Vancouver Sun

Former PM Mulroney raps Mulcair over oilsands

NDP leader advised to work with Alberta on national deal

- BY PETER O’NEIL poneil@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/ poneilinot­tawa Read my blog, Letter from Ottawa, at vancouvers­un. com/ oneil

OTTAWA — Former prime minister Brian Mulroney, voted the greenest prime minister in a 2005 vote by Canadian environmen­tal groups, says there’s a way to deal with oilsands concerns without dividing the country as New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair is doing.

Mulroney said the Alberta treasury was “looted” of $ 100 billion by predecesso­r Pierre Trudeau’s Liberal government “so Mr. Trudeau could artificial­ly subsidize consumers in Quebec and Ontario,” Mulroney told CTV. He said the national energy program, which among other things set an artificial­ly low oil price in Canada and imposed new taxes on the industry starting in 1980, was a “great injustice to the people of Alberta and to Western Canada.”

Mulroney, who dismantled the NEP after taking power in 1984, said he doesn’t know if Mulcair’s criticism of the oilsands industry — the NDP leader has blamed it for driving the dollar artificial­ly high at the expense of manufactur­ing jobs in Ontario and Quebec — will hurt national unity.

But he said Mulcair erred in taking such a stand at a time when Alberta is being led by Premier Alison Redford, who was portrayed in the interview as Alberta’s strongest national leader since Peter Lougheed.

“Alberta is now playing the leadership role that it should in the federation, and I think with Premier Redford a very enlightene­d role, a promising role,” he said, citing the recent appointmen­t of former Conservati­ve MP Lee Richardson as her principal secretary.

“Now with Lee Richardson and the others out there, Alberta is going to assume the mantle of leadership in the federation that it enjoyed when Peter Lougheed was premier,” he said. “And I think that for any political leader to deliberate­ly sow divisions or suggest that one part of the country is

I think the government and the opposition should take a good look at their obligation­s to leave our environmen­t, which is pretty magnificen­t, even more splendid than it is now.

BRIAN MULRONEY

FORMER PRIME MINISTER

not prospering because another is wrong.

“There’s a way to sit down with Alberta, if you have a problem with the developmen­t — the oilsands, the tarsands developmen­t or what have you in Alberta — there’s a way to sit down and see if you can’t accommodat­e that, the environmen­tal concerns, on a national level.

“You don’t try and say, ‘ you know, we’ve got to … stop that progress to satisfy some other need.”

Mulroney, who said he remains “very proud” of his 2005 designatio­n as Canada’s greenest PM, said he isn’t sufficient­ly knowledgea­ble and therefore wouldn’t comment on major changes to federal environmen­tal legislatio­n in the Harper government’s massive budget implementa­tion bill.

Those changes, and in particular amendments to the federal Fisheries Act, have been denounced by former Mulroney- era ministers John Fraser and Tom Siddon, both ex- fisheries ministers.

Mulroney said a key issue among the Canadian middle class is that the “pristine” Canadian environmen­t be protected.

“I think the government and the opposition should take a good look at their obligation­s to leave our environmen­t, which is pretty magnificen­t, even more splendid than it is now.”

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