Regina Leader-Post

Wall jumps ship in tough times

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There have been many comparison­s between Brad Wall and Grant Devine over the years. Most notably, how each of them managed to rack up mounds of debt, paying out favours of party friends and supporters, while maintainin­g a primary target on privatizat­ion.

While Devine didn’t manage this very well, it would appear that Premier Wall has succeeded on many levels. The only difference is, he isn’t going down with the ship, like any good captain ought to.

He gleefully racked up our provincial debt through sneaky P3 partnershi­ps and questionab­le land transactio­ns, during the biggest boom time in our history.

He has successful­ly managed to introduce controvers­ial legislatio­n that opens the road to the privatizat­ion of any and all Crown corporatio­ns.

He managed to close the long-standing Saskatchew­an Transporta­tion Company, through a sneaky, albeit apparently legal, sell off/shut down. Amongst many more things, he also successful­ly made us the only province without a film employment tax credit and with a tax on insurance premiums.

Now … he’s gone. Poof. Vanished into thin air. A responsibl­e ship captain would have remained on board while the ship sank, but not Wall.

He’s smart (?) enough to jump ship even before the iceberg cometh. These poor souls are left on board, drinking and dancing, thinking nothing is wrong with the ship and gleefully going on their merry ways.

Don’t think there haven’t been warning signs, though. From the Why Tower Road Group, to the Saskatchew­an PC Party, to the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, to lawsuit after lawsuit, the warning signs have been aplenty.

When that iceberg hits — and rest assured it will, folks — will you be one of the thousands remaining on board, or will you have jumped ship like so many of us have already, realizing that the captain is no longer anywhere to be found, and all he’s left for us is a dummy at the wheel in captain’s clothing. Donald Neuls, Coppersand­s

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