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Danielle Smith, the pundit turned premier, wants to self-immunize from her opinionated past

Danielle Smith, the pundit turned premier, wants to self-immunize from her opinionated past

CBC
Thursday, November 24, 2022 06:12:33 PM UTC

Last month, United Conservatives crowned a former media figure as Alberta's premier for the first time since Ralph Klein. 

Except, unlike Danielle Smith, Klein wasn't just a few months out of the microphone-and-interviews racket when he began running Alberta in 1992. He'd spent a dozen years in politics, as Calgary mayor then provincial environment minister.

And Klein was a TV reporter, rather than the talk show host and pundit that Smith has been at Corus Radio and the Calgary Herald, so he didn't leave a long trail of provocative opinions and recorded beliefs for critics and political watchers to scrutinize, and to hold up against the premier's current positions.

Well, scrutinize no longer. The public has been alerted by Danielle Smith herself: "I know I'm not a talk show host or media commentator any longer."

That stuff she said? It's so 2003. Way back in 2019. Or 2020. More than a year ago. As far as nine months ago. Or perhaps she was a UCP leadership candidate, but surely wasn't premier yet.

In Smith's televised address to the province Tuesday evening, she took time after promising $2.4 billion in direct payments and rate breaks to most Albertans to address "something personal." Namely, a big section of the curriculum vitae that helped her get elected.

"I know that I am far from perfect, and I made mistakes," Smith said into the camera from her office desk. "And having spent decades in media and hosting talk shows, I discussed hundreds of different topics, and sometimes took controversial positions, many of which have evolved or changed as I have grown and learned from listening to you." 

She stressed she knows what her job is: to be premier, not pundit, to "serve Albertans with everything I have," and to "be humble, listen, and continue to learn from you."

It was an act of contrition, albeit completely nonspecific contrition for an untold swath of Smith's recorded observations and wisdom over the years.

Smith and her team know her hot-take past carries numerous political liabilities and landmines, several of them from the most recent phase of her commentary life, after she quit commercial radio for alternative and less-regulated formats offering more latitude to speak with doctors that the medical mainstream accuses of spreading COVID misinformation, and rebroadcasting info from other unseemly online realms.

She'd warned about this previously, the night she won the UCP leadership, that "detractors will dredge up old statements and mistakes from the past," and use "cancel culture." Now again, with people watching her as premier, Smith bids to broadly inoculate herself from the great treasury of old Smith clips and soundbites.

After Smith last month had to walk back comments about the unvaccinated being discriminated against and some admittedly "ill-informed" views about Ukraine, her team felt they had to apply spot treatment of that pesticide again earlier this week. The NDP had done some of that dredging — various Smith commentary from the last two years about adding more user pay into the public health system for things like doctor checkups, perhaps through a variation of the health spending accounts that Smith currently promises to help individuals pay for health expenses the system doesn't cover, like psychology and naturopathy.

Smith's team took to Twitter to brand this as Rachel Notley's spin, a "myth busted." 

But the NDP's source material wasn't glib remarks from online videos — it was a 14-page essay Smith wrote in 2021 for the University of Calgary School of Public Policy. Well-considered scholarship, which just so happens to be squarely at odds what Notley and Smith alike deem is politically palatable in today's Alberta.

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