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Thompson jumps ship PDF Print E-mail

Longtime provincial Conservative supporter and former MP Myron Thompson will offer his political experience to the fledgling Wildrose Alliance.

Frustrated by what he sees as out-of-control bureaucracy and an embedded political culture unwilling to change, Thompson has joined Wildrose's Rocky Mountain House Constituency Association as a director-at-large.

"We've got too big a government, we've got a lot of bureaucracy, we've got a lot of things that need to be changed and the present government doesn't seem to be interested in those kinds of changes," he said on Thursday.

"I am interested in it and the Wildrose Alliance appears to have the same attitude."

Thompson said he's not the only one who feels the Conservatives have lost their way, citing the two MLAs who crossed the floor to join the Wildrose Alliance a few months ago.

"I know that there would be more who are certainly contemplating it but they would like to see changes made within the party."

Thompson said while he will be helping the party that hopes to unseat MLA and former cabinet minister Ty Lund, he doesn't blame him for his party's troubles and he hasn't heard from Lund's camp.

"Ty and I are good friends and I have always admired Ty. I think Ty has done an excellent job for this riding.

"The system is set up where the circle of cabinet are the ones who make the big decisions and the backbenchers' voices are very small."

While Thompson would like to see change, the 74-year-old is not considering taking a run for the seat.

"I'm just getting too old to play these games much longer."

Lund, who has represented the riding since 1989, was philosophical about Thompson's shift in allegiance.

"It's a free and democratic country. If people aren't happy and feel they can do better in some other place and in some other way then they can go and do whatever they can," he said.

The two politicians have been friendly for many years and he was not taking Thompson's support for the Alliance personally. He pointed out the party is an offspring of the Reform Party, of which Thompson was a member before it merged with the federal Conservatives.

Lund believes Thompson may also be feeling frustrated with the government because of the difficulty in lining up funding for Save our Sundre's efforts to tackle flooding problems along the Red Deer River. Thompson is a leader of that effort.

The Wildrose Alliance has been busy organizing in Central Alberta. Last week, a full board was elected for the party in the Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills riding.

 
Rob Anderson, Wildrose MLA on CPAC PDF Print E-mail

On January 20, Rob Anderson, MLA for Airdrie-Chestermere participated in a panel discussion hosted by CPAC and Maclean's the topic, "The West is in.  Now what?"

Click here to watch the show.

 
Danielle Can Dodge a Jab PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ian Robinson, Calgary Sun   
Saturday, 16 January 2010 00:00

She gives off the same vibe as the wicked smart girl who used to help you with your high school chemistry homework because, even back then she was at war with incompetence wherever she found it.

Now that she's all grown up, she's still fighting incompetence. Only now the stakes are a little higher than dragging your grade-point average into higher-primate range.

Now what's at stake is Alberta's future.

Read more...
 
Wildrose Blooms PDF Print E-mail
Written by Colby Cosh, Macleans Magazine   
Wednesday, 13 January 2010 00:00

Danielle Smith is no Sarah Palin. For one thing, she might win.

So what's Wildrose Alliance Leader Danielle Smith reading these days when she's not busy haunting the nightmares of Alberta Progressive Conservatives? Does she curl up with one of her favourite libertarian ur-texts—Atlas Shrugged, maybe, or Friedrich von Hayek's "The Use of Knowledge in Society"? It turns out she's enjoying a timely Christmas gift that has the attention of politicians everywhere: The Audacity to Win, David Plouffe's memoir of the strategies behind Barack Obama's leap from Chicago state politics to the presidency.

Read the entire article on Macleans.ca

 
Wildrose leader meets the people PDF Print E-mail
Bonnyville Nouvelle, January 12, 2010 - An enthusiastic audience of supporters, new members and curious onlookers gathered at the Bonnyville Senior's Drop-In Centre on Jan. 6 to meet the leader of the Wildrose Alliance Party. Addressing an estimated 150 people, Danielle Smith remarked that on "my first visit up north to Grande Prairie I had six people."
Read more...
 
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