Randy Fiedler, the Red Deer Advocate/The Canadian PressWildrose leader Danielle Smith, flanked by fellow MLAs, at her party’s provincial convention in Red Deer, Alberta, on June 25, 2010Meet Danielle Smith (Wildrose TV)
The introductory clip doesn’t mention that she used to hate dogs. In a 2005 Calgary Herald column, she lamented the carnal and scatological habits of Turk, her then boyfriend’s Chesapeake Bay retriever. Just under seven years later, the boyfriend has become the husband, and the columnist, now head of the rightmost party of Canada’s rightmost province, is leading the vanguard to oust the dynastic Progressive Conservatives. “I’m a dog lover. I didn’t start off that way,” she tells me, unbidden. “You’ll probably go through my columns. You’ll find one where I said, ‘Here are the reasons why I’m not a dog lover.’ But I am now.”
As leader of the de facto opposition, she seems as affable as Phil’s, the family restaurant where we meet on a big-sky fall afternoon — the sort of place that has plastic high chairs, crayons in paper cups, fabric flowers, and a reliable menu. It’s midday, but Smith, clad in a red blazer, says she hasn’t eaten yet. She orders a Monte Cristo sandwich with a side of iceberg lettuce, and speaks as if reciting a monologue, stopping only to take a bite. She is, after all, a politician.
Smith is a true believer in conservative principles. At the University of Calgary, where she took English and economics, she led the campus PC club and studied under political scientist Tom Flanagan. An internship at the Fraser Institute imbued her with a passion for Ayn Rand and charter schools. After graduation, she held positions with various advocacy groups focused on land rights, the libertarian cri de coeur. At twenty-seven, she won a spot as a trustee on the Calgary Board of Education. “It was a horrible black mark on Alberta’s democracy,” says Jennifer Pollock, a fellow trustee and three-time failed federal Liberal candidate. Back then, the school board was among the most vocal critics of Ralph Klein’s cuts; Pollock believes Smith was parachuted in to discredit the organization. Within months, it had become so fractious that minister of learning Lyle Oberg dissolved it.
Smith moved on to the Calgary Herald ’s editorial board, where she advocated for the privatization of health care and public services. One former board member recalls her arguing in favour of privatizing sidewalks. When Wildrose formed in 2007, Smith — who had stayed in politics for the debates — saw an opportunity. At the time, the party managed to unite social conservatives and gun-loving libertarians. It is now competing with the governing PCs, who have achieved forty consecutive years in power. (Only two other provincial parties, the Ontario PCs and the Nova Scotia Liberals, have recorded longer stints.)
Robyn ShesterniakRoss Perot entered US presidential politics in 1992, after watching the Republican Party become the Washington establishment and the national debt skyrocket to $4 trillion. Once his campaign seemed viable, he hired a manager: Ed Rollins, the architect behind Ronald Reagan’s and Richard Nixon’s elections. Perot and Rollins distrusted each other from the outset. Rollins considered Perot a paranoid eccentric who thought his campaign team was associating with the GOP and possibly the CIA; and a bullheaded micromanager who made television appearances without first discussing message discipline with his campaign advisers, and insisted on directing and editing his own commercials. (Perot’s biographer, Gerald Posner, described Rollins as an egomaniacal blowhard more concerned with promoting himself than with running Perot’s campaign.) Rollins quit after six weeks. “There’s no doubt in my mind that… Perot had a legitimate shot at being elected,” he wrote in his memoir. “The country was absolutely ready for an outsider, and his message had great resonance. If he had been elected, however, his government would have been a managerial disaster… He’d have been a little dictator, ruling over government in chaos.— Bronwen Jervis
Redford was elected to head the party — and the province — with about half as many votes as Ed Stelmach won in the 2006 leadership primary. “You end up having nothing but career politicians, people who have been there a long, long, long time,” Smith says, cutting her sandwich with a knife and fork. “They stop thinking about what is in the best interest of their community and start thinking about what they need to do to get elected again.”
Wildrose, which has ideology to spare, represents part of an overall shift to the right in the province. The party is united by a common distrust of hierarchy in general, and the government in particular. But how does one lead a pack of contrarians? The values that make Wildrose compelling are the same ones that may alienate the majority of voters, who, despite much hard-right braying, tend to vote centre. “There’s ideology and there’s governing,” Bratt says, “and they don’t go hand in hand.” Improbably, Smith must present her party as the new middle ground and, by extension, paint the standard-bearer as wildly off track.
Maintaining power is the moderate’s Zen, and Smith, though an experienced ideologue, is an inexperienced leader. “You can only lead as far as people are willing to follow,” says Peter Menzies, who was editor-in-chief at the Herald when Smith worked at the paper. “If you can’t bring the team with you, you’re out there on your own, and that’s not a safe place to be.” If Wildrose fails to capture the legislature, it may find itself like the remnants of the Calgary Board of Education after Smith blew through. According to the Globe and Mail, at least fourteen key party members have left in the past year, citing Smith’s management style and organizational turmoil.
“[She was] like a freight train,” Pollock says. “I do love trains, but freight trains are limited. They only make certain stops.”





