This was never part of the plan.
When I started blogging – exactly 5 years ago, as of
tomorrow – the idea was to help my fellow citizens understand what was going on
in the political world. Nothing more.
I didn’t have any extraordinary connections at the time. I
knew my MLA. That was it: That was all.
I didn’t have a degree in Political Science. I didn’t grow
up in a family of political operatives. To the best of my knowledge, I was the
first member of my family to ever belong to a political party of any kind. I
didn’t have any exceptional qualifications that elevated me above anyone else.
All I had was a computer, time on my hands, and a desire to
help people see through the fog and the baloney.
As time went on, and my readership grew, I realized that
there was an appetite for the kind of plain-spoken, common-sense analysis that
I was providing. People really liked that I was a Progressive Conservative who
was willing to take his own party to task, and to call them out when they
deserved it.
What’s more, though: I began to realize that there was an
appetite not only for that kind of coverage, but for that kind of MLA as well.
The kind that puts good ideas and good governance ahead of partisanship and the
“theatre of the absurd” that politics has become.
When you look at the voter participation numbers in all of
our elections, you see numbers that are embarrassingly low. And while there are
no doubt many different reasons for this lack of participation in the most
fundamental of our societal responsibilities, it’s not hard to imagine that one
of those reasons is the often ridiculous way that many of our elected officials
behave. They name-call. They shout at each other. They don’t tell the whole
truth when asked. Ask 3 of them the same question, and you get 3 versions of
“the facts”. None of these behaviours would be tolerated from our children, and
yet when a politician does it, we not only TOLERATE it, we vote for them – sometimes
for decades - and pay their salary.
Don’t we deserve better from our employees? Shouldn’t our
leaders lead by example?
I came to realize that in order to force the kind of change
I wanted to see, I could do one of two things: I could either write about it
for the next several years, and see if anyone took up the challenge; or, I
could dare to BE the change I wanted to see.
Better to light a candle than curse the dark.
As a teenager growing up in Bonavista Downs, I often
wondered what it would be like to be a politician. I would see shows on television
– usually on Access, as this was “back in the day” of 36 channels – of Peter
Lougheed and John F. Kennedy, and I would imagine what it might be like to step
up and serve your fellow citizens, like they did, and change the world in which
you lived. I would wonder what could drive a person to do a job where half the
people you were trying to help would hate you, all of the time, no matter what
you were doing.
But the desire to serve my neighbours never went away. I
started forming opinions. Opinions formed around the dinner table while
watching how things were unfolding at the time. Opinions challenged by great
teachers at St. Bonaventure Junior High and Bishop Grandin High School. When
the facts changed, I changed my opinions. Politicians call this “flip-flopping”,
to try to talk you out of voting for someone. The rest of us call it
“learning”.
Over the past several years, politics in Alberta has taken a
definite turn for the worse, in my opinion. The money that gets thrown around
in exchange for influence is ridiculous. The personal attacks are disgusting.
The way we are, as citizens, expected to accept this as “the way it has to be”
is, quite frankly, insulting.
We deserve better than this.
They say that “politicians are like diapers; they should be
changed often, and for the same reason”.
I don’t know if that’s true 100% of the time, but as I look
around Calgary-Fish Creek, I see how drastically things have changed over the
past 18 years. Our communities are
different. Our needs and values have changed. The people of this area – my home
– have aspirations and visions for an Alberta 20 years from now that, in 1993,
would have seemed unimaginable. And yet, that future is within our grasp. All
we have to do is dare to talk about it. To talk, as equal partners in that
future, about ideas freely and openly, without fear of being labelled by voices
on the left as “rednecks”, or by voices on the right as “socialists”.
We’re better than that. And we deserve better than the
divisive politics of yesterday.
