speaking last month at the annual canada strong & free network (csfn) conference in ottawa, alberta premier danielle smith implored her fellow conservatives to “run towards” health care, rather than away from it.
“part of the reason health care doesn’t work (in canada),” smith told csfn director jocelyn bamford, “is because it’s being operated in this sort of top-down … public-funded, publicly delivered (model) …
“we can have private delivery, public funding, stay within the canada health act, and bring all of the principles that we know work in free enterprise to this most expensive service.”
these were surprising words to hear from a conservative premier who will be up for re-election in less than two months — even if smith was speaking on her “home turf” to a roomful of conservative movers and shakers.
after all, public health care has long been the third rail of canadian politics. the mere suggestion of altering our single-payer, one-tier status quo to create more room for more private-sector involvement in health care has been enough to bring down conservative politicians in the past.
take, for instance, the hapless former canadian alliance leader stockwell day, who was so flummoxed by the liberal narrative that he was a closet supporter of privatization that he resorted to holding up a sign reading
“no 2-tier healthcare” during a televised leaders’ debate.