RAJESH ANGRAL

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“The question will be whether voters believe what she says now, or what she said before. It’s a toss-up, frankly, because she was so specific and passionate about her earlier prescription for user-pay health care.

Smith’s health-care guarantee goes against her own basic plans and convictions

Premier Danielle Smith needs Albertans to believe she didn’t mean many things she said in the past. Her voluble history is a serious danger to the UCP in the coming election campaign.

This forces her to govern against some of her own core beliefs. The most striking example came this week, when she announced the UCP’s “Public Health Care Guarantee.”

The question will be whether voters believe what she says now, or what she said before. It’s a toss-up, frankly, because she was so specific and passionate about her earlier prescription for user-pay health care.

On Tuesday, the premier said: “The UCP is committed to all Albertans that under no circumstances will any Albertan ever have to pay out of pocket for access to their family doctor or to get the medical treatment that they need.

“It means that a UCP government under my leadership will not delist any medical services or prescriptions now covered by Alberta health insurance, no exceptions.”

She repeated this several times, topping it with: “Rest assured, you will never use a credit card to pay for a public health care service. You will only ever need your Alberta health care card.”

To make the point, the premier stood beside a big sign showing the card most of us carry around.

Smith said the NDP is “lying to Albertans” and engaging in “fear and smear” when they accuse her of threatening universal public payment.

But Smith herself sowed some of that fear with great conviction, and not just in throwaway lines on talk radio.

She wrote it all down in a 2021 policy paper for the University of Calgary. Her full article was published along with those of other participants under the title Alberta’s Economic Future.

wrote about this last November but it’s even more pertinent now, with her new promises and an election at stake.

Smith’s article outlines her belief that business has the solutions for society, that Alberta bureaucrats are lazy and incapable of reform, and — most crucially — that services should come with cost to Albertans.

Her section on “User Fees” starts with this declaration: “We can no longer afford universal social programs that are 100 per cent paid by taxpayers. That is the simple truth.

“Taxpayers do not want to throw more money at an inefficient system. Public servants don’t want to reform the system from within.

“The only option is to allow people to use more of their own money to pay their own way and use the power of innovation to deliver better services at a lower cost.”

She called for a patient-focused system “that has to shift the burden of payment away from taxpayers and toward private individuals, their employers and their insurance companies.”

Then she explains her plan to prepare the public, through health-care spending accounts starting with $375 per person per year.

“The benefit of a Health Spending Account is that it allows people the means to pay for services that are uncovered and largely preventive — massage therapy, physiotherapy, dietitians, prescriptions and so on,” Smith wrote.

Then came the real point: “But once people get used to the concept of paying out of pocket for more things themselves, then we can change the conversation on health care.

“Instead of asking, what services will the government delist, we would instead be asking what services are paid for directly by government, and what services are paid for out of your Health Spending Account?

“My view is that the entire budget for general practitioners should be paid for from Health Spending Accounts. If the government funded the account at $375 a year, that’s the equivalent of 10 trips to a GP, so there can be no argument that this would compromise access on the basis of ability to pay.”

There would be plenty of argument, actually, from people with serious illness or complex conditions.

The real point here is Smith’s health spending accounts would groom the public for private payment.

She now promises that the accounts would not be used for doctor’s visits, only for unlisted services.

But she has not abandoned the original idea. Health-care savings accounts are coming.

Originally, Smith envisaged people topping up accounts with their own cash, and companies and non-profits pitching in with contributions.

In her view, the effect of these accounts stretches to an overhaul of health insurance.

“If we establish the principle of Health Spending Accounts, then we can also establish copayments,” she says.

Albertans would face a deductible before receiving free care, on the same principle as your car insurance.

Now she promises that no Albertan will ever pay for anything. That’s not what she believes, unless she was making up everything in that U of C paper.

Politicians often govern against their own wishes for electoral reasons. They adjust to reality. Maybe voters will accept Smith’s big switch.

