Public debates become endangered species

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Published: November 28, 2002

Modern elections are often won or lost in public debates where

candidates, pitted head-to-head, confront each other on the burning

issues of the day.

Not the 2002 Canadian Wheat Board election.

All-candidates meetings have been scarce in most districts and

non-existent in one. That’s a dramatic change from previous campaigns.

During the 1998 CWB election, Larry Hill attended six meetings across

District 3. This year the incumbent hasn’t been to one debate because

no chamber of commerce, farm group or marketing club has organized any

Read Also

Robert Andjelic, who owns 248,000 acres of cropland in Canada, stands in a massive field of canola south of Whitewood, Sask. Andjelic doesn't believe that technical analysis is a useful tool for predicting farmland values | Robert Arnason photo

Land crash warning rejected

A technical analyst believes that Saskatchewan land values could