between the Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin factions that came to consume the federal Liberals at the end of their previous reign, or the post-Mulroney schisms that pitted conservati­ve against conservati­ve for a decade nationally and ended almost half a century of Tory rule in Alberta three years ago.

The advent of female premiers in Canada coincided with a time when the ties that used to bind voters to political parties were becoming increasing­ly frayed.

In New Brunswick in 2010 and in Nova Scotia three years later, voters declined for the first time in the modern history of those provinces to give incumbent government­s (led by male premiers) a second mandate.

Greater voter mobility also led to the 2011 orange wave in Quebec and to Justin Trudeau’s unpreceden­ted feat of leading a federal party from third place to a majority government in 2015.

In the era of the political consumer, the average life expectancy of a party in power - be it led by male or female leaders - could be getting shorter. As Wynne was pre-emptively conceding defeat last weekend, the members of the Bloc Québécois were firing their first female leader.

Martine Ouellet inferred she had been treated differentl­y on account of her gender. But there was a more fundamenta­l difference between Ouellet’s short tenure and those of her predecesso­rs - Ouellet did not get any of the MPs who served under her elected. None had reason to feel beholden to her for his or her seat in the House of Commons.

Inasmuch as he comes from a provincial legislatur­e and has yet to lead his troops in Parliament, let alone in an election, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh shares some of Ouellet’s circumstan­ces. And he, too, has had a taste of the medicine that ended up poisoning her brief leadership tenure. Over his first months as leader, Singh has had to walk back some publicly stated positions in the face of pushback from his caucus. Some of that pushback took place in public.

That would not be because he is the first visible minority politician to lead a main federal party, but because he has yet to acquire the moral authority that comes

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