Suggested
head: We are who our leaders have made us
Our
identity as a province — how we work, how we play, how we see
ourselves within Canada — carries qualities we have adopted
from our leaders. Unique in Canada (and probably unique in the
world), Alberta has been shaped by three strong leaders that we chose
and kept in office for what adds up to most of our history.
And
it is also unique that in the past few months, two of the strongest
leaders in our history have passed away. With the
passing of Peter Lougheed last December and Ralph Klein last week,
ends an era of leadership that modern times may not ever repeat.
We've
had 14 premiers since Alberta gained provincial status in 1905, but
three — Ernest Manning, Peter Lougheed and Ralph Klein — together held the lion's share of our history.
At
one point, Manning, who was premier from 1943 to 1968 was the
longest-serving democratically-elected leader in the world. Think of
the changes that took place, from the time Canada was still
engaged in the Second World War, to the beginning of the Apollo Space
program that sent astronauts to the moon.
When
Manning started his life in politics, much of Alberta's grain harvest
was taken in by horses. He ended it with agriculture becoming a
mechanized, international industry.
Manning
won seven consecutive elections, and it was his hand on the tiller
during the time Alberta changed from being a collection of small
agrarian communities tied to two minor cities, and found its destiny
as an energy producer.
All
but eight years of the great Social Credit dynasty (begun in 1935 in
the depths of the Great Depression) were led by Ernest Manning, who
himself changed the party from a right-wing religious revolution into
a modern, pragmatic political party.
That
dynasty began to crumble in 1965, when a young lawyer, Peter
Lougheed, became leader of the Alberta Progressive Conservative
Party. In 1967, Canada's Centennial, Lougheed became leader of the
opposition with six members, all elected in either Edmonton or
Calgary.
It
was the signal of change. The 1971 election brought Lougheed to the
premier's post, and Alberta would never again be chiefly agricultural
in character.
Lougheed
would serve as premier until 1985, ushering in the era of Alberta's
ascendance on the national agenda. The Heritage Fund was begun by
Lougheed, as was the Alberta Bill of Rights.
Lougheed
invested hundreds of millions in direct investment, plus tax and
royalty incentives to get the oilsands industry on its feet. Remember
the Alberta Opportunity Company? It had its headquarters in Ponoka,
and many an Alberta family got in for $10 a share in 1972. A pretty
good investment, looking back.
Don
Getty served almost as an interim premier upon Lougheed's retirement,
when Alberta's third great leader — Ralph Klein — took up the
mantle of securing a Tory dynasty that has outlasted even the
historic Social Credit run of power.
Gregarious
where Lougheed was austere, Klein seized popular consent to address a
recurring problem for us: the cycle of energy prices that drives our
economy.
Alberta
was $23 billion in debt by the time the cycle bottomed out. Klein
convinced us that we were not the “blue-eyed sheiks” of the
Lougheed boom years. Or, at least that we could not live like we were
all the time.
Klein
campaigned on severe — almost punitive — cutbacks.
No opposition could slow the tidal wave of salary and pension
cuts, hospital closures, layoffs in health care and rises in service
fees of all kinds. In fact, we lauded Klein for them.
Klein
was mayor of Calgary for the 1988 Olympics in Calgary, and he topped
that by being premier for Alberta's Centennial party in 2005. It
was punctuated by showcasing Alberta as the lowest-taxed region in
the industrialized world, and the only one with no debt.
That
we also have almost no savings to show for the billions earned
selling non-renewable resources, would be a problem for leaders to
come after him.
Under
Klein's tenure, our energy industry changed in character. Where once
Albertans were characterized as local risk-taking mavericks who could
parlay small exploration startups into multi-million-dollar profits,
the oil and gas industry has become international in scope.
Where
Alberta and Canada have no indigenous, government-owned energy firms
of any kind, the nationally-owned corporations of other countries
have billions invested in our borders.
Syncrude,
begun under Peter Lougheed using technology developed in household
washing machines, is now run by Imperial Oil Limited, which is in
turn owned by international giant Exxon Mobil, out of Irving, Texas.
During
a single lifetime, Alberta has changed from being inward-looking,
small-town, family-farm-based to discovering our potential as
Canada's national economic engine, to finding ourselves a place on
the world stage of energy supply.
And
it was accomplished under three leaders, whose ambition, acumen and
personal qualities matched the spirit of their times.
You
won't find another district anywhere where three such
leaders could be democratically elected in such close succession,
without violence. And where each leader's legacy paved the way for
the next.
Alberta's
political and social character is to follow a strong leader, and to follow that person for many years at a stretch.
Can
we get used to a rotating leadership, such as the rest of the world
has, or will someone with the right mix of vision and common touch
rise to carry on for decades longer?
Whatever
happens in the future, we can say for now that we are who our leaders
made us.
Follow
Greg Neiman's blog at readersadvocate.blogspot.ca
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