But rarely has a premier set down core beliefs and actions so vividly, and then promised the exact opposite 48 days before an election.

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Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley reiterated her promise for a $200-million university campus in Calgary’s downtown to drive innovation and economic diversification

With the safety and vibrancy of Calgary’s downtown squarely in the crosshairs in recent weeks, Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley reiterated her promise for a $200-million university campus in Calgary’s downtown to drive innovation and economic diversification.

With the safety and vibrancy of Calgary’s downtown squarely in the crosshairs in recent weeks, Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley reiterated her promise for a $200-million university campus in Calgary’s downtown to drive innovation and economic diversification.

Notley said this would help address the 32 per cent vacancy in downtown offices while bringing economic stimulus to the core.

The University of Calgary already has a downtown campus and Bow Valley College’s main campus is also in the core, while SAIT is just to the north.

Project light on details

The project is light on details. There are no plans on where the campus could be and no indication of what post-secondary institutions could be involved. Notley did not shut the door on out-of-province schools being connected to the facility, but said priority would be given to Alberta-based schools.

Student housing would also likely be included in the project, which could include the expansion of existing campuses and the repurposing of vacant office towers.

Notley referenced Concordia University of Edmonton’s $50-million expansion and MacEwan University’s $190-million business school project for how they developed a $200-million budget for the project.

There is no timeline for this to come to fruition if the NDP forms government following the election in May. Notley said planning would begin within months, and potential repurposing of office space could begin in the fall.

The provincial government released the CORE report last year that prioritized bringing post-secondaries downtown.

Advanced Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides said the province is already talking with local universities and colleges. He said none has told them they want or need a campus like this. He said he has been working with the U of C to expand its architecture and planning program in the downtown, but added there is already strong representation there.

“I’m happy to take direction from our universities and colleges about what projects should be funded, where dollars should go and what kind of projects need to be supported, rather than coming up with my own and trying to compel the universities and colleges to follow that,” he told Postmedia.

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Smith went much further than that. She suggested the private accounts would eventually be the ONLY way family doctors would be paid

Premier Danielle Smith stoked many fires in her media days. Now she’s trying to stomp one out with her apparent retreat on health spending accounts.

First, she said people would pay for their visits to family doctors with these accounts. The government would seed them with an initial $375 payment, presumably to everyone who holds an Alberta Health card.

“My view is that the entire budget for family practitioners should be paid for from Health Care Savings Accounts,” she said in June 2021, in a paper written for the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy.

“If the government funded the account at $375 a year, that’s the equivalent of 10 trips to a GP, so there can be no argument that this would compromise access on the basis of ability to pay.”

Well, sorry, there is an argument. Many people need far more care in times of serious illness. The accounts would also discriminate against lower income people who lack the means to add their own funds to the account.

One GP calls the plan “short-sighted and knee-jerk, without due consideration of the vast array of concerns that a family doctor deals with.”

She threw out these ideas before anybody dreamed she’d be premier. But she still pushes the accounts in her mandate letter to Health Minister Jason Copping, ordering him to “work to establish Health Spending Accounts.”

The premier now says people could use their accounts only for services that aren’t covered by public health insurance — physiotherapy, medications, whatever.

An excerpt from Premier Danielle Smith’s paper in the U of C School of Public Policy.
An excerpt from Premier Danielle Smith’s paper in the U of C School of Public Policy.

There’s no more talk of physician visits being part of the plan. She blasts NDP Leader Rachel Notley twisting the truth, when Notley is pretty much pointing out what Smith herself has said.

This premier was a professional talker for so long that we often know what she really wants, which can be quite different from what she now says.

And the goal of these saving accounts is to groom the public for widespread private payment. That’s clear from her own words.

Smith said in the U of C paper: “Once people get used to the concept of paying out of pocket for more things themselves, then we can change the conversation on health care.”

She argued that the system “has to shift the burden of payment away from taxpayers and toward private individuals, their employers and their insurance companies.”

