Vancouver Sun

Redford, Nenshi offer to help bridge gap

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA • Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi is willing to help bridge the current divide between Western Canada and the federal government, but called speculatio­n about him being appointed as a representa­tive of — or adviser for — Alberta in federal cabinet “silly.”

“No job has been offered, nor no job has been contemplat­ed,” Nenshi told CTV’s Question Period in an interview aired Sunday.

“Probably it’s wrong, but I am enjoying all this speculatio­n because it’s so silly.”

Nenshi said he’d be prepared to aid the Trudeau government in gaining a better perspectiv­e on Alberta issues in an informal way, but appeared to lay down a few ground rules for his cooperatio­n.

Calling separatist rumblings in Alberta “very real,” Nenshi said he spoke with Trudeau about a range of issues seen in the West as irritants in a call he received from the prime minister on Wednesday.

“Of course the (Trans Mountain) pipeline has to get built, of course we need to re-examine Bill C-69 which my premier calls the No More Pipelines Bill, but is actually much more dangerous than that,” Nenshi said.

The popular three-time mayor warned that Bill C-69, known as the Impact Assessment Act, would make it much more difficult to build not just pipelines, but other infrastruc­ture projects as well.

The Trudeau Liberals were shut out of Alberta and Saskatchew­an in the Oct. 21 election amid growing frustratio­n with federal policies affecting the oilpatch, leading to questions about how the prime minister would provide representa­tion of the two provinces in his cabinet, which is to be sworn in Nov. 20.

Comments made by Trudeau since the election triggered speculatio­n that he might turn to Nenshi to be a voice for the West in cabinet.

Former Alberta premier Alison Redford has also been tabbed as a potential Trudeau confidante, and said she’s willing to lend the federal Liberals a hand in addressing the gap in western representa­tion.

“I haven’t been asked. I am happy to help in any way,” she told CTV’s Question Period.

“This is something Canadians have been thinking about for a long time and I think the key is that there has to be a lot of voices at the table.”

Bill C-69, designed to change the way the federal government reviews major projects, including oil and gas pipelines, became a key focal point of discontent expressed by Albertans during the federal election campaign.

Oil industry executives have warned the legislatio­n will halt economic growth in Canada, particular­ly in the West as companies struggle to get bitumen to markets other than the United States.

 ??  ?? Naheed Nenshi
Naheed Nenshi

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