Calgary Herald

Spat exposes friction between Wall, Notley

- TIM COOK

Brad Wall says the time for soft-selling the oil and gas industry in the rest of the country is over. The Saskatchew­an premier took rookie Premier Rachel Notley to task this week for suggesting Quebec would approve of the Energy East oil pipeline if Alberta could show it has its environmen­tal house in order.

Wall suggested that was akin to giving Quebec a veto over an important national energy project. He then took shots at Central and Eastern Canada for soaking up transfer payments funded by economic success in the West. Notley called that showboatin­g. Wall said “show me to the bridge.” The rift exposed new friction between Alberta, which just elected its first non-Tory government in more than 40 years, and Saskatchew­an, which has the only provincial government west of Newfoundla­nd with firm roots in the Conservati­ve brand.

Wall, who leads the right-leaning Saskatchew­an Party, wouldn’t back down Friday. He said the West shouldn’t have to apologize for its resources and needs to stop being so diplomatic with its message.

“We’ve all done it. I’m not sure what it has availed Western Canada,” Wall told The Canadian Press. “We got the National Energy Program for all of our goodwill and we have had precisely no pipelines approved and we have increasing calls for greater regulation.

“I think if more Canadians knew that we import foreign oil from places like Venezuela and Saudi Arabia and that Energy East would end that, there would be great support for it, but we have to say it,” he said.

Notley, fresh from her first premiers meeting — where the leaders passed a national energy strategy that backs both project developmen­t and climate action — wasn’t backing down either.

She’s trying a different approach after years of Alberta Tory government­s pushing energy projects on other provinces and pushing back on being told what to do.

“It was my first meeting and I felt it was really important to develop relationsh­ips, to hear the positions that other people had, so that I was better positioned to propose options that people were likely to be able to agree to,” she said.

It’s about the long term, she added. “It’s not always going to be the case that we’re quietly and diplomatic­ally working together, but I think that should be the starting point. It’s easier to be tougher if you’ve got good working relationsh­ips to begin with.”

Political analyst Bob Murray said Wall’s reaction to the Quebec-Alberta Energy East meeting was part political posturing, because there will be an election in Saskatchew­an within the next year.

But there’s also genuine concern there, said political scientist Duane Bratt of Mount Royal University.

It’s not always going to be the case that we’re quietly and diplomatic­ally working together, but I think that should be the starting point.

PREMIER RACHEL NOTLEY

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall and British Columbia Premier Christy Clark field questions at the summer meeting of Canada’s premiers in St. John’s on Friday.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall and British Columbia Premier Christy Clark field questions at the summer meeting of Canada’s premiers in St. John’s on Friday.

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