Even more startling, Smith calls for a “proper” overall health insurance system with deductibles or co-payment.

“If we establish the principle of Health Spending Accounts, then we can also establish co-payments,” she wrote.

“I can guarantee you as well that if the government creates this structure, business and non-profits will step up.

“Employers will make matching contributions to Health Spending Accounts. Non-profits will be established to make charitable contributions to the Health Spending Accounts of low-income earners so they can get a broader range of health services.

“Because that is the character of Albertans. We take care of each other. It’s what we do.”

In my experience, Albertans have always demanded a better system, but never one that makes them pay out of their own pockets.

Premier Danielle Smith celebrates her byelection win in Medicine Hat on Nov. 8.
Premier Danielle Smith celebrates her byelection win in Medicine Hat on Nov. 8. PHOTO BY JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Smith is toying with political explosives far more dangerous than former Premier Ralph Klein detonated in 2005, when he brought in the Third Way, a plan that would have allowed people to pay for upgraded surgeries and queue-jumping.

The uproar was so furious that Klein had to abandon the plan, but not before throwing a Liberal health policy paper at a teenage legislature page and shouting “I don’t need that crap!”

Smith’s wider plans would inevitably violate the Canada Health Act. A single public pay system is the very heart of the Act. Because Alberta conforms, Ottawa will deliver $5.3 billion to the province this year, 21.5 per cent of the health care budget.

Smith now says anything she does would comply with the federal law. But she constantly voices opposition to many federal policies and actions, claiming the right to nullify them.

It raises the question: would she use her looming Sovereignty Act for health care?

Don Braid’s column appears regularly in the Herald.

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“We’re not in the formal election period, and Danielle Smith is spending millions and millions and millions of public dollars — dollars that belong to Alberta taxpayers in order to advertise to you.”

GRANDE PRAIRIE — Despite the lack of an election writ, Alberta’s Opposition Leader Rachel Notley’s feet are firmly entrenched on a campaign trail through Grande Prairie and the Peace Country.

With her Thursday speech focused on health care, emergency services, schools, and teachers, Notley contrasted the NDP platform against the UCP’s last three years and Premier Danielle Smith’s recent actions.

“We’re not in the formal election period, and Danielle Smith is spending millions and millions and millions of public dollars — dollars that belong to Alberta taxpayers in order to advertise to you.”

As for the NDP, talking about a better future means talking about health care and education, Notley said.

The NDP platform is leaning into the idea of family health teams, a renovation of primary health care that provides one-stop shopping. She promises more doctors and health professionals to keep families healthy and to ensure they are never denied a service or treatment because of their finances.

“I have been unwavering in my view that Albertans need health care when they need it, where they need it regardless of how much money they have in their bank account.”

“We’re not in the formal election period, and Danielle Smith is spending millions and millions and millions of public dollars — dollars that belong to Alberta taxpayers in order to advertise to you.”

As for the NDP, talking about a better future means talking about health care and education, Notley said.

The NDP platform is leaning into the idea of family health teams, a renovation of primary health care that provides one-stop shopping. She promises more doctors and health professionals to keep families healthy and to ensure they are never denied a service or treatment because of their finances.

“I have been unwavering in my view that Albertans need health care when they need it, where they need it regardless of how much money they have in their bank account.”

Notley said they need to involve municipal leaders, reconfigure the services, develop competitive contracts, and ensure they have the bodies to put in the units that serve in the province’s northwest area.

Education is an area that has seen a tremendous impact when repeated cuts have left schools thousands of teachers short of what they needed.

“My commitment is to reverse those cuts in a very substantial way. We will deliver better health care, better education and a better future.”

When asked if the NDP did the same during the last run-up to an election, Notley said the comparisons were qualitatively different. In the same periods of time, January, February and March 2019, the NDP spent about 10 times less.

