Weekly Note to Supporters of the Citizens Centre
from Link Byfield
December 15, 2003
--NEWS BULLETIN--
. Alberta's McClelland Task Force (see column below) will announce the dates and locations of its hearings on Wednesday. Watch for a Citizens Centre bulletin with details.
. This is an effective opportunity for Albertans, along with people in other provinces, to push for reforms in Confederation.
. The Citizens Centre will be working with the Alberta Residents League and many others to help Albertans make maximum use of this opportunity.
--WEEKLY COLUMN--
TITLE: Ralph Klein can change Canada if he wants to
These are exciting times for conservatives across the country, as they see the old Conservative Party of Sir John A. Macdonald restored to its original name.
But the most significant event in Canadian politics next year will not be the new party, the old name, or even the impending federal election.
Paul Martin (after a lot of talk and reorganization) will do pretty much what Chretien did, and the Conservative Party will appeal for votes in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic the way Joe Clark did, by promising not to change anything.
Eastern Canada likes things as they are. Only the West--and mainly Alberta--understands the urgent need for new directions.
That's why I think the really important event next year will be the McClelland Task Force. You may not of heard of it, but you will. It's a committee of nine Tory MLAs appointed by the Klein government to canvas opinion on Alberta's role in confederation.
Laugh if you like, but Alberta's premier has far more nation-changing power in his grasp than either Steve Harper or Paul Martin. Both of the latter answer to central Canadian majorities wedded to the status quo. Ralph just answers to Albertans. And Albertans yearn for change.
They can wield far more national clout than they have ever used.
Alberta may have a mere 10 percent of federal votes, but it's the only province economically strong enough to tell Ottawa to jump in the lake. It has both the money and the constitutional power. All it needs is the political will.
Look at all the things Klein and his government could do.
* They could save the average working Alberta family $500 annually by opting Albertans out of the Canada Pension Plan and creating an Alberta Pension Plan. This would be good for Albertans, but good for Canada too, because Alberta's exit from the national plan could force the CPP to be redesigned along more modern and practical lines.
* Alberta could opt out of the RCMP, and replace it with a provincial police force. There is no good reason for local policemen at Rimbey or Oyen, Alberta, to be selected, trained and managed as a bilingual branch of the federal Solicitor General's Department in Ottawa. This is a vestige of colonialism, pure and simple. The RCMP should do national policing tasks, and leave local matters to provincial and local management, as in Ontario and Quebec.
* Alberta could start collecting its own personal income tax the way Quebec does, giving it a lot more local flexibility for targeted deductions and incentives. Other provinces might then see reasons and ways to follow suit. Alberta already collects medicare premiums from everyone, and would also be collecting pension plan premiums.
* Some experts insist that Alberta should give up its fairly piddling federal health transfer. It could then design a provincial health system that reflects provincial priorities and attitudes about extra-billing and user fees. Most people understand that a public health system does not need to be a government-managed monopoly, because they are always inefficient and unfair. Again, if other regions see Alberta's waiting lists shrink, they will find ways to follow suit.
* Alberta could get serious about defending the ownership rights of its citizens by establishing an Alberta Wheat Board to bust Ottawa's export monopoly (a holdover from the price-controls program of the Second World War). It could also start more effectively challenging needless federal encroachments on private property in things like the Species at Risk Act and the billion-dollar rifle registry.
All these things can happen if ordinary, sensible Albertans appear in large, enthusiastic numbers before the McClelland Task Force with arguments that are well-informed and constructive.
They alone can convince Premier Klein to use all the powers the Canadian Constitution gives him to lead Canada in the right direction.
The hearings will begin in January. Now is the chance to put up or shut up.
- Link Byfield is chairman of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy
Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy
#203, 10441 - 178 Street
Edmonton, AB T5S 1R5
Phone: 780-481-7844
Fax: 780-481-9983
Email: contact@citizenscentre.com
from Link Byfield
December 15, 2003
--NEWS BULLETIN--
. Alberta's McClelland Task Force (see column below) will announce the dates and locations of its hearings on Wednesday. Watch for a Citizens Centre bulletin with details.
. This is an effective opportunity for Albertans, along with people in other provinces, to push for reforms in Confederation.
. The Citizens Centre will be working with the Alberta Residents League and many others to help Albertans make maximum use of this opportunity.
--WEEKLY COLUMN--
TITLE: Ralph Klein can change Canada if he wants to
These are exciting times for conservatives across the country, as they see the old Conservative Party of Sir John A. Macdonald restored to its original name.
But the most significant event in Canadian politics next year will not be the new party, the old name, or even the impending federal election.
Paul Martin (after a lot of talk and reorganization) will do pretty much what Chretien did, and the Conservative Party will appeal for votes in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic the way Joe Clark did, by promising not to change anything.
Eastern Canada likes things as they are. Only the West--and mainly Alberta--understands the urgent need for new directions.
That's why I think the really important event next year will be the McClelland Task Force. You may not of heard of it, but you will. It's a committee of nine Tory MLAs appointed by the Klein government to canvas opinion on Alberta's role in confederation.
Laugh if you like, but Alberta's premier has far more nation-changing power in his grasp than either Steve Harper or Paul Martin. Both of the latter answer to central Canadian majorities wedded to the status quo. Ralph just answers to Albertans. And Albertans yearn for change.
They can wield far more national clout than they have ever used.
Alberta may have a mere 10 percent of federal votes, but it's the only province economically strong enough to tell Ottawa to jump in the lake. It has both the money and the constitutional power. All it needs is the political will.
Look at all the things Klein and his government could do.
* They could save the average working Alberta family $500 annually by opting Albertans out of the Canada Pension Plan and creating an Alberta Pension Plan. This would be good for Albertans, but good for Canada too, because Alberta's exit from the national plan could force the CPP to be redesigned along more modern and practical lines.
* Alberta could opt out of the RCMP, and replace it with a provincial police force. There is no good reason for local policemen at Rimbey or Oyen, Alberta, to be selected, trained and managed as a bilingual branch of the federal Solicitor General's Department in Ottawa. This is a vestige of colonialism, pure and simple. The RCMP should do national policing tasks, and leave local matters to provincial and local management, as in Ontario and Quebec.
* Alberta could start collecting its own personal income tax the way Quebec does, giving it a lot more local flexibility for targeted deductions and incentives. Other provinces might then see reasons and ways to follow suit. Alberta already collects medicare premiums from everyone, and would also be collecting pension plan premiums.
* Some experts insist that Alberta should give up its fairly piddling federal health transfer. It could then design a provincial health system that reflects provincial priorities and attitudes about extra-billing and user fees. Most people understand that a public health system does not need to be a government-managed monopoly, because they are always inefficient and unfair. Again, if other regions see Alberta's waiting lists shrink, they will find ways to follow suit.
* Alberta could get serious about defending the ownership rights of its citizens by establishing an Alberta Wheat Board to bust Ottawa's export monopoly (a holdover from the price-controls program of the Second World War). It could also start more effectively challenging needless federal encroachments on private property in things like the Species at Risk Act and the billion-dollar rifle registry.
All these things can happen if ordinary, sensible Albertans appear in large, enthusiastic numbers before the McClelland Task Force with arguments that are well-informed and constructive.
They alone can convince Premier Klein to use all the powers the Canadian Constitution gives him to lead Canada in the right direction.
The hearings will begin in January. Now is the chance to put up or shut up.
- Link Byfield is chairman of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy
Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy
#203, 10441 - 178 Street
Edmonton, AB T5S 1R5
Phone: 780-481-7844
Fax: 780-481-9983
Email: contact@citizenscentre.com