Alberta Premier Rachel Notley (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

As she hinted at her Edmonton rally Sunday, Premier Rachel Notley announced yesterday in Calgary that if her NDP government is reelected it will move to help families with children by introducing 13,000 more $25-a-day child care spaces across Alberta.

Making safe, quality, affordable child care what Premier Notley called “the medicare of the 21st Century” would cost $1.5 billion over five years to implement, but would pump almost $6 billion into the Alberta economy.

United Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

And since the sky-high cost of child care in Alberta has a disproportionate impact on women, child care fees capped at $25 per day per child would help more women enter the workforce, narrow the wage gap between men and women, and reduce the “motherhood penalty” in wages earned.

Naturally, it would have been a challenge for the United Conservative Party led by Jason Kenney to argue we can’t afford that investment when his party’s platform calls for huge tax breaks for profitable foreign companies and local billionaires.

So Mr. Kenney needed to distract from a positive NDP policy that was bound to get favourable reviews from a lot of voters, especially women, and also draw attention away from the bozo eruptions some of his candidates have been suffering lately without looking like what he really wants to do is to roll Alberta back to the 1950s.

But I’m not sure the idea he hit upon – announcing at his own news conference at a private religious school in Calgary that he will roll back the rights of LGBTQ students introduced by the NDP and re-litigate the whole gay-straight alliance controversy in the guise of an education policy – is the right one if his goal is to look like a leader for the 21st Century.

Calgary-Mountain View UCP candidate Jeremy Wong (Photo: Facebook).

On the other hand, if he wants to please his party’s extreme social conservative base, the plan to proclaim an old piece of Tory legislation moldering on the books without having been proclaimed into law is probably a good way to do it. This may be kind of sneaky, as we’ve come to expect from the Kamikaze campaigner, but it would allow him to repeal the NDP’s strong GSA protections without appearing to kill the whole idea.

This may not go far enough for all of the UCP base, some of which longs for something more ancient than merely the mid-20th Century. Consider Jeremy Wong, Mr. Kenney’s latest handpicked candidate in the Calgary-Mountain View riding. Rev. Wong, an anti-choice pastor, preached in his Mothers Day sermon that women should “submit to their husbands,” and suggested “guys are more cerebral” than women.

Cypress-Medicine Hat UCP MLA Drew Barnes (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

Well, that’s better, I guess, than Mr. Kenney’s original handpicked Calgary-Mountain View candidate, Caylan Ford, who was caught commenting online that she is “saddened by the replacement of white people in their homelands,” but I digress.

In addition to rolling back school protections for LGBTQ students and replacing them with insincere platitudes about safe and inclusive schools “while respecting the basic religious freedom of faith-based independent schools,” Mr. Kenney’s plan would make privatization and other attacks on public schools easier, encourage religious schools that teach God-only-knows what alternatives to science and facts, and blow up the ongoing curriculum review that began under the Progressive Conservative government.

Speaking of which, Mr. Kenney claimed at his newser that there’s been “a devastating reduction in math proficiency” among Alberta children.

Cypress Medicine Hat MLA Drew Barnes backed up his leader’s claim with a Tweet that stated, “42% has become acceptable as a passing great. (sic) Let that sink in … 42%! That means it has become acceptable for children to not know 68% of the material they are taught in school” …

Mr. Barnes’s problematic Tweet. I’m 110-per-cent sure it’s now been deleted (Photo: Screenshot).

Mr. Barnes, 57, and the UCP’s finance critic, is a presumably a beneficiary of the old-style math education once taught in Western Canada, which may explain why he gave 110 per cent for his leader on this issue.

Getting back to the premier’s announcement, Ms. Notley’s government piloted the $25-a-day kid care program two years ago, then expanded it to 122 centres with 7,300 spaces across the province. Needless to say, given the cost of child care in Alberta, spaces fill up quickly.

Right now, Alberta has the largest workforce participation gender gap in Canada. As happened in Quebec when it introduced similar policies in the 1990s, affordable day care will reduce that differential.

“Jason Kenney has said kids should have a parent at home, and child care is a waste of money,” the premier told her news conference. “I say whether you work inside the home or outside of it, each choice has dignity and is made with love for your kids, but it should be your choice and yours alone.” (Emphasis added.)

As we have observed with Pastor Wong, that’s not necessarily the way all UCP candidates see it, and that’s apparently OK with their leader.

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1 Comment

  1. Mr. “grassroots” Kenney can’t seem to help himself and his candidates don’t seem to be helping him much either. After going around and saying they are going to focus on the economy and not social issues, it turns out there are all those embarrassing posts from yet another (now former Calgary Mountain-View) candidate about all sort of crazy things. After not having much policy for the last year year, the dear leader comes out with an education policy that would reduce protection for GSA’s and then to top it off, the UCP appears to chide the media for not paying attention to his education policy and instead focusing on those embarrassing candidate posts. Perhaps they felt the controversial elements of his education policy would be buried or ignored in his recent avalanche of policy. Hey, it’s just an election, who is going to pay attention to all the details? If this wasn’t so tragic, it would be funny. It sort of feels like the wheels are coming off the campaign bus (or is it a big blue truck again?). I suppose now we know why the UCP avoided policy so long for the last year.

    It seems the choices in the election are becoming clearer and perhaps yesterday was the clearest they have been so far – more day care spaces or fewer GSA’s.

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