Calgary Herald

Tory win a victory for big cities, Mandel says

- GORDON KENT

Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith’s campaign was hurt by her baffling attempt to pit the rest of the province against Edmonton, says Mayor Stephen Mandel.

A victory by Smith, who wanted to reopen talks on the City Centre Airport’s future and postpone constructi­on of the Royal Alberta Museum until there’s a provincial surplus, would have “devastated” the city, Mandel said Tuesday.

But the party didn’t win a single local riding and will sit in Opposition instead.

“What would be the logic of going against a city which in our region has 26 seats? I don’t understand the political logic,” Mandel told the Journal’s editorial board. “I have no understand­ing why someone would take an issue knowing the citizens of the city are very, very strong supporters of it. . . . I couldn’t understand it for someone who’s supposed to be so politicall­y smart.”

Edmonton Conservati­ve MPS Rona Ambrose and Laurie Hawn privately vowed to fight for completion of the new museum, which will receive $120 million in federal funding if work starts by November, Mandel said.

He was particular­ly upset Smith didn’t condemn the comments of Edmonton Wildrose candidate Allan Hunsperger, who wrote in a blog post last year that gay people are going to hell.

“You can’t govern me and have a homophobic attitude or an anti-anything attitude. . . . The question I ask is why she didn’t react to it,” Mandel said. “Either 1, she agrees, or 2, there were people behind her who wouldn’t let her. . . . That was a pivotal point in the campaign. That was the TSN turning point.”

Mandel made the comments after his annual state-of-thecity speech to the Edmonton Chamber of commerce, where he told about 1,500 people Premier Alison Redford’s win was all about new ideas, particular­ly for urban centres.

“From our perspectiv­e, this election demonstrat­ed how clearly Alberta’s growing urban reality is a major change that has fully dawned on the provincial stage,” he said.

“This election presented near-unanimous agreement that it is time for a new deal for Alberta’s two big cities.”

Edmonton has shaken off a “good enough” mentality that stalled work such as overhaulin­g Churchill Square, and needs to push ahead with LRT expansion, a new Walterdale Bridge and redevelopi­ng the City Centre Airport lands, he said.

The mayor also wants greater focus on marketing Edmonton as a place to live and do business, saying the city ran from previous efforts such as the Edmonton Stories website as soon as the cost became a “political football.”

“We have to compete against the world. We have lost things we should have had a chance to compete for.”

He wants to see more regional economic diversific­ation, such as boosting Fort Saskatchew­an’s petrochemi­cal industry, to offset a potential drop in oil exports to an increasing­ly energy selfsuffic­ient U.S. market.

But on one controvers­ial scheme — the new arena — Mandel admitted more should have been done to explain how it’s expected to revitalize downtown.

The $450-million project is envisioned as the centrepiec­e of an entertainm­ent district featuring restaurant­s, stores, office towers, apartment buildings and a new casino.

 ?? Megan Voss, Edmonton Journal ?? Mayor Mandel said Edmonton is shaking off a “good enough” mentality.
Megan Voss, Edmonton Journal Mayor Mandel said Edmonton is shaking off a “good enough” mentality.

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