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EDITORIAL: New leader must widen her appeal by spring

Danielle Smith has a challenge ahead to reach wider electorate without alienating the base that gave her UCP leadership.
NEWS-Danielle Smith BWC 2502 web
Danielle Smith in Foothills County on April 12, 2022.

Danielle Smith cleared the first hurdle last week when she won the United Conservative Party’s leadership race, but she faces a far taller one next spring. 

Smith must be congratulated for coming out on top of six other hopefuls in the race to replace Jason Kenney, but a leadership contest and a general election are entirely different animals, something she would be wise to acknowledge in the months ahead. 

Buoyed by anti-Ottawa, anti-COVID restrictions and pro-freedom messaging, Smith’s campaign resonated with a significant chunk of UCP members, but there were many even within her own party who felt the rhetoric went too far, to say nothing of the broader population who she will have to win over if she wants to keep the top job for more than a few months. 

Appealing to a wider electorate, while not alienating the base that put her in this position, will require some impressive political gymnastics, to say the least. Her predecessor struggled to reconcile competing factions within the party, so the new leader faces a significant challenge trying to create one big happy family of Conservatives out of the dysfunction that now exists. 

She has pledged to bring unity to the party, which is easier said than done given that in the wake of her victory last week, there were Conservatives out there who felt so at odds with the new leader they now consider themselves politically homeless. Smith must convince them to remain in the fold and persuade others that her vision is the right one for Alberta. 

She doesn’t have a lot of time to accomplish that lofty goal, what with an election set for next spring, but if history has taught us anything, counting her out could prove to be a mistake. 

After all, Smith was in the political wilderness not that long ago after an ill-fated crossing of the legislature floor, yet today she holds the highest political office in the province. 

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