What’s with that Wildrose leadership review?

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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Wildrose members, dissatisfied with the Mr. Jean’s underwhelming recent stagecraft in the Legislature and the media, have been muttering about a rebellion, perhaps a prudent decision has been made by his strategists to get the review over with now while there’s still some relief about the party’s survival in the general election rather than after another year of wooden performances by the leader.

Certainly picking hills to die on like fighting for the right to sleep in till noon before coming to work, not to mention calling New Democrats liars for keeping their promises, can’t be impressing too many people, even within Wildrose ranks!

So at a time and in circumstances when a strong performance by the opposition could have had business groups piling onto the Wildrose bandwagon, instead we have the NDP’s Oct. 27 budget getting pretty decent reviews from folks in many surprising places.


This gives the government of Premier Rachel Notley momentum that could count for a lot later.

Example: “This budget signals we have a government willing to listen and capable of taking a measured approach to managing the province’s finances,” said a news release from … wait for it … the Alberta Chambers of Commerce! “This is what Albertans and business needs right now,” President Ken Kobly concluded in the release.

It’s unlikely just now Mr. Jean’s foes in party ranks could muster enough votes on this coming Friday the 13th to force him to quit. If this keeps up, though, next year might be a different story. So perhaps now that the grumbling has grown audible, Mr. Jean’s strategic brain trust has decided they’re smarter to go for it immediately than wait till next year, when, significantly, they’ll have no choice.

As for the Wildrose Caucus, I can’t imagine it’s in a very happy place this week, especially after the dumbness about not wanting to start work at 9 a.m. becoming the party’s No. 1 battle. Remember, most of the caucus’s 22 members represent ridings populated by the kind of people who still get up at 4 a.m. to milk the cows, even if they don’t do the milking by hand any more.

Now, think about this: Derek Fildebrandt, Mr. Jean’s pick as finance critic, arguably the second most important position in the opposition shadow cabinet, is known to be ambitious. He’s also the one responsible for complaining that by keeping its promises the NDP was misleading voters, and then picking a fight with the Globe and Mail when its reporter didn’t report the story the way he thought she should.

So there’s probably an argument as well for getting the review out of the way while Mr. Fildebrandt, a potential alternative leader, is still hopping around the room because of the self-inflicted wounds to both of his feet.

Finally, there’s the matter of a merger with the Progressive Conservatives. A case could be made that a merger is more likely to succeed to the advantage of the Wildrose Party if it happens sooner than later, given the way the two parties are performing now.

I wouldn’t be surprised if conservative godfather Preston Manning is burning up the phone lines trying to do something to fix the Opposition’s lame performance. This would be especially true nowadays with some business leaders reporting back that – ahem! – they’re not really all that unhappy with the NDP.


What's with that Wildrose leadership review? (Inquiring Albertans want to know!) | rabble.ca
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
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Lets face it by next election the NDP won't hold a seat in Alberta.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
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Alberta
Lets face it by next election the NDP won't hold a seat in Alberta.

They've got pretty good control of some Edmonton ridings but only got in because the electorate desperately wanted change. They'll desperately want change come the next election. If the Wildrose have a decent leader, it will be a slam dunk. I'm not convinced the Conservatives can make over the party in time. Maybe in ten years...
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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Brian Jean blasts the old Wildrose, praises the old PCs


He also has a new friend — the very same PC party, which he now credits with great things in the past.

This is jolting for anyone who watched the savagery of Wildrose attacks on the PCs for nearly six years, from 2009 right through the campaign for the May 5 election.

But it’s all part of a strategy to realign the thinking of PCs, and pull them into the Wildrose tent without the bother of a merger or any dealings with the party itself.

Wildrose will run this plan over the next few years, working hard to attract stray and dispossessed PC voters, as well as many Wildroser-leaners who voted for the NDP.

But the popularity of the approach among Wildrosers isn’t universal. Some were dubious about Jean’s speech. He got 78 per cent support in the party’s leadership vote, held immediately after he spoke.

That’s not a huge level of backing from a party that rose from the ashes under Jean’s leadership. Danielle Smith received 90 per cent support in her final leadership review.

In his speech, Jean turned his sights directly on Smith and her crew of 11 ‘crossers.

“We’ve all been witness to what happens when that kind of selfish, power-hungry ambition takes hold inside a party,” he said. “It ends in disaster.”

The truth is there is a whole bunch of good conservatives in this province who today don’t believe they have a viable political home.

“They know their old party is dying, but they don’t think they are welcome here … we need those people.”

He urged Wildrosers “to do more to welcome them.” There was little or no applause when he talked of bringing PCs into the tent.

But Jean painted the struggle with the NDP as life and death for Alberta, while the old battles with the PCs were “a principled check on a wayward dynasty.”

So, it begins.

Old battles are reimagined, old enemies embraced.

Yet another movement, driven by defeat, calls the family back home. Reconciliation rarely comes easy.

Braid: Brian Jean blasts the old Wildrose, praises the old PCs | Calgary Herald