I worked for a (too brief in retrospect) time for the NDP government that
preceded Blakeney (of which Blakeney was as I recall the senior
bureaucrat...

They were a a model of probity and public service and provided a lifelong
lesson for me on how the instrumentality of government could be used in
support of the public good. They had their faults (they were in some sense
too good as bureaucrats and not good enough as politicians). They were
rather better at directing than they were at listening, but they did this
country an inestimable service through the creation of medicare, the design
of a modern and efficient public service, providing models of how Crown
Corporations could act in the public interest and I could go on.

Murray Dobbin's comparison with Harper (and Murray also grew up in
Saskatchewan) isn't really fair to Blakeney who should not even be seen in
the same light as Harper whose major contribution (hopefully) to Canada will
be as a spur to a re-recognition by many to the basic good sense and virtues
of Canadian democracy and a firm resolve and committment to protect this
from Harper and his gang.

M

 From: "Murray Dobbin's Blog" <[email protected]
 Date: 2011.04 .18 5:19:34 PM PDT (CA)
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: A new post from Murray Dobbin

 A new post from Murray Dobbin

 Allan Blakeney versus Stephen Harper: Nation builder versus nation
destroyer

 Posted: 18 Apr 2011 05:02 PM PDT

 Politicians come and go but some go leaving a genuine legacy and  
 that is the case with Allan Blakeney who died yesterday at 85.  
 Unlike too many ex-NDP premiers, he didn't take on the job as  
 ambassador to the US or get suckered into moderating some right- 
 wing prime ministers image by accepting some other appointment. He 
 mostly withdrew from politics but occasionally engaged when he  
 thought it was important enough.

 One of those occasions was in response to Liberal Prime Minister  
 Jean Chretien's outrageous statement that Medicare was designed to 
 deal with catastrophic illness only. Blakeney called a news  
 conference along with other key figures in the creation of  
 Saskatchewans Medicare program and put Chretien in his place.  
 Medicare, said Blakeney, was always intended to be comprehensive
 anything less was a violation of its basic principles.

 Blakeney was unique amongst NDP premiers  many of whom got knocked
 off track by conservative bureaucrats who manipulated them with  
 dozens of reasons why they couldnt do what they had promised to do.

 But Blakeney was a senior civil servant before he was a politician  
 and there wasnt a bureaucrat in the Saskatchewan civil service who
 hold a candle to his intellect. He knew too much to be put off by  
 spurious arguments about what was possible or impossible.

 And he was tough and fearless when it came to facing down the  
 biggest resource companies in the country. He insisted that  
 Saskatchewan receive 60% of the value of oil in royalties, a huge  
 percentage compared to todays blatant giveaway  Saskatchewan now
 gets something in the range of 14%. When the oil giants threatened  
 to stop pumping Blakeney raised the bet  and threatened to charge
 them thousands of dollars a day for each well they closed down. The
 big, tough oil companies backed down. They had forgotten they  
 couldnt take the oil with them.

 When the potash companies refused to pay higher royalties and  
 threatened a decade of court battles, Blakeney nationalized them,  
 creating a new source of revenue for the province. Tragically, the  
 Conservative government of Grant Devine sold them off at less than  
 half their value. Had they remained in provincial hands,  
 Saskatchewan would have had billions in revenue for a whole new  
 generation of social programs.

 Blakeney wasnt perfect and I remember writing fiercely critical  
 articles on a number of issues where I thought he caved in too  
 soon, or failed to follow through on commitments.

 But he was a nation builder, a man who more than any modern  
 political leader really understood the positive role government  
 could play. He worried about the Charter of Rights and Freedoms  
 because, as he told me in an interview for an Ideas series, it is  
 not just governments that violate citizens rights  corporations  
 do, too. And he predicted that corporations would use the Charter  
 by accessing their persons status to claim freedom of speech and 
 other rights. He was right  they have done so, to the detriment of
 society and democracy.

 Compare this amazing leader to the vicious, dishonest, sneering  
 excuse for a leader we have as a prime minister today. Both  
 intelligent men, one turned his brilliance to building a humane,  
 egalitarian, and fair society in his province. The other is  
 applying his intelligence to a project of diminishing a nation,  
 crushing the opposition and slandering and bullying anyone who  
 dares exercise their democratic rights.

 The death of Blakeney represents the end of an era  one we should
 remember and recreate once we rid the country of our version of  
 Vlad the Destroyer.


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