Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 07 Sep, 2014 01:18 PM
    EDMONTON - Alberta's next premier grew up working "under the bins" of a Crownsnest coal mine, and now hopes to apply those principles to get his PC party back on top.
     
    Jim Prentice, as a university student, toiled for seven summers underground, amidst choking dust, heat, and deafening machinery.
     
    Coal was dropped by trucks from above into bins and then down onto a conveyer belt where Prentice and others would pry off the massive rocks that had gotten mixed in with the coal and smash them up.
     
    "I always said I got my education there," Prentice said in a recent interview.
     
    "I learned teamwork, I learned respect for other people. I learned the fact that the smartest guy in the room is often not the guy you think is the smartest guy.
     
    "Everybody's got something to contribute and everybody's got to be part of the solution."
     
    Prentice, the former Calgary Conservative MP and key lieutenant of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper, has a daunting task after winning the party's leadership race Saturday.
     
    The 58-year-old has a year and a half, before the next election, to resurrect a party and caucus bludgeoned and demoralized by stinging revelations of lavish spending and travel under former premier Alison Redford.
     
    Five decades earlier, his only goal was to play hockey.
     
    He was born on July 20, 1956, in South Porcupine in northern Ontario.
     
    His dad, Eric, was a gold miner and former pro hockey player, a 17-year-old whiz-kid winger and the youngest player ever signed by the Toronto Maple Leafs.
     
    Eric was a career minor leaguer, save for five games with Toronto in the bigs in 1943.
     
    As the gold mine dwindled, Eric picked up his family in 1969 and moved to a new coal mine in Grande Cache, Alta., when Jim was 13, and eventually to the mines further south in the Crowsnest Pass.
     
    Hockey-wise, Prentice became a top-flight winger in his own right, but his promising junior career ended with a devastating knee-on-knee hit.
     
    "I got creamed coming out from behind the net," he said. "That was it."
     
    From then on he focused on university, graduating with a law degree and going to work in Alberta as an entrepreneur and a lawyer dealing mainly with land and property rights.
     
    In the background there was politics. Always politics.
     
     
    From age 20 he worked for the federal and provincial Conservative parties taking a page, he said, from his parents' involvement in their community.
     
    Save for one failed bid for elected office provincially in 1986 he stayed in the backrooms as an organizer and bean counter. It was an agreement with Karen, his wife, he said, not to get into the all-consuming elected life until their kids were much older.
     
    When he did run again, in 2002, the federal conservative movement was a mess, fractured between the PCs and the Canadian Alliance.
     
    Prentice urged reunification and in 2002 stepped aside as the PC candidate in Calgary Southwest so that then-Alliance leader Stephen Harper could run unopposed to represent the centre-right.
     
    In 2004, at age 47, he finally grabbed the brass ring, winning the Calgary riding for the newly merged Conservative Party.
     
    In 2006 Harper won a minority government and Prentice was in cabinet. Over the following six-plus years he was given high marks for his work in diverse portfolios — Indian and Northern Affairs, Industry, and Environment.
     
    The defining moment, he said, came before his cabinet days, when the Conservatives were still the Opposition in 2005.
     
    Prentice decided to vote for a controversial Liberal bill endorsing same-sex marriage.
     
    "The pressure (to vote no) was incredible," said Prentice.
     
    "(But) I believe in the rights of individuals, including the rights of communities of faith.
     
    "There's a duty to balance and protect the rights of everyone."
     
    That humanist rationale, however, didn't cut much ice in his riding of Calgary Centre-North.
     
    There were angry letters to the editor. Staff in his riding office quit. People told him his political career was finished. One angry Calgarian passed him in a pickup truck, pulled over and threatened clean his clock on the spot.
     
    They set fire to his veranda.
     
    In the church, where he was married and his children were baptized, Prentice and his wife Karen arrived to find that day's sermon was a warning about him.
     
    When he finally voted, it was at once one of his proudest moments, followed by one he will forever regret.
     
    Prentice always prided himself on going out the front door of the Commons, to face the media and answer for his actions.
     
    On that day, he didn't.
     
    "It was pandemonium out there," he said. "Every journalist in the country was there ready to descend on me.
     
    "It's the only time I ever went out the back door of the House of Commons.
     
    "It's the only thing I regret, because I don't ever walk out the back door."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend
    Mounties are looking for a man who is alleged to have sexually assaulted several students at a central Alberta Bible college.

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack
    More than one-third of Canada's IT professionals know — for sure — that they'd had a significant data breach over the previous 12 months that could put their clients or their organizations at risk, a cybersecurity study suggests.

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau
    Health Minister Rona Ambrose denies the federal government's marijuana awareness campaign is aimed at Justin Trudeau.

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property
    Police say a dead person was discovered on a property on the east side of Mackenzie and an investigation was started on Saturday....

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province
    Bill Miller of the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako says controlled burns will start today around the 37-square-kilometre China Nose fire southeast of Houston....

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province

    Trudeau confident Liberals on right track to victory in 2015 federal election

    Justin Trudeau doesn't put much stock in public opinion surveys that suggest the federal Liberal party vaulted into the lead once he took the helm 16 months ago and has stayed on top ever since...

    Trudeau confident Liberals on right track to victory in 2015 federal election