She wants Albertans to lend a critical eye to Smith’s spending of “unprecedented amounts” of money on advertising services that sound like campaign promises and to remember her previous commitments to change health care. Her current backtracking and explaining that she misspoke doesn’t cut it, Notley said.

“This is not a person who has demonstrated high levels of trustworthiness.”

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While tens of thousands of Albertans struggle to find a family doctor (alongside struggling to make ends meet with the rising cost of living) Danielle Smith wants those that have a family doctor to pay to see them. Out of pocket.

DANIELLE SMITH WANTS YOU TO PAY OUT OF POCKET TO SEE A FAMILY DOCTOR

Read that twice. While tens of thousands of Albertans struggle to find a family doctor (alongside struggling to make ends meet with the rising cost of living) Danielle Smith wants those that have a family doctor to pay to see them. Out of pocket. 

https://cantafforducp.ca/dismantle-healthcare

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UCP candidate says people who have heart attacks should be held accountable

EDMONTON — A United Conservative Party candidate in southern Alberta is being criticized for saying people who have heart failure should take accountability for their own health.

“Maybe the reason you had a heart attack was because you haven’t taken care of yourself,” said UCP Livingstone-Macleod candidate Chelsae Petrovic on a February episode of “The Canadian Story” podcast.

“You’re extremely overweight, you haven’t managed your congestive heart failure, you haven’t managed your diabetes and there’s no personal accountability.

“But they come into the hospital and all of a sudden it’s everyone else’s problem but their own.”

Petrovic, who is mayor of Claresholm south of Calgary, has also been a licensed practical nurse for more than 12 years.

She issued a statement Monday saying her comment on the podcast was taken out of context.

“I was speaking for several minutes about the challenges our health-care system is currently facing,” Petrovic said. “I understand my comment could be offensive when removed from the longer interview, and I should have chosen better language.

“I believe we should be a province that not only focuses on reactive health for those in need but also one that teaches our kids to practice healthy living, which includes taking care of our physical health.”

On the podcast, Petrovic prefaced her comments saying, “This might be political suicide, what I’m about to say, which is fine with me, because it needs to be said.”

Premier Danielle Smith was asked Tuesday during a news conference on health care in Sherwood Park, Alta., about her candidate’s comment.

“I’m pleased to see that (Petrovic) issued a statement yesterday clarifying that she could have used better language,” Smith said.

“There are some times that I have had missteps,” said Smith. “I think people are forgiving when you give an opportunity to explain what you meant and I want to extend the same opportunity to others.”

Smith was criticized last year for saying that early-stage cancer is within a person’s control during her own podcast.

“When you think everything that built up before you got to stage four and that diagnosis, that’s completely within your control and there’s something you can do about that that is different,” Smith said.

She later said during a UCP leadership debate that her comment was “misunderstood,” and she’s a “proponent of early detection, early treatment, nutrition and holistic medicine.”

In late March, UCP Lethbridge West candidate Torry Tanner resigned after claiming in a video that children are exposed to pornography in schools and teachers help them change their gender identity.

Opposition NDP leader Rachel Notley took to Twitter to comment on Petrovic’s statement, sharing that her grandfather had a heart attack and died while he was headed out to feed cows on their farm.

“No one saw it coming,” tweeted Notley.

Kevin Van Tighem, the NDP candidate for Livingstone-Macleod, issued a statement demanding Petrovic and Smith apologize.

“Last year, Danielle Smith said Albertans are responsible for developing cancer. Now her candidate blames Albertans for having a heart attack. This is a pattern of cruel and hurtful language that kicks Albertans when they’re down. They must apologize today.”

“The Canadian Story” is a podcast hosted by Zach Gerber, owner of Skytrack Studios, and David Parker, who was a regional adviser to Stephen Harper while he was prime minister. The podcast covers a wide variety of topics under a politically conservative lens.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 11, 2023.

This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Meta and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

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GLOBAL NEWS: “Danielle Smith was slammed for cancer misinformation before she became premier. She falsely said people could control their cancer so long as it’s before a Stage 4 diagnosis.”

