Pubdate: Wed, 27 Oct 2004 Source: Fort McMurray Today (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 Fort McMurray Today Contact: http://www.fortmcmurraytoday.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1012 Author: Patrick Morley, Today Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjparty.htm (Canadian Marijuana Party) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) MARIJUANA, ALLIANCE IN THE RACE With just under a month to go before Albertans go to the polls, and with the Grits and ND's yet to assign candidates in this constituency, Reginald Normore of the Marijuana Party and Eugene Eklund of the Alberta Alliance are the only competition for Progressive Conservative Guy Boutilier. So far. Despite being on opposite ends of the political spectrum the two candidates are firing very similar pre-election attacks at the Tories. Eklund, a 51-year-old oil worker from Slave Lake, said premier ralph Klein has alienated Alberta's health care and education sectors by focusing tax dollars in the wrong direction. He said his party will change the face of health care by injecting money into the bottom of the system, not the top as the Conservatives have done. "What I'm saying is that three quarters of all health care dollars goes to feed the bureaucracy, not the patient. Essentially the trickle down effect is not working. We put millions in at the top and pennies come out the bottom. We want to reverse that process," said Eklund. He added his party is a viable alternative to the Conservatives with policies similar to the old former federal Reform Party. "Albertans support the Alliance federally, so why not provincially? "The thing is that people don't have a say. Ralph runs it all. Back-benchers don't even have a say. Ralph has (ticked) off everybody in the province and there is a very good possibility that people will vote for someone else." Tory incumbent MLA Guy Boutilier was out meeting with voters at press time but he told Today on Monday he was looking forward to the election and added, "I welcome the opportunity of anyone who runs against me." Normore, who ran an unsuccessful campaign in the 2000 provincial election said, "Klein is terrible and does nothing for the people." He added that the Tories have taken away the trades that were once taught in school leaving the education system, not to mention health care and social liberties, in shambles. "Health care is not looking good at all," said Normore. "And the laws against (marijuana) need to be changed." Normore -- who is awaiting a January court date for possession of marijuana for purposes of trafficking and production of a controlled substance, said Boutilier is a "good guy but too bad he's a puppet to the terrible Ralph Klein." Eklund too, had nothing bad to say about his Conservative competitor, but reiterated his earlier point that Boutilier, like the rest of Albertan's, are "at the mercy of Klein." "I don't know if he (Boutilier) personally agrees with their policies but the way the government is run he has no choice." Eklund believes the trend that saw many of Alberta's municipal incumbents lose their positions will transfer to the provincial scene. "As I look across Alberta we had many mayoral changes," said Eklund. "St. Albert, Edmonton, Red Deer -- many incumbents were replaced. People want a change, let's keep the momentum for the betterment of Alberta." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek