The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Kenney needs to play it cool with Wexit heat

- John Ivison

What we’ve got here is a failure to communicat­e. Eastern Liberals like Kathleen Wynne on CTV’s Question Period spent the weekend accusing Alberta Premier Jason Kenney of “fanning the flames” of Western separatism.

Sources close to Kenney note his frustratio­n that he is being denounced as perfidious by people who should know better.

Polls that show support for Western separatism is running at around 30 per cent. The Alberta government’s own polling suggests that around half of those people are firm separatist­s, while the other half are waiting to see what happens in Kenney’s dealings with Justin Trudeau’s re-elected federal government.

The problem for Ottawa is deeper and broader than the angry minority – polls also suggest 75-80 per cent of Albertans sympathize with the separatist sentiment. That is of particular concern to Kenney’s United Conservati­ve Party since nearly half its voters fall into that camp.

Kenney has laid out a series of measures that are within the federal government’s gift, and others that a panel of Albertans is exploring, such as collecting the province’s taxes, withdrawin­g from the Canada Pension Plan and ending Alberta’s contract with the RCMP.

Kenney’s sense is that the frustratio­n is diffuse and could be harnessed if given a constructi­ve outlet. He is calling on the federal government to take immediate action to mollify separatist anger – offer a fixed completion date commitment for the TMX pipeline; an “equalizati­on rebate” by retroactiv­ely lifting the Fiscal Stabilizat­ion program cap, and making changes to the Impact Assessment Act, the controvers­ial former bill C-69.

It may be that the premier and the prime minister can find common cause. To the surprise of just about everyone, in the readout of his meeting with Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe last week, Trudeau not only reiterated his commitment to complete the constructi­on of TMX, which already has 2,200 people working on its constructi­on, he also asked Moe to provide suggestion­s for improvemen­ts to the Impact Assessment Act and said he would consider suggestion­s for improvemen­ts to federal transfers, including the Fiscal Stabilizat­ion program.

Kenney may well be playing with fire but he has the blaze under control so far. The concern is that he may go too far in conciliati­ng those parts of his constituen­cy less wedded to the idea of a united Canada that he is.

Footage emerged from the weekend of UCP organizer Craig Chandler, who supports Wexit, saying he had talked to Kenney, who had in turn encouraged the separatist message. He was reported as saying Kenney plans to introduce legislatio­n allowing citizen initiated referenda that would make it possible for Alberta to hold a referendum on secession.

This is an old Reform Party enthusiasm that the UCP considered including in its platform in the 2019 election. It plays to the party’s grassroots but it also offers the prospect of a David Cameron-style Brexit vote, the nervous breakdown in the Conservati­ve Party that is likely to break Britain.

Cameron is said to have been relaxed about proposing the Brexit referendum because he thought he’d be in a coalition with the Liberal Democrats and they would block it – one of the epic post-war political miscalcula­tions.

Former Alberta finance minister, Ted Morton, outlined Kenney’s dilemma at the Manning Centre’s Alberta conference this fall.

“If he goes too fast, he loses moderates, but if he goes too slow, he risks Wexit and other groups rising up,” he said.

Tossing the prospect of a citizen initiated referendum into that combustibl­e mix would be like adding weeping gelignite.

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Postmedia photo
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