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Ted Morton at the Calgary Stampede
'Frederick Lee (Ted) Morton', PhD. (born
March 28,
1949,
Los Angeles, California) is a former university professor, an
Albertan politician and currently a Member of the
Legislative Assembly of Alberta. He is currently the Minister of Sustainable resource development. Morton was candidate for the leadership of the
Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta but was ultimately defeated by leadership candidate
Ed Stelmach when party members voted for
Ralph Klein's replacement on
2 December 2006.
Morton moved to
Wyoming in
1952, where his father worked in the oil and gas exploration business. In
1991, Morton and his wife Bambi became Canadian citizens.
Academic career
Morton obtained his
B.A. from
Colorado College and earned his
Masters and
Ph.D. in
political economy from the
University of Toronto. During university Ted was active in the anti-
Vietnam war effort. In
1981, Ted joined the faculty of the
University of Calgary as a
political science professor. He remained in that position for 22 years.
While at the University of Calgary, Morton was a part of a group of academics called the
Calgary School whose teaching and writing exercised a very significant influence on the future of
conservatism in Canada.
He has published five books, one of which won the
1992 Alberta Writers' Guild award, and more than fifty scholarly articles. His columns have appeared in the
National Post, the
Calgary Herald, the
Globe and Mail and the
Calgary Sun.
Political career
Morton was an early supporter of the
Triple-E Senate Committee and a public critic of the
Meech Lake (
1987) and
Charlottetown (
1992) Accords.
He was elected as a
Reform Party Senator-in-Waiting in the
1998 Alberta Senate nominee election.
In
2001,
Canadian Alliance leader
Stockwell Day appointed him Parliamentary Director of Policy and Research for the party. That same year, he was one of a group of six Albertans (including
Stephen Harper—later to become
Prime Minister in
2006) who authored the “
Alberta Agenda“, also known as the "firewall letter", a manifesto that calls on the government of Alberta to use all of its
constitutional powers to reduce the influence of the
Federal government on the lives and personal finances of Albertans.
In the
2004 Alberta general election, Morton won the newly created seat of
Foothills-Rocky View and now sits as an
MLA for the
Alberta Progressive Conservatives. In that role, he has advocated for
tax cuts, against
same-sex marriage, for increased saving of energy revenues, for a
lobbyist registry, and for
fixed election dates. A primary facet of his environmental policy is the revocation of Métis hunting rights
[1]. He was the only Conservative MLA to publicly oppose the
Prosperity Bonus. Within six months of his election, the
Calgary Herald gave Morton the highest grade of all new Calgary-area MLAs and rated him “Most likely to succeed.”
On December 15th 2006 he was named Minister of Sustainable resource development.
Alberta Progressive Conservative leadership campaign
As a candidate in the 2006 Progressive Conservative leadership race Morton placed second to front runner Jim Dinning on the first ballot. The second ballot took place Saturday, 2 December, 2006. In the leadership campaign Morton's primary policies include:
★ Maintaining publicly funded health care, while allowing private health care for non-emergency procedures.
★ Providing fixed election dates, and maximum term lengths for the office of Premier.
★ The creation of a lobbyist registry and strengthening of the office of auditor general.
★ Promoting a bill that would ensure no Alberta laws penalized someone expressing disagreement with same-sex marriage, allow provincially appointed marriage commissioners to refuse to marry same-sex couples, and place restrictions on the teaching of marriage as including same-sex couples.
★ Advocating "more Alberta, less Ottawa," including starting an Alberta pension plan, replacing the RCMP in Alberta with a provincial police force, and exercising greater provincial influence in the area of immigration.
★ Ensuring that Alberta has greater control over its non-renewable energy resources.
Morton has referred to Edmonton as "the capital city of northern Alberta."
[2]
Criticism
Several figures have publicly expressed worry that Morton's private member Bill 208 would have the effect of protecting, in statute, public discrimination against gays and lesbians.
[3].
Morton has been criticized by his constituents on the issue of logging in the beloved Kananaskis region
[4].
Campaign Theme Song
The theme music from Ted's campaign ("Ted Morton is the Man") was so popular and entertaining that it was used as the wake-up call music for
Gerard Kennedy youth delegates at the Federal Liberal Leadership Convention in December 2006.
External links
★
Biography for Dr. Ted Morton on the website of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
★
Ted Morton Official Website