United Conservative Party candidate is suggesting heart attack victims should take more personal accountability.

Chelsae Petrovic, the UCP candidate for Livingstone-Macleod, who is also the current mayor of Claresholm and a nurse, said she sees people suffer from heart attacks and not take responsibility for the own health.

“This might be political suicide here, what I’m about to say,” she prefaced her comments during an interview in February with a podcast called The Canadian Story, hosted by David Parker and Zach Gerbe.

“We can look at this and I see it in health care, I’m going to say it: maybe the reason you had a heart attack was because you haven’t taken care of yourself; you’re extremely overweight, you haven’t managed your congestive heart failure, you haven’t managed your diabetes, and there’s no personal accountability,” Petrovic said.

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Have double the impact. Make a donation by April 18th and any amount you give will be matched.

Chip In To Match the UCP

To end the UCP’s reign of chaos and fuel our campaign to victory, we need to outmatch the UCP’s deep-pocketed corporate donors again.

For a limited time you can double your impact towards a better future for Alberta. Donate to our Better Alberta Victory Fund by April 18th to have your donation matched!

Get your donation matched.

More Info: https://act.albertandp.ca/donate/double-your-impact/

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The countdown is on as we prepare for the coming election in May!

The countdown is on as we prepare for the coming election in May! April 15 is Orange Saturday: a volunteer blitz across the province. Orange Saturday will mobilize more volunteers than ever before in this campaign.

Join your local team to knock on doors, make phone calls, and deliver literature to thousands of voters, province-wide! If this is your first time volunteering, sign up here and we’ll give you a call to connect you with your local team.

If it’s easier for you to engage from the comfort of your home, sign up here for the online phone bank – all you need is a connection to the internet to participate! 

Together, we can deliver a better future for Alberta! RSVP and share with your friends

  • Saturday April 15th
    1:00pm (Mountain time)

More Info: https://www.albertandp.ca/orange-saturday

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CBC NEWS: “In response to the account Smith offered on Saturday, NDP justice critic Irfan Sabir wondered why politics never came up if the phone call was ostensibly to discuss politics.”

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has delivered a new version of why she engaged in a controversial phone call with a Calgary street pastor in which they discussed his upcoming criminal case related to COVID-19 public health measures.

Smith told her weekly phone-in radio show Saturday that she took the call from Artur Pawlowski because she thought it was going to be in the context of his role as the leader of another political party.

She said when the discussion veered into Pawlowski’s court case, she simply reminded the former head of the Alberta Independence Party that she had tried to gain amnesty for COVID accused but was told by justice officials the cases must play out independently, and that she accepted that advice.

She also said she disagrees strongly with Pawlowski’s “extreme views.”

“When we talked, I thought we were talking in the context of him being a political party leader because [Pawlowski] was at the time the head of the Independence Party,” Smith told her Corus radio audience on her show Your Province Your Premier in response to a question from the host.

“It turned into a discussion about what I was doing with COVID amnesty.

“And I’ve been very clear about what I was trying to do with COVID amnesty. I campaigned [for the party leadership] on it. I said I would look into ways in which we might be able to address the non-violent, non-firearms-related, non-contempt-of-court-related charges.”

he 11-minute phone call took place in early January, weeks before Pawlowski went on trial on charges related to the 2022 protest at the U.S. border at Coutts, Alta., over COVID restrictions.

He was charged with breaching a release order and mischief for allegedly inciting people to block public property at the border crossing.

He was also charged under the Alberta Critical Infrastructure Defence Act with willfully damaging or destroying essential infrastructure.

The trial has ended but the judge has yet to render a verdict.

NDP justice critic responds

A recording of the pre-trial phone call was obtained by the Alberta New Democrats and played for media on March 29.

In response to the account Smith offered on Saturday, NDP justice critic Irfan Sabir wondered why politics never came up if the phone call was ostensibly to discuss politics.

