Pubdate: Sat, 05 Mar 2005 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Graham Thomson, The Edmonton Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) MASSACRE CHANGES POLITICAL TONE Deaths of RCMP Officers Fuel Tough Talk Against Crime, Overwhelm Other Issues It might yet become a huge political issue in the spring session of the Alberta Legislature, but nobody is willing to talk about it -- yet. The murder of four RCMP officers in Mayerthorpe is still too fresh, too confusing, too horrific. But the Alberta Liberals have already subtly suggested they're waiting to pounce on the government. On Thursday, when word first reached the floor of the Assembly about an "incident" involving the RCMP and gunfire near Mayerthorpe, Liberal Bruce Miller expressed his respect and concern for the police. Then added: "Now is not the time to talk about issues that we must face in the future, like the underfunding of our police service in Alberta and dealing with gangs." Was underfunding an issue in this shooting? Or gangs? Everybody has a theory. Almost nobody has the facts. Grief is clouding the air. Put them all together and you get the makings of an uneven political debate. That can be a dangerous thing. Emotionally driven debate is the political equivalent of running with scissors. About all we know for sure as I write this is that four officers were slaughtered. One police officer murdered is a tragedy. Four is a calamity. Something, somewhere in the system failed. And that makes it political. Already politicians at the provincial and federal levels are talking about getting tougher on crime. "I am more committed than ever towards the dismantling of organized crime in every region of this province. In the immediate future I will be presenting a strategy to my government colleagues that will address this issue," said Alberta Solicitor General Harvey Cenaiko, a former police officer himself who looks and sounds like he hasn't slept a wink since he got word of the shootings. Some politicians are calling for tougher laws on guns or marijuana. But was a marijuana grow op the catalyst here? How do you stop criminal cop-haters from getting guns? Federal Liberals gathered in Ottawa for their first policy convention in five years heatedly debated the government's marijuana decriminalization legislation. At the same time, some politicians are wondering if legalizing marijuana would be a way to put the grow ops out of business. Everything seemed much simpler and more innocent just a few days ago when the big issues were the use of government aircraft, more money for post-secondary education and the grizzly bear hunt. As recently as Wednesday morning, we all thought the United States border would be reopening to live Canadian cattle this coming Monday. Premier Ralph Klein was planning to attend an "Open the Border Celebration" today in Cochrane. On Wednesday afternoon, a U.S. judge bolted the border shut before it even had a chance to open. Klein complained about the politically driven unfairness of it all. Of course, we have our man in Washington, former energy minister Murray Smith, who is referred to now as our "envoy" to the U.S. capital. But what he is doing, or what he can do, is still a bit of a mystery. What isn't a mystery is the level of animosity developing in the legislature between the government Conservatives and the lone Alliance MLA, Paul Hinman. On Thursday, the Conservatives refused to give Hinman unanimous consent to respond to Klein's ministerial statement on the border closure to Canadian beef. In the past the Conservatives have allowed opposition MLAs without official party status to respond to ministerial statements as a courtesy. But Hinman is neither well liked nor well respected by many government members. Some accuse him of showboating and want him taken down a peg. Others are still upset he defeated Broyce Jacobs, an MLA popular in the Tory caucus. They are not sympathetic to Hinman's fight for more time in question period. Hinman will be lucky to get one question a week because he's deemed to be a simple MLA with no party status. Hinman wants one question a day. The opposition Liberals and New Democrats would be happy to see Hinman get more floor time because the right-wing Alliance is more a threat to the government than it is to the centre-left parties. Interestingly, there was a simmering debate among Tory MLAs earlier this week whether it's better for them to keep Hinman on a short leash or give him enough rope in question period to hang himself with his right-wing views. That debate seems like something out of a different era -- a time when the $7-billion BSE crisis seemed to be coming to an end and four RCMP officers had yet to pay a visit to what seemed to be a quiet farm near Mayerthorpe. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake