Stelmach government lurches from one controversy to another during spring sitting

Published Wednesday June 3rd, 2009

EDMONTON - Alberta politicians have wrapped up a spring sitting that saw Premier Ed Stelmach's Conservative government lurch from one controversy to another.

It began with a budget that forecasts a record deficit of nearly $5 billion during the current fiscal year and there's even more grim news ahead - the government must cut more than $2 billion from it over the next couple of years. So far, no one is willing to say if this will mean job cuts, tax hikes or both.

Despite the financial crisis, the Tories pressed ahead with several bills that drew angry responses or touched off protests, including legislation that some landowners fear will give the government unlimited powers of expropriation.

Alberta will also become the first province to slap criminals with medical bills for injuries they receive or cause either during violent crimes or drunk-driving incidents - a move that was immediately panned as unworkable by Canada's criminal lawyers.

The province also made headlines by becoming the first jurisdiction in Canada to enshrine the right of parents to pull their kids from classes dealing with religion, sex or sexual orientation. The outrage over these changes to the Human Rights Code was loud and immediate from teachers, school boards, students and even several former Tory cabinet ministers. But the government stuck to its guns, labelling the law "courageous."

Health care was also a contentious issue this spring and cost-cutting measures drew an outcry from thousands of seniors who faced a doubling or tripling of their group insurance rates. Health Minister Ron Liepert was forced to announce some last minute changes in the face of growing protests.

Liepert also had to do some backpedalling on his decision to remove funding for sex-change operations, resulting in protests by the transgendered community.

Political analyst Peter McCormick says these controversies were embarrassing, awkward and annoying and suggests a lack of leadership by Stelmach, who became premier in early 2007 when Ralph Klein retired from politics.

"With Ralph Klein, you had a clearer message whether you liked it or not," said McCormick. "I'm still waiting to see what the Stelmach era is supposed to look like. He's really acting like a drifting caretaker."

He says a good example of a poorly handled issue was Alberta's media campaign to improve its global image. Media reports revealed that a photograph being used in the $25-million campaign was actually shot on a beach in England.

The British tabloids were quick to pounce and the Stelmach government swiftly removed it from the province's website.

"They don't seem to realize that one headline can undo several million dollars in ads," McCormick said.

"To the world at large, we are still concerned about evolution and gays, that's the message we've sent."

Stelmach declined an interview request and a spokesman said the premier would instead take questions about the spring session at a news conference Thursday.

Recently, Stelmach has been pestering Ottawa for help with the province's financial woes, demanding nearly $1 billion in extra federal cash.

Political analyst David Taras says for two decades Alberta has been gushing in budget surpluses and the Tory government "never had to look back over its shoulder."

"I mean all of a sudden Alberta becomes poor and the politics changes," he said. "The shoe really is on the other foot and Alberta has to go cap in hand and this is humiliating."

Liberal Opposition Leader David Swann says Stelmach's government appears to be "drifting aimlessly."

"They appear to be lurching from right to left in terms of many of their public statements and decisions they've made," said Swann, who participated in his first session as leader of the Liberal party.

"They may be very socially conservative, but they're not fiscally conservative," said Swann. "They are responding to a radical right fringe in their caucus and trying to pacify the other side that says spend more.

"It's a very schizophrenic approach to public policy ... and not really a sound assessment of public values."

NDP Leader Brian Mason says the government appears to have a hidden agenda that was never revealed to Albertans during the campaign leading up to the provincial election last year.

"There is also a very strong desire to centralize power in the hands of the cabinet, but there's a lack of political skill in carrying that out.

"So they blunder into things, they draft legislation in a very bad way."

Mason also blames the Tories for Alberta's current financial dilemma.

"This is also the government that has charged some of the lowest royalties in the world and cut corporate income tax almost in half over the last 10 years," he said. "Now they've got a revenue problem.

"They are the authors of their own misfortune."

 

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