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Jason Kenney's faith in personal responsibility is no match for Alberta's COVID-19 surge

Jason Kenney’s timid approach to the pandemic isn’t making life any easier for Alberta’s doctors and nurses, says Max Fawcett. Photo by Shutterstock

Jason Kenney may be a practising Catholic, but over the last few months he has made it clear that he worships most enthusiastically at the altar of personal responsibility. And while the recent spike in COVID-19 cases in Alberta has alarmed doctors across the province, who recommended a series of decisive actions aimed at slowing its spread, that apparently didn’t shake Kenney’s faith.

During a Nov. 12 press conference at which his government announced a series of new (and limited) restrictions, Kenney reiterated his belief that Albertans could be trusted to do the right thing — evidence to the contrary notwithstanding.

“We are putting our faith in the good judgment of Albertans,” the premier said, “which is why these measures are voluntary right now.”

Albertans quickly proved that his faith was misplaced, and Kenney was forced to announce additional restrictions less than two weeks later. But even then, Kenney made it clear that a “just watch me” moment wasn’t in the offing.

Even something like a mandatory mask mandate, which is now in place in every other province in Canada, was apparently too much to ask. During a Nov. 25 Facebook Live event, Kenney said: “I think we continue to encourage mask wearing in crowded areas where people cannot physically distance, in workplaces where it makes sense, particularly in areas of high transmission, but that we not create a condition where there’s a backlash.”

"Jason Kenney’s timid approach to the pandemic isn’t making life any easier for Alberta’s doctors and nurses, who have to deal with the surge in cases," writes @maxfawcett. #COVID19 #cdnpoli

Kenney’s timid approach to the pandemic isn’t making life any easier for Alberta’s doctors and nurses, who have to deal with the surge in cases. But it’s not great for his own political health, either. Despite the fact that Canada’s other premiers haven’t exactly covered themselves in glory on this issue, Kenney continues to have — by far — the lowest approval ratings in the country when it comes to managing COVID-19.

According to a recent Leger poll, 59 per cent of Albertans were either “very” or “somewhat” dissatisfied with his government’s response.

And no wonder. At a moment where the situation clearly calls for a show of political resolve, Albertans are getting the tedious moralizing of a frustrated but ineffectual parent. Instead of imposing measures that might actually reduce the spread of the virus — from the suspension of indoor dining, bars and religious services to more effective work-from-home directives — Alberta’s government instead limited attendance at weddings and funerals and asked bars to close a few hours early.

For Kenney, it’s apparently more important to honour his pre-existing ideological commitments than address the situation at hand: “It’s no secret that I do not want to take an approach that restricts people’s fundamental rights and freedoms (or) their ability to gain a livelihood.”

Kenney is not alone here. For conservative premiers across the country, and conservative politicians throughout North America, protecting the freedom to do business seems more important than preventing the spread of a deadly virus. In a Nov. 23 tweet, Ontario Premier Doug Ford noted that “COVID fatigue is setting in on all of us, but we all have a part to play.”

That part? “When holiday shopping,” he continued, “please shop locally through curbside pickup or online stores and support our restaurants by ordering takeout.”

The problem with that approach is that the virus doesn’t believe in personal responsibility, and its spread is an even bigger threat to people’s livelihoods than any short-term shutdown. The province could have done more than hectoring Albertans and implementing cautious, limited restrictions. And it could, and still can, use its balance sheet to support vulnerable businesses like restaurants and bars, and pay them to remain closed for the time that’s needed.

It can drop its hostility with Ottawa and allow the federal contact tracing app to work in Alberta, where it might begin to more effectively track the more than 80 per cent of cases whose origins can’t be identified right now. And it can temporarily abandon its loyalty to an idea and ideology and instead do what’s required to protect citizens from the lethal consequences of an overburdened health-care system.

That seems unlikely, though, given the premier’s obvious unwillingness to abandon his ideological beliefs. Even in announcing additional measures, he emphasized how uncomfortable he was in doing it — and incorrectly suggested that the Charter of Rights and Freedoms prevented him from implementing a full lockdown. That, he said, would “be an unprecedented violation of fundamental constitutionally protected rights and freedoms.”

But it’s not just law professors and constitutional experts who disagree with Kenney here. So does Pope Francis, who took aim in an op-ed for the New York Times at those protesting mask mandates and other COVID-19 measures.

“It is all too easy for some to take an idea — in this case, for example, personal freedom — and turn it into an ideology, creating a prism through which they judge everything,” he wrote.

Kenney may yet pay a political price for his unwillingness to deviate from his ideological beliefs on personal responsibility and government intervention. But as the current numbers make brutally clear, hundreds of Albertans have already paid a much higher one. And make no mistake: It didn’t have to be this way.

Max Fawcett is a freelance writer and the former editor of Alberta Oil and Vancouver magazine.

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