Alberta's vote on whether to reject equalization is about leverage, premier says - Action News
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Alberta's vote on whether to reject equalization is about leverage, premier says

Albertans will cast ballots Monday in a referendum that is technically about rejecting equalization but has morphed into more of a Prairie Festivus airing of grievances.

Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta has concerns over the billions its residents pay

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney gives a COVID-19 update in Edmonton in this file photo from Sept. 21. The premier says a referendum vote on federal equalization payments is about establishing leverage. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Albertans will cast ballots Monday in a referendum that is technically about rejecting equalization but has morphed into more of a Prairie Festivus airing of grievances.

"[This]is not about partisan politics," Premier Jason Kenney has said at various times in recent days, when asked about the referendum question.

"This is about whether or not Alberta should push hard to get a fair deal."

It's symbolism, he said, but also a bargaining chip.

"The point of it is to get leverage for constitutional negotiations with the federal government about reform of the entire system of fiscal federalism, which treats Alberta so unfairly," he said.

The question is straightforward for voters, who are also heading to the polls in municipal elections: Should the section of the Constitution enshrining the principle of equalization payments be removed?

WATCH | Albertans to vote in referendum over equalization payments:

Albertans voting in referendum over equalization payments

3 years ago
Duration 2:08
Albertans will vote Monday in a referendum on the constitutional issue of equalization the program wherein federal taxes are redistributed around the country so all Canadians can have a relatively equal level of things like health care and education.

Equalization sees some tax money collected by the federal government redistributed from wealthier provinces to lower-income ones to ensure a basic level of service for all.

Kenney has said Alberta has concerns over billions of dollars its residents pay, while provinces such as British Columbia and Quebec obstruct oil and pipeline projects that underpin that wealth.

Many don't understand equalization, says professor

Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews estimated the provincial contribution at $20 billion a year in a public letter this week. It was signposted by the phrases "more unfair," "clearly unfair," "fundamentally unfair," "lack of fairness" and "fight for fairness."

Political scientist Jared Wesley, the lead on a recent University of Alberta survey on referendum voting intentions, said the poll suggested the Yes side remains in the lead. But he said ahigh percentage of respondents don'tunderstand how equalization works (44 per cent), wrongly believeQuebec gets the most per capita (85 per cent), and failto understand Ottawa does not need provincial buy-in to change the equalization formula (62 per cent).

"I don't blame Albertans for being confused," said Wesley. "They've been fed a lot of misinformation by governments in this province for a lot of decades, and that's showing up in our research."

LISTEN |The argument against equalization payments:

Wesley said it's a muddy referendum question designed to deliver "strategic ambiguity" for the United Conservative government as it seeks broad leverage.

But leverage, he said, is not what you think you have. Rather, it's what others think you have.

He said the rest of Canada is seeing a province that has received generous federal COVID-19 funding, has called in the military to rescue its COVID-19-ravaged health system, and has seen Ottawa literally buy the Trans Mountain pipeline to help its oil industry.

"As much as the premier and Yes supporters are out there saying, 'We want a fair deal,' the rest of Canada doesn't look at it that way," said Wesley.

"I've called this the Festivus referendum," he continued, referencing the fictive secular holiday made famous in the TV sitcom Seinfeld,when family members gather around a metal pole to swap festering complaints.

Bill Bewick, head of Fairness Alberta, a group stumping for a Yes vote, said critics confuse the message being sent with the more important principle of sending a message.

LISTEN | The argument in support of equalization payments:

He said equalization is profoundly unfair to Alberta and that a referendum is a legal, practical, effective method for Albertans to get Ottawa's attention while providing a handy release valve for those who would otherwise seek more radical alternatives to make their voices heard.

"[The vote]is people speaking and expressing their displeasure."

Bewick said a Yes vote from Alberta could push other provinces to pressure the federal government for meaningful changes to improve the equalization formula for all.

"It can get the ball rolling," he said.

Some Yes supporters, including ousted UCP backbencher Drew Barnes, worry that with Kenney's low popularity numbers the No vote will get a boost from those who want to send a message to the premier.

"There is no question that the premier has failed our province on a variety of issues," wrote Barnes in an open letter on social media.

"He is the least popular premier in Canada for good reason. However, on Oct. 18I would encourage Albertans to focus on the bigger picture."

Rejection of Alberta's values, says economist

University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe, who has taken the No side in recent debates with Bewick, said Alberta already has the power to discuss its equalization concerns with Ottawa.

But he said the referendum question on its face is a dismaying rejection of long-held Alberta values toward fellow Canadians.

"Alberta [through its government]has always and consistently supported the principle of equalization," said Tombe.

"It's unfortunate that Kenney is asking us to reject it."