“The entire call between Pawlowski and Smith is her describing her efforts to block these charges, either by weekly calls to prosecutors or her expressing her dissatisfaction to the attorney general and deputy attorney general,” said Sabir.

“This is yet another desperate move from Danielle Smith to distract from her attempt to block the prosecution of Pawlowski and others at Coutts.”

Sabir repeated a call for an expedited internal probe into the matter before Albertans go to the polls on May 29 for a provincial election.

Smith first publicly acknowledged that she had spoken with Pawlowski on Feb. 9 when asked about it at a news conference.

She answered at that time she had engaged in discussions with those facing COVID-related charges to tell them she had explored amnesty and that it was not possible. She did not say the Pawlowski discussion was supposed to have been about politics or that she had expected to be talking to him in his role as a party leader.

Considering defamation action

When the NDP released the call recording seven weeks later, Smith announced she would not discuss the issue publicly because she was considering defamation action and was acting on the advice of her lawyer.

Saturday’s explanation comes two days after reporters asked Smith whether the call with Pawlowski means her government has changed policy and that politicians were free to discuss active criminal cases with the accused.

Smith said there has been no policy change. She said it remains offside for politicians to discuss active court cases with accused, but her call with Pawlowski passed muster because it’s her job as an elected official to listen and act on concerns from members of the public.

Legal experts say the call was a clear violation of the firewall between politicians and the justice system to prevent politicians from getting a say in who gets charged and how.

They note while Smith is heard on the call reminding Pawlowski she can’t intervene directly, she also confides in him that she is questioning justice officials “almost weekly” about the cases.

On the call, Smith is also heard sharing details of an internal disagreement over Crown case strategy with Pawlowski. She promises to make inquiries on Pawlowski’s behalf and report back to him while also telling him the charges against him were politically motivated.

Controversial figure

She commiserates with Pawlowski when he accuses the Crown prosecutor in his case of a last-minute “document dump” of files which he said was aimed at frustrating his defence.

Legal experts have also said regardless of the context, Smith at the very least should have ended the call when Pawlowski raised the issue of his case.

Pawlowski is a controversial figure in Alberta for his high-profile, disruptive demonstrations against the LGBTQ community and COVID-19 health rules.

The Alberta Independence party announced it was parting ways with Pawlowski as leader late last month, saying their values no longer aligned.

On the January call, Smith is heard telling Pawlowski, “I’ve been watching your public advocacy for many years so it’s nice to connect with you.”

She struck a different tone on Saturday’s radio show.

“Obviously, Mr. Pawlowski holds some very extreme views that I disagree with completely,” she said.

Smith has faced questions about her involvement with prosecutors since telling the media in mid-January she regularly reminds Crown lawyers the cases can only be pursued if they are winnable and in the public interest.

She later walked those comments back, saying she didn’t talk to front-line prosecutors but only senior justice officials, as is proper. Her assertion is backed up by the Justice Department.

Since then, Smith has offered multiple, at times conflicting, explanations on who she talked to, what was discussed and when. She has said the talks were only about broad prosecution principles but has also said they were about issues related to the cases. She has stated the talks were ongoing and that the talks had ended.

On April 2, lawyers representing Smith sent a notice of defamation letter calling on the CBC to retract and apologize for a January story. The article alleged a member of her staff sent emails to the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service challenging how it was handling court cases from the Coutts blockade.

While the CBC says it stands by its reporting, Smith has said a review found no evidence of contact between her office and the prosecution service.

That review has also featured conflicting statements from the Justice Department on how far back the search went on any emails between the department and Smith’s office.

Smith said her United Conservative Party, not the government, is paying for the lawsuit. Smith’s office and the party have declined to say why the party is paying.

Smith has long been critical of COVID-19 masking, gathering and vaccine mandate rules, questioning if they were needed to fight the pandemic. She has called them intolerable violations of personal freedoms.