Politicians always tell you they want to “represent your
interests to the party”. They say they want to be “your voice in Edmonton”. But
what do they do once they’re elected? They tow the party line. They echo
whatever their party leader says. The people of Calgary-Fish Creek, if you
believe the voting record, agreed with absolutely everything Ralph Klein ever
did. And then they agreed with everything Ed Stelmach ever did. Until 2010,
when they started agreeing with everything Danielle Smith said.
Where is your chance to have your voice heard in between
elections? Politicians make big decisions in the 4 years between elections –
sometimes, they even change their mind about which party they belong to. But do
they ever ask you? Do they vote against their own party, when it’s what the
people who elected them – their BOSSES – want them to do?
The TRUTH is, our elected officials don’t work for their
party, or their party’s leader: They work for you. And if they forget that,
even for a minute, you should fire them.
I don’t want to spend the rest of my days arguing about
which ideas are “left wing” and which ones are “right wing”. I don’t believe in
convenient labels that hide the truth. The truth is complicated, and something
that the politicians of yesterday have trouble understanding is that voters
aren’t dumb: We can have mature, adult discussions without a politician in the
room. We can even make decisions without a politician in the room. We can
handle “complicated” ideas.
I want to work with people from all parties, and from no
party. I want to work with people whose backgrounds are as varied as the
languages that you can hear while you walk through Sikome Lake on a July
weekend. I’m not going to pretend I know more than you do about healthcare – I
probably don’t. If you’re a nurse, or a doctor, or a patient, I need to hear
what YOU think. I’m not going to pretend I know more than you about energy
policy – again, I probably don’t. But whether you work on the rigs, or you own
a mid-sized producer, I need to hear what YOU think. We can only face these
challenges of vision and ideas when we hear ALL the ideas, and not just the
ones the person at the front of the room already agrees with (or, that their
party leader agrees with).
It’s time to move past the politics of immaturity and
divisiveness. It’s time to stop pretending the voters whose candidate didn’t
win don’t matter in between elections. It’s time to demand better of our
elected officials. It’s time to take back our voice from the special interests
and big donors who drown the rest of us out with their big donation cheques and
special access.
The people in Calgary-Fish Creek have always stood up for
what is right, and for what makes sense.
We need change, as a province, as a government, and as the
Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta.
Yesterday is done. Some of it was great. Some of it, not so
much. But it’s in the past. We can respect it, and learn lessons from it,
without repeating it.
The future is today. It’s now. It can’t wait, and it won’t
be held back. If we don’t embrace change as a party, Albertans will force
change at the ballot box. And they’ll be right to do so.
I believe in our party, and the people within it. I believe
they see the need to change. And I believe that we, in Calgary-Fish Creek, can
lead the charge by sending an Agent of Change to Edmonton, to let them see that
“politics as usual” isn’t good enough any more.
And so, it is with humility and a great sense of purpose
that I announce my intention to seek the nomination for the Progressive
Conservative Association of Alberta in the constituency of Calgary-Fish Creek –
to serve my neighbours in the way they deserve to be served.
There goes the neighbourhood.
Campaign Website: http://www.joeyo.ca
“Like” us on Facebook: http://o4u.ca/facebook“Follow” JoeyO on Twitter: @oberhoffner
Email your questions and comments to JoeyO at: joey@o-mail.ca
2 comments:
I'd just like to say congrats again. I really respect what you're doing and I think you've got a great point of view on politics and the role of the MLA. In fact, it is a point of view which sounds more like my party (the Alberta Party) than yours!
But I do understand your committment to the PCs and your reasons for seeking a nomination under that banner; I guess I just don't share your belief that the PC party can be renewed from the inside and all the muck thrown out; even with Redford at the helm.
Anyway, best wishes again. Hopefully I'll be seeing you in the Leg sometime in the near future!
Like Brandon I understand your commitment to the PCs; I also understand that the best chance of becoming an MLA is to run under that banner - a nomination almost (but not quite) guarantees a seat in the Legislature. I commend you for initiating the changes you think are necessary for the governing party.
Best of luck from a long-time reader and New Democrat.
Bob
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