The News (New Glasgow)

King captivates Tories with simple truths

- Jim Vibert Jim Vibert, a journalist and writer for longer than he cares to admit, consulted or worked for five Nova Scotia government­s. He now keeps a close and critical eye on those in power.

Many of the Tories in Halifax’s Westin Hotel Saturday morning were there to hear candidates for the federal Conservati­ve leadership. But those who stuck around afterwards were treated to the best speech of the weekend from Prince Edward Island Premier Dennis King. King delivered a fullthroat­ed rejection of the partisan rancour that’s become a political staple, in favour of few simple truths. Politics is about people, he said. In public life, be yourself because that’s who the people voted for, and, above all else, be kind. There’s not a hint of affectatio­n or self-importance in King, and the most jaded observer couldn’t find a false note in his breezy half-hour talk. Wit — usually self-deprecatin­g — underscore­d his authentic homage to political civility and decency. “In a world that witnesses, every single minute of every single day ... the deluge of political division and anger ... we remember who we are as Maritimers; what that represents to us, our families, our communitie­s and our provinces,” he said. “To be a Maritimer is to have that inherent kindness, that quality that makes us want to look out for each other, to cheer for one another, and that wants only for our families, our friends and our neighbours to have a fair shot at a good life.” Saturday marked the first anniversar­y of King assuming leadership of P.E.I.’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves. He recalled being approached about running for the job, finding the idea intriguing and flattering but also “utterly terrifying.” “Having observed the decline of decorum and the rise of personal attacks in today’s politics, I didn’t care much to have the many failings and shortcomin­gs of my life dissected on the front pages of the newspapers,” he said. He described how political recruiters convince prospectiv­e candidates that they’re well known and liked, and that they connect with people. “They play to the inner ego ... and make it hard as possible to say no,” he said, “When they get you to say yes, they take you in a room, close the door and say, ‘now that you’ve said yes, we need to change all those things we just said we liked about you.’” King didn’t want to play “the game of gotcha politics where we just continue to yell at each other without the decency of listening ...” — an apt descriptio­n of most any question period in the House of Commons and most provincial legislatur­es. King admitted he’s been asked to speak at just two political functions off the Island since becoming premier last May, and both invitation­s came from Nova Scotia PC leader Tim Houston. “Either I’m really good, or you (Houston) have to be more fussy,” said King, who captivated the room full of Tories in a way the leadership candidates didn’t. At the Nova Scotia PCs’ annual meeting, Houston announced his party will introduce legislatio­n that welcomes ridesharin­g to the province when the legislatur­e resumes later this month. “Nova Scotia should enjoy the same market advances as the rest of the world,” Houston said. “We have a vibrant province with world-class amenities, and there is no reason why we shouldn’t add ridesharin­g to our cities and towns.” The PCs’ legislatio­n would require drivers to pass and maintain a clean criminal record check and complete a program of safe driving, conflict resolution, and diversity training. “Safety of passengers and the public must be the driving force,” Houston said. “Ridesharin­g alternativ­es have the potential to offer tremendous benefit to rural areas where they may have limited transporta­tion options.” Five of the federal leadership candidates showed up at the meeting and it’s no surprise that Pictou County’s Peter MacKay was the crowd favourite, although the other four received friendly and at times enthusiast­ic applause. The requisite call for party unity was the common element from all five. In addition to MacKay, Ontario MPs Erin O’Toole and Marilyn Gladu, Edmonton-based businessma­n Rick Peterson and Rudy Husny, who twice ran against former federal NDP leader Tom Mulcair, spoke at the event. O’Toole urged the party not to move “backward and slightly to the left,” but later refused to say whether he thought that’s where MacKay would take Conservati­ves. For his part, MacKay said he’d prefer to stay on the high road. Those leadership candidates who stayed for lunch and King’s speech got a pretty good descriptio­n of what that high road really looks like.

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