The Globe and Mail - 09.03.2020

(Ron) #1

A6 | NEWS O THEGLOBEANDMAIL| MONDAY,MARCH9,


New Ontario Liberal Leader Ste-
ven Del Duca will set about tour-
ing the province as he looks to re-
build his party after the crushing
2018 election loss, while Progres-
sive Conservatives immediately
tied him to the legacy of former
premier Kathleen Wynne.
Mr. Del Duca, a former cabinet
minister in Ms. Wynne’sgovern-
ment, handily won Saturday’s
leadership race on the first ballot,
with almost 59 per cent of the
vote. A long-time Liberal organiz-
er, he will now take the helm of a
party that has not had a perma-
nent leader since the June, 2018,
election defeat under Ms. Wynne,
who still sits as an MPP.
The party holds eight seats in
the Ontario Legislature, and is
millions of dollars in debt from
the last election. Mr. Del Duca’s
first stop on Monday will be
Windsor.
In his acceptance speech on
Saturday, Mr. Del Duca, a 46-year-
old father of two, said he wants to
create a “modernized political
movement” to win the next elec-
tion.
“When we are united, when we
are focused, we get the job done,”
he said.
He later told reporters he
doesn’t plan to seek a seat in the
legislature before the June, 2022,
election unless a by-election
opens up in Vaughan-Wood-
bridge, now held by PC associate
minister Michael Tibollo, who
beat Mr. Del Duca in 2018.
“We have a lot of work to do in
order to regain with humility ...
the trust of people in this prov-
ince,” he said.
Mr. Del Duca said the party
needs to raise millions of dollars,
find a diverse slate of candidates
andcomeupwithaplatformthat
resonates with the public before
the next election, which takes
place in just more than two years.
But when asked about his own
recordastransportationminister,


which saw controversy after he
approved a GO train station near
his Vaughan riding, Mr. Del Duca
said he’s a “work in progress.”
“I don’t think that any one of
us delivers perfection, and more
importantlyIdon’tthinkthepeo-
ple of Ontario expect perfection.
They expect competence. They
expect a government to gets the
big things right,” he said.
Toronto MPP Michael Coteau
came second in the leadership
race with 17 per cent of the vote,
followed by academic Kate Gra-
ham, seen as a rising star in the
party, with 14 per cent.
In a final pitch to about 2,
Ontario Liberals, Mr. Del Duca
took direct aim at Mr. Ford, criti-
cizing the PC record on educa-
tion, health care and the environ-
mentandlabellingthePremier“a
climatechangedinosaur.”Hesaid
theTorieshavecreated“chaos”in
the education system, a reference
to four teachers’ unions that have

undertakenrotatingstrikesinthe
province,andhevowedtostreng-
thenpubliceducation.Healsoex-
pressed support for pharmacare,
a key federal Liberal pledge.
Mr.DelDucaportrayedthePre-
mier as a partisan opportunist
who does not have Ontarians’ in-
terests at heart.

“We know that Doug Ford only
cares about expanding opportu-
nity for his friends, and for set-
tling old political scores,” Mr. Del
Duca told the crowd.
Mr. Del Duca accused Mr. Ford
of wasting money on gas pump
stickers,attackadsandlawyersto

fight the federal carbon tax in
court.“WeneedaPremierwhore-
allyacceptsthatclimatechangeis
a scientific fact,” he said.
PC House Leader Paul Calan-
dra tied Mr. Del Duca to Ms.
Wynne’sgovernment,callinghim
her “right-hand man” and criti-
cizing the Liberal record on high
hydro prices and skyrocketing
debt.
“When you hear what he talk-
ed about today, it was doubling
down on the policies of Kathleen
Wynne,”Mr.Calandratoldreport-
ers. “It’s like he learned nothing
from the 2018 election.”
As soon as Mr. Del Duca con-
cluded his speech on Saturday
morning, the PC party released a
noticethatMr.Calandrawouldbe
playing host to a “pool party” at
the convention, a reference to a
recent CBC report about Mr. Del
Duca’sfailuretoapplyforthenec-
essary permits for a newly built
pool in his backyard.

Mr.DelDucarefusedtodirectly
answer questions about the pool
at his news conference.
Mr. Del Duca did not reserve
his criticism for Mr. Ford alone:
He also went after NDP Leader
AndreaHorwath,whoheaccused
of siding with the Tories during
the Liberals’ time in office.
“Wecannotaffordtohavelead-
ers who are missing in action
when the bell sounds,” he said.
The NDP’s Taras Natyshak sent
out a fundraising e-mail after Mr.
Del Duca’s win, calling him a
“scandal-plagued, out-of-touch,
former Wynne cabinet minister
from the right-leaning wing of
their party.”
Theothercandidatesforleader
were: Toronto MPP Mitzie Hun-
ter, Ottawa lawyer Brenda Hol-
lingsworth and former staffer Al-
vin Tedjo, who was joined on-
stage by a robot as he made his
pitchforartificialintelligenceand
basic income.

