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Shannon Phillips targeted climate and parks action. Then she got targeted. The NDPer is now leaving office

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Shannon Phillips targeted climate and parks action. Then she got targeted. The NDPer is now leaving office

Dogged by Lethbridge police surveillance scandal and its long shadow

The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.

And as the party reignites its bid to return to government this summer with a new leader, New Democrats will do so without the veteran MLA who led the party's push to make the world take Alberta more seriously on climate action.

Shannon Phillips, the party's former environment minister, has decided to leave office July 1.

Her departure comes barely one year after she was elected to a third term as MLA for Lethbridge-West. It will also pose a serious test for her party and its next leader, in a byelection later this year to defend the NDP's only seat outside of the Calgary and Edmonton regions.

Phillips insisted in an interview that her departure has nothing to do with the June 22 leadership vote to replace Notley, the only leader Phillips has served alongside.

It's personal reasons — a sense that she's accomplished enough in politics, some unnamed opportunities in the private sector and a desire to spend more time with her two teenage sons.

But she also has a less typical personal reason to resign: the long shadow of the improper surveillance that Lethbridge police officers conducted on her while she was minister — photographing her, following her and looking her up on police databases.

What's followed that 2017 snooping has been discipline for two officers, her own bids for more police accountability, a $400,000 lawsuit she filed in 2022, and recent word that Alberta's police watchdog recommended charges against the police members, though the Crown declined to prosecute.

The saga has taken its personal toll on her.

"It is an absolutely deplorable situation, and there's no question that it grinds on me," Phillips told CBC News.

"I don't feel solid at all in my own community, and it's been years now."

Phillips said she considered not running again in 2023, but a longtime friend and adviser told her: "Don't let these f--kers win," she recalled.

a woman stands in a jacket on a city street. Phillips on the street where Lethbridge police officers took surreptitious photos of her and followed her brunch guests. (Dave Rae/CBC)

She was also motivated to run again with the hopes her NDP could win again, beating then-rookie Premier Danielle Smith. The disappointment of the party's defeat, and four more years on the Opposition benches, led both Notley and Phillips to both decide to step down (though Notley has no plans yet to resign her seat).

Phillips has endorsed former justice minister Kathleen Ganley in this month's leadership vote, although former Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi is widely perceived to be the front-runner. "I am perfectly comfortable with any leadership outcome," Phillips said.

"No one, I think, would ever accuse me of being an opportunist on any side of the outcomes in this party. I was a New Democrat before it was cool. I intend to remain one now that it is pretty cool."

Her time with the party stretches to 2000, when she was a University of Alberta political science grad interning in the office of Brian Mason, then one of only two New Democrat MLAs. 

She was part of a group of local activists— protesting in the tear-gas clouds outside 2001's Summit of the Americas in Quebec City — but became the one who preferred to agitate for change inside the government system.

After several years as an aide in the NDP's small Opposition caucus office, she left to work in progressive media and with the Alberta Federation of Labour, returning to run for the provincial party in Lethbridge in 2012. She lost that one, before winning the next three contests.

She became known as one of the Notley government's toughest operators, in question period and behind the scenes. To let off steam, she participated in Lethbridge roller derby — her nickname was Gnome Stompsky (a nod to social critic and academic Noam Chomsky) and her number (4746) was a nod to her vote total in her first election.

a woman waves behind a lectern. Other people stand around her. Phillips, at front right, joined then-premier Rachel Notley as the Alberta NDP government announced a wide-ranging climate action plan in 2015. (Amber Bracken/Canadian Press)

She served as Notley's environment and parks minister throughout their years in government, 2015 to 2019. She's proud of the climate measures, but holds a bigger place in her heart for her accomplishments on parks files, including protections for the northern Wood Buffalo area and the Castle parks region in southwest Alberta, closer to her Lethbridge base.

Some of those Lethbridge officers in the surveillance scandal were offroading enthusiasts who opposed the NDP's plans for Castle parks, Phillips would later discover through the police investigation processes.

