On the road in Canada's conservative heartland - Action News
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On the road in Canada's conservative heartland

Alberta's election is just days away, and if the polls are to be believed the United Conservative Party is set to sweep into power. It signals a trend of sorts, as conservative parties have recently won in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick too, possible signs of a conservative resurgence in Canada.

Taking the political temperature in one of Canada's most conservative ridings

Rowley, Alberta, population eight, hasn't changed much since the railway stopped rolling through town in the 1990s. It's in the heart of one of Canada's most politically conservative ridings, Drumheller-Stettler. (Erin Collins/CBC)

On the dusty main street of Rowley, Alberta,time standsstill.

Boarded-up storefronts andantique gas pumps sit idle, these days used mostly as a set for films or a backdrop for selfies from curious road-trippers.

The last big change here came when the railway pulled out in the early 1990s, putting the final nailin aonce bustling prairie town's economy.

No surprise, then, that for theeight people who still call Rowleyhome, change is viewed with skepticism, something to be resisted, not embraced.

MikeMckee is one of the holdouts here. The farmer was born and raised in the area, and says it's amentality that has made him and other people heresome of the most politically conservative in Canada.

"It has always been that way out here," Mckee says.

Farmer Mike Mckee was born and raised near Rowley. He now helps run the community-operated saloon, Sam's, which helps keep the tiny hamlet afloat financially. (Erin Collins/CBC)

He might be right.In the last provincial election, conservative candidates in the east-central riding of Drumheller-Stettler, where Rowley is located,received more than 80 per cent of the vote. Federally, conservativesalso regularly receive more than four in five votes in the area. And polls show conservatives in the lead in Alberta ahead of Tuesday's election.

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It makes this part of the country a good place to check the political temperature of conservatives in Canada at a time when the movement could be seeing a resurgence: conservative parties have recently won elections in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, and the federal Conservative Party has pulled ahead of the Liberals.

Standing in sawdust behind the bar at Rowley'scommunity-run saloon, Sam's, Mckeesays that trend doesn't surprise him. Hebelieves conservatives hereand across Canada simply wantgovernment to"leave us the hell aloneand let us do our own thing."

According to Mckee, public enemy number one for conservatives these days is carbon taxes and the governments behind them.

"I think it's a farce. I don't think that anthropogenic climate change means anything other than a tax grab."

Mckee and his neighbours say the support for scrapping the tax isone reason political power is shifting to the right across Canada: "Alberta for sure. Not assure about Ottawa but wehope."

A pumpjack hauls oil from the ground south of Stettler, Alberta. Agriculture and the energy sector are the two largest employers in the rural riding of Drumheller-Stettler. (Erin Collins/CBC)

It's an understandable grievance in a riding the size of Belgiumwherea lot of time is spent on the roadburning fuel, and where pulling oil fromthe ground isa way of life.

This is the heart of Alberta's conventional oil and gas sector; along with carbon-intensive agriculture, it's one ofthe twoindustries that butter most people's bread in these parts.

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There is afeeling here that both the provincial NDP and the federal Liberals have been less than supportive of the energy sector over the last four years, failing to get any new pipelines built while making it harder to get new projects off the ground.

For Mckee, it's a failure that has him thinking about the future of Alberta in confederation.

"We need out of Canada as a province," he says. "I'm really leaning towards a separatist movement out here I just don't see any other way around it."

He isn't alone. The United Conservative Party's candidate in the riding,Nate Horner, says that many of the voters he runs across bring up the idea of secession. "In some places, a vote on separating would be close," he said.

Nate Horner, the United Conservative Party's candidate in Drumheller-Stettler, says he wants to 'fight to get a fair deal in Canada.' (Erin Collins/CBC)

Horner and the UCP aren't ready to talk about separating, but they are ready to tick off a lot of the other boxes for these voters, like scrapping the carbon tax, cutting red tape and being more aggressive in the pursuit of a new pipeline.

"This is where we draw the line in the sand and we fight to get a fair deal in Canada." Horner says while chatting to local business owners at the only cafe still open in the town of Veteran.

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Key to that fair deal, for Horner,is getting more pipelines built. "If we have to shut off the taps to B.C., if we have to have a referendum on equalization to try to get some leverage out of the feds everything is in play, because we simply aren't being heard."

It's a message that people like Rachel Robinson,who runs T&EPumps, a company that manufactures equipment for use in the oilpatch, want to hear.

Getting Alberta's stagnant economy fired up again is her priority one that will see her supporting a conservative candidate in the upcoming election, despite a string ofracist and homophobic statements connected to some UCP candidates.

Rachel Robinson, who runs T&E Pumps, a company that manufactures equipment for use in the oilpatch, wants the provincial government to do more to stimulate growth in Alberta's energy sector. (Erin Collins/CBC)

"I just want to be here and do my thing. I don't see skin colour, I don't see sexual orientation, I don't care about that stuff," Robinson says.

In this part of the world, Robinson is in the majority, and conservative voters here are spoiled for choice in this election.

About 70 kmto the southeast, another conservative contender is campaigning over coffee at the General Store in Sedalia.

  • Alberta Votes 2019: CBC News brings you all the news, analyses and columns you need for the election

Incumbent MLA Rick Strankmanlost the UCP nomination in this riding to Hornerwhen the province's Progressive Conservative and Wildrose Parties merged in 2017, but the veteran politician, running as an Independent, likely remains Horner's stiffest competition.

Standing amidst the canned goods and power tools inthe country store,Strankmanis the latest in a long line of conservative MLAs here, andbelieves many of the frustrations felt by conservativesin Alberta are shared by other Canadians.

Incumbent MLA Rick Strankman is running as an Independent in the riding of Drumheller-Stettler after losing the nomination in the newly created United Conservative Party. (Erin Collins/CBC)

"I see many people who want to have less government involvement, less taxation and bettereffective use of those taxpayer dollars," he says. "I think everyone just wants to co-habitate, if you will, without frustration of government."

And Strankmansays thereis a "feeling of alienation" in Alberta that he says voters want to "rectifyin some fashion."He too has heard the rumblings of Alberta separation as he knocks on doors in his expansive riding.

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It's telling that at an all-candidates forum later that night in Consort, about 50 km to the north, the local NDP candidate was a no-show. Of the candidates that did take part,nonesupporta carbon tax.

"It was all right of centre," said Kevin VanLagen, the principal of a nearby rural school. "There was no centre tonight, and anything left of centre didn't show up because there would be no place for them."

Van Lagen says the candidates reflect the riding they want to represent, and that the local New Democrat stayed home because "they knew they wouldn't have a friendly audience."

It isn't hard to find signs of thosefeelings of anger and western alienation here.

"They don't know we exist," says Mary Readman, who ran the local paper for decades. "The world ends at Winnipeg. They don't give a damn about Western Canada at all."