NewleaderplansOntarioLiberalrebuild


DelDucasayshisparty


has‘alotofworktodo’


toregainpeople’strust


asheembarksontour


acrosstheprovince


LAURASTONE
QUEEN'SPARKREPORTER


StevenDelDucawavestothecrowdafterbeingannouncedasthewinneroftheOntarioLiberalPartyleadershipraceinMississaugaonSaturday.
Mr.DelDucasayshewantstocreatea‘modernizedpoliticalmovement’towinthenextelection.FRANKGUNN/THECANADIANPRESS

Whenweareunited,
whenwearefocused,
wegetthejobdone.

STEVENDELDUCA
NEWONTARIOLIBERALPARTYLEADER

AreportfortheAlbertagovernmenthasraisedconcernsthat
a large number of methamphetamine users are frequenting
supervised consumption sites that were designed to respond
to opioid overdoses.
Front-line health workers say, if anything, that finding
shouldpersuadetheUnitedConservativegovernmenttobol-
ster services. Theprovincialgovernment formed a panel last
summer to look at how consumption sites were affecting
crime rates, social order, property values and businesses. It
didn’t address the benefits of harm reduction for users.
The report said meth constitutes up to half the drugs
consumed at locations where multiple substances are
permitted. “This was surprising and seemed antithetical to
thepurposeofthesites,whichistoaddresstheopioidcrisis,”
committee vice-chair Geri Bemister-Williams said.
“The side effects of methamphetamine are characterized
by agitation, aggressiveness, paranoia, psychosis and other
bizarrebehaviourthatincreasesandaddstothe...socialdis-
order. We, as a committee, were concerned, as the sites were
not equipped or designed to handle methamphetamine
users.”
Thereportsaidmethusersaregenerallylessatriskofdying
of an overdose unless the substance has been “adulterated.”
Bonnie Larson, a family physician who works with vulner-
ablecommunitiesinCalgary,saidthat’sexactlytheproblem.
Methis“very,veryfrequently”contaminatedwithstreet-level
fentanyl, a powerful opioid. “What we’re looking at is a con-
taminated drug supply, a poisoned drug supply,” she said.
“Nobody’s meaning to overdose on fentanyl regardless of
what drugs they’re taking, but they are at a high risk of over-
dosing and dying even if their whole intention was to use
methamphetamines.”
CoreyRanger,aregisterednursewhohasworkedinharm-
reduction programs across Alberta, said non-opioid drug us-
ers are at a higher risk of an overdose if they inadvertently
take a fentanyl-laced substance, because they don’t have the
tolerance.
Mr. Ranger suggested providing more resources at super-
vised consumption services could help address some of the
disorder that comes with increased meth use. Right now, the
sites are too busy to accomplish that. “If somebody has con-
sumedabadbatchofastimulantlikemethamphetamines,it
presents very much like an exaggerated anxiety or panic at-
tack,andthewaythatyoutreatthatisyouprovideasupport-
ive environment.”
Mr.Rangersaidmostsitesaresetuptohandleallmethods
of consumption except inhalation. Arches in Lethbridge is
one of the few in Canada that has supervised inhalation
rooms. “If anything, this report tells us that we haven’t gone
far enough. If we’re able to offer safe places for people to in-
haletheirdrugs,thenthey’relesslikelytoinjectitandtherisk
foroverdoseandtheriskforblood-bornepathogeninjection
goes down significantly.”

THECANADIANPRESS

AdvocatesinAlberta


callformoreresources


amidhighmethuseat


drug-consumptionsites


LAURENKRUGELCALGARY

F


or more than two weeks, In-
digenous youth and their
supporters occupied the
granite steps of the the B.C. Legis-
lature’s ceremonial front en-
trance, spreading out with tents,
tarps and protest signs and main-
taining a ceremonial fire that
filled the building with campfire
smoke – and tension.
All that is left of the protest is
an ugly protective fence, erected
after they vacated the space on
Friday.
The protest camp was set up in
support of Wet’suwet’en hered-
itary leaders who are in a battle
against construction of a pipeline
in their traditional territories. It
ended after five key leaders were
arrested for mischief inside the
legislature.
During the occupation, the
protesters treated Indigenous
Members of the Legislative As-
sembly – the voices who might
have best advanced their con-
cerns inside the chamber – with
contempt.
Advanced Education Minister
Melanie Mark, B.C.’s first female
First Nations MLA, was accosted
asshetravelledtoworkbyprotes-
ters who yelled “shame!” while
her constituency office in East
Vancouver was occupied by dem-
onstrators.
Liberal MLA Ellis Ross, the for-
mer chief councillor of the Haisla
Nation, ran for provincial office
with an agenda to reduce Indige-
nous poverty, suicides and incar-
ceration rates. He was blocked by
protesters from entering the
buildings on the day of the
Throne Speech and had to find
another entrance.
Adam Olsen is the Greens’ in-
terim leader and a member of the
Tsartlip First Nation who got into
politicsseekingtorepairthedeep
riftbetweentheCrownandIndig-
enous governance. He met with
the Indigenous youth, agreed
that the pipeline was a bad idea,


railedagainstinjusticestoIndige-
nous people – and was yelled at
for his efforts.
British Columbia has never be-
fore had so many Indigenous
voices in the legislature at one
time. There has never been a bet-
ter time for members of the
house, who last fall unanimously
passed legislation to commit to
humanrightsforIndigenouspeo-
ple, to listen with empathy to the
concerns of the youth outside.
But the protesters demanded
complete allegiance with their
position, dismissing alternative
perspectives within Indigenous
communities on the Coastal Gas-
Link pipeline. The Wet’suwet’en
themselves are divided on the is-
sue, and are in the midst of a sen-
sitive consultation process on is-
sues of rights and title.

Mr. Olsen tried to engage with
the Indigenous youth, and re-
mains sympathetic to their feel-
ings of frustration. But he could
notcountenancetheirtactics,nor
their tone. “I have great difficulty
characterizing much of what I ex-
perienced ... as peaceful,” he said
aftertheprotestersblockedMLAs
from entering the buildings on
Feb. 11. He suggested the protes-
ters were missing the guidance of
their elders.
Mr. Olsen was the greatest ally
that the youth could have had.
His party opposes the expansion
of fossil-fuel infrastructure, and
has voted repeatedly against the
corporate subsidiesthat govern-
ment has offered to secure a new
liquefied natural gas (LNG) in-
dustry that the Coastal GasLink
pipeline is designed to support.
He blamed thegovernment for
backing the pipeline project
when the opposition from the
Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs
was firmly established. “This sit-
uation which we face right now
was entirely foreseeable,” he said

in an interview.
Last week, Mr. Olsen was asked
to witness a meeting between
Scott Fraser, the Minister for In-
digenous Relations and Reconcil-
iation, and a small group of the
Indigenous youth. The group was
invited into the legislature only
after they gave their word that
they would leave after the meet-
ing–akeyissue because a court
injunction was in place to keep
them outside. Mr. Olsen was
blunt, after the melee that fol-
lowed,thatthegroupuseddecep-
tion in order to launch a sit-in
that led to the five arrests.
Still, the interim Green leader
maintains that dialogue must
continue, saying that Indigenous
people have little reason to trust
the Crown on good-faith bargain-
ing. “Everyone has been let down
by this system and it’s important
for us to make those systemic
changessothatthenwecancome
out with a different outcome.”
Mr.Rosswasnevergoingtosee
eye to eye with the pipeline pro-
testers – he is a champion of LNG,
and supports the pipeline as a
tool for economic development
to lift Indigenous communities
out of poverty.
But he is also an influential In-
digenous leader who served a key
roleinputtingastakeintheheart
of the Northern Gateway oil pipe-
line.
His first encounter with the
protesters at the legislature was
with a group that prevented him
from entering the building on
Throne Speech day. “Somebody
yelled at my face, some young kid
yells my face,” he recalled in an
interview.
“There was no respect for abo-
riginal issues, there was no re-
spectfortheinstitutionoftheleg-
islature. And there was so much
ignorance in terms of what these
protesters were actually protest-
ing.”
BritishColumbiaispoisednow
to make real progress toward
reconciliation,with new legisla-
tive tools, commitment and In-
digenous guidance in the legisla-
ture. The protests haven’t stop-
ped that work, but they didn’t
help it either.

ProtestersatB.C.Legislaturealienated


theverypeoplethatmighthelpthem


JUSTINEHUNTERVICTORIA


ANALYSIS

DISPATCH


BritishColumbia
hasneverbeforehad
somanyIndigenous
voicesinthelegislature
atonetime.
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