Her lawsuit against the officers will follow her into life after provincial politics. While she has no plans for a next job nailed down yet, she hopes to do some teaching and writing alongside it, Phillips said.

A byelection must be called within six months of a seat's vacancy. Phillips's Lethbridge-West is the lone dot of orange in a provincial map the UCP dominates outside of Alberta's two largest cities. But while the UCP will surely covet victory there, Phillips said she's helped turn Lethbridge into a hotbed of NDP support.

"If the UCP wants to run at it, they're welcome to waste their money," she said, with a flash of her confidence and determination. "I know what people here are made of."

Alberta NDP candidates make their final bids for leadership

Duration 2:16
The Alberta NDP held their final leadership debate on June 2 in Edmonton. Candidates Jodi Calahoo Stonehouse, Kathleen Ganley, Sarah Hoffman and Naheed Nenshi delivered their closing arguments to party faithful before 85,000 members will begin voting. CBC's Natasha Riebe breaks down the key issues for the candidates and party members.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jason Markusoff

Producer and writer

Jason Markusoff analyzes what's happening — and what isn't happening, but probably should be — in Calgary, Alberta and sometimes farther afield. He's written in Alberta for more than two decades, previously reporting for Maclean's magazine, Calgary Herald and Edmonton Journal. He appears regularly on Power and Politics' Power Panel and various other CBC current affairs shows. Reach him at jason.markusoff@cbc.ca

 
 
 
 
 
 
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Kathleen Ganley

 
I am running to be leader of the Alberta NDP and the next Premier of our province. Working together, we will win together.
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(403) 216-5445
info@teamganley.ca
 
 
1 Hour Ago 
Shannon Phillips is a powerhouse. Smart, articulate, and dedicated, she has boundless compassionate for those who deserve it, but no tolerance for fools who would try to sway her from defence of the public interest. She is someone who changed the world for the better.
I have had the incredible privilege to stand shoulder to shoulder with her while we fought to make this world just a little bit better, a little bit fairer, and a little bit easier for people who have to struggle a little too much. I am incredibly grateful for her friendship and for all the things I have learned from her. We survived good times and hard times together - we laughed, cried, and so much more. We have seen each other and our best and worst. While many would say it is her smarts that make her exceptional, I think it’s her courage.
Shannon lost her first election for the NDP. She got right back up again and fought until she won. She overcame what would have been insurmountable odds to anyone else to hold that seat in 2019, and again in 2023. She managed to get wildly opposing interests and view points to agree on a signature piece of climate policy that actually made real change in the world. She has demonstrated incredible grit, it is breathtaking to witness.
She did it while raising children and commuting over 500 kilometres to work. She did it while the worst kind of people slandered her and threatened her. She did it while she was surveilled by the very people who are supposed to protect us. Politics is hard, but her journey was harder than most, and she navigated it with grace, and she never lost her North Star - the people she wanted to help and the change she wanted to make.
Putting an idea out into the world and standing behind it is incredibly courageous. Standing behind your values, even when they aren’t popular is hard. Doing is hard and criticizing is far too easy, but the doing is how we change the world.
Shannon changed the world for the better, that is a legacy no one can ever take from her. But she also changed me for the better, and I will forever be grateful.
Top fan
Ronald Reinhold
Great story. As accomplished as Shannon is, I am sure there will be more chapters. I am sure wondering where I will be able to tune in, to keep up.

David Raymond Amos
I just called and Tweeted you

 


-----Original Message-----
From: Charmaine BULGER
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2017 5:11 PM
To: David Amos
Subject: Re: Two voicemails and an email for the Minister of Justice
Kathleen Ganley, her friends in the Assembly, the CPS, the EPS and RCMP to review before May 24th

I am no longer working in ALERT and will be on retirement leave.  Please
contact Insp. Chad Coles via groupwise or at 780-509-3056.  Thank-you.

Charmaine

David Amosdavid.raymond.amos@gmail.com

May 10, 2017, 10:42 AM


to David, me, motorcylemaniac333
 
 
 

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