Last August, when he was still an
outsider wanting to get inside, Jim Prentice proposed a three-term
limit for provincial MLAs. Now that he's premier, that hasn't been so
much on the radar, much less the agenda.
But MLAs in all three major parties in
our province have been doing a lot of that work for him. In the next
provincial election, not one of the current party leaders will have
fought a provincial campaign before, not as leader.
Rachel Notley, leader of the NDP will
be the senior statesperson in the next election — and she has only
been in leading the NDP since last Oct. 18.
“Officially,” Prentice has had
premier-like status since winning the party leadership last Sept. 15,
but he gained fully-elected status in a by-election Oct. 27, nine
days after Notley. That's if you're in the mood to split hairs.
Wildrose has an interim leader, Heather
Forsyth, in office since just before last Christmas. That Christmas
horribilus saw the mass
defection of Wildrose leader Danielle Smith, along with eight other
Wildrose representatives, to the Tories.
And now, the Liberal Party of Alberta
is also officially leaderless. Sherman could have held senior status
in the next election, coming to the leadership wa-a-y back on Sept.
12, 2011.
But he announced Monday that he was
stepping down, following a decision he made “walking a beach.”
The usual reasons — a new direction, spending time with family,
etc. — were given.
The cumulative result is as clean a
slate as this province has ever had electorally. There are fewer
incumbents in high office known to be running today than I can
remember in all my years of watching politics.
Last August, while Prentice was
promising things that only $100 oil could provide, the Calgary
Herald ran a list of 23 Alberta MLAs who would have been in their
last term of office, had the three-term rule been in force then. (For
the record, in case you need to know, there is no three-term limit
now.)
That list included Forsyth, who was then serving her sixth term as an MLA, albeit her first term as a member of the Wildrose.
That list also included Red Deer North
MLA Mary Ann Jablonski, who is currently in her fifth term. Jablonski
has also announced she would not be running in the next election —
a decision that will not come as a surprise to the people who know
her well.
I did not like the tone of the Herald
column last August in one major regard. The headline referenced
people who have passed their “best before date.” One paragraph
metaphorically suggested a “severance-free ice floe.”
I'm no fan at all of the Alberta
Progressive Conservative Party, but I am a fan of Mary Ann Jablonski.
That might have caused me some major stress at the ballot box on a
few (4) occasions, but for a miracle of geography that put my home
just south of the border of her riding.
I was free to vote both my heart and my
principles. For all the effect that it would have.
As it is, Jablonski is nowhere near her
best-before date. For her, I sincerely hope (and expect) the best is
yet to come.
Five terms is a long time. So we will
need some reminding that Jablonski replaced the Red Deer MLA who
bequeathed Alberta its asinine flat income tax: Stockwell Day.
Jablonski won in a by-election to
replace Day — who had definitely passed his best-before date in
provincial politics, though not before saddling taxpayers with the
legal expenses required to defend a defamation lawsuit for comments
he made in a letter to the Red Deer Advocate.
We like to elect people who can
deliver, people who can get things done.
Jablonski had shown that political
ability long before being elected. She successfully lobbied the
federal government for dental care for members of the armed forces
and the RCMP. As well, she advocated for greater rights for military
spouses. Her husband Bob Jablonski had been a member of the military,
and was transferred to Penhold in 1980 — to our benefit.
It's all right there, in Wikipedia.
Successful private members bills are
like hen's teeth. Jablonski has championed two of them. One would
give the parents of drug-addicted youth the right to force them into
rehab. Another would increase attention for screening into Irlen
Syndrome in school children, to give those children a better chance
at making the most of their educations.
And that's overlooking a lot of the
rest of her accomplishments.
I don't know about the value of any
severance package for Jablonski, but I do know any reference to an
ice floe is supremely disrespectful.
My line is open to suggest any number
of local agencies for her attention, that could benefit from having a
person on board like her. A person who can get things done.
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