Prairie Post (East Edition)

Times change: fine line between villains and heroes

- By Ryan Dahlman (Ryan Dahlman is managing editor for the Prairie Post West, Prairie Post East and Bow Island Commentato­r)

Growing up, I can remember being heavily interested in politics. Not being the coolest kid at the age of 9, I can remember how much I disliked Quebec — Montreal Canadiens and Guy Lafleur aside. Why? Because La Belle Province wanted to separate from Canada.

René Lévesque, the thin-haired, chainsmoki­ng leader of the Sovereigni­sts was the almost diabolcle politician who wanted to pull Quebec out, but still have some ties. The West and the rest of the country protested. It was a time of political turmoil. Think of it as a 1970’s style of the last two years provincial­ly in Alberta: a lot of controvers­y, a leader who was very unpopular by many in a voting jurisdicti­on which the party has been a traditiona­lly dominant power, both on the arrogant side but completely different in political savvy.

Regardless, the country was hurting and worried about Quebec. In 1979, little-known Alberta-born politician Joe “Who?” Clark earned a minority government over Pierre Trudeau in the federal election. As a right-leaning political friend of mine pointed out, it made it the only time a Conservati­ve leader ever defeated a Trudeau in an election. Of course Clark lost a vote of confidence in February 1980 and Trudeau was back in power. The provincial Quebec Referendum took place May 20, 1980 and with a participat­ion rate of of 85.61%, almost 60 per cent of voters voted against separation. Separation came back as a Quebec referendum in 1995. And again, Quebec was vilified.

Quebec: complainer­s, spoiled, always wanting more — Quebec personifie­d the proverb “You can’t have your cake and eat it (too).”

Yes there was some western separatist­s during that time like the Confederat­ion of Regions Party, Western Canada Concept, Alberta First Party, and later the Separation Party of Alberta and Alberta Independen­ce Party. They were fringe movements and rarely elected more than a few token people.

Fast forward to Aug. 25, 2022. Alberta Prosperity Project, a, unabashedl­y pro-Alberta independen­ce political movement, hosted a dinner and forum at the Edmonton Convention Centre. As featured guests at the event Brian Jean, Todd Loewen and Danielle Smith were the featured speakers.

Jean is running under the slogan “Autonomy for Alberta;” Smith has the Alberta Sovereignt­y Act which basically has the Alberta government be able to to override or ignore any federal legislatio­ns, laws or rulings which contravene Alberta’s prosperity and growth. Loewen, of course, left the UCP and sat as an independen­t, but has been quite vocal in his sovereign beliefs.

The parallels are obvious. Do Canadian nationalis­ts see Smith and Jean as troublemak­ers like Levesque was and later Jacques Parizeau were observed to be in 2005?

What’s the difference? Alberta has been devastatin­gly hurt by Justin Trudeau policies on many levels: energy, agricultur­e, high inflation (ie. food) and of course gasoline and this never-ending push for electric cars to name a few.

Somewhere Ontario is eating popcorn and laughing while the rest of Canada watches curiously.

Being from Saskatchew­an, I know how Alberta was observed: pompous and presumptuo­us; things always going their way with oil revenues overfillin­g Alberta coffers, allowing the government to increase growth in other areas. Alberta politician­s have long complained they have been treated unfairly in regards to their contributi­ons to Confederat­ion with little in return.

Wanting to separate, well, that doesn’t dispel the view outside of Wildrose Country.

Whoever wins will have to heal a lot of hurt feelings here within the borders but what will it mean for interprovi­ncial collaborat­ion and interprovi­ncial trade?

Will Canadian flags on cars be replaced with Alberta ones?

Alberta politics at least, is never boring.

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