DIY-HP-LED
Well-Known Member
Alberta is about the closest we have to a "red state" the government there is to the right of the national conservatives. It is interesting to note the rural urban divide, rural people think they are less vulnerable to covid, but experience has proved them wrong repeatedly (especially in the states). Even with in a Canadian conservative party there is a rural urban divide over the pandemic response and issues like guns, here too folks.
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Kenney's divided house: COVID pandemic widens urban-rural rift within Alberta government | National Post
Kenney's divided house: COVID pandemic widens urban-rural rift within Alberta government
The intersection of political persuasion and geography on lockdown views in Alberta has been evident in polling throughout the pandemic
EDMONTON — Alberta’s rural-urban divide has become a deeper problem for Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, as the province enters the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Earlier this week, Kenney announced another round of restrictions, saying it was his job to “make tough choices,” and taking the province back to strict rules that were in place in February during the second wave, when cases had grown rapidly and there were concerns the hospital system would be overrun.
“The only responsible choice to save lives and to protect our health-care system is to take immediate action,” Kenney said on Tuesday.
The premier also hinted some Albertans — and some in his caucus — weren’t going to be happy about it.
“I fully expect to hear some of those opinions publicly, in the coming days, and I welcome that,” Kenney said. “I just ask that the debate be informed by facts.”
By Wednesday night, it was clear just how many politicians felt that way: Seventeen out of 63 United Conservative Party caucus members — fully one-quarter — signed a letter addressed to Kenney, saying they disagreed with returning to more stringent restrictions.
For months there has been a handful of disgruntled UCP MLAs who’ve opposed further restrictions, or in some cases, advocated for an approach that treats parts of the province differently.
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Kenney's divided house: COVID pandemic widens urban-rural rift within Alberta government | National Post
Kenney's divided house: COVID pandemic widens urban-rural rift within Alberta government
The intersection of political persuasion and geography on lockdown views in Alberta has been evident in polling throughout the pandemic
EDMONTON — Alberta’s rural-urban divide has become a deeper problem for Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, as the province enters the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Earlier this week, Kenney announced another round of restrictions, saying it was his job to “make tough choices,” and taking the province back to strict rules that were in place in February during the second wave, when cases had grown rapidly and there were concerns the hospital system would be overrun.
“The only responsible choice to save lives and to protect our health-care system is to take immediate action,” Kenney said on Tuesday.
The premier also hinted some Albertans — and some in his caucus — weren’t going to be happy about it.
“I fully expect to hear some of those opinions publicly, in the coming days, and I welcome that,” Kenney said. “I just ask that the debate be informed by facts.”
By Wednesday night, it was clear just how many politicians felt that way: Seventeen out of 63 United Conservative Party caucus members — fully one-quarter — signed a letter addressed to Kenney, saying they disagreed with returning to more stringent restrictions.
For months there has been a handful of disgruntled UCP MLAs who’ve opposed further restrictions, or in some cases, advocated for an approach that treats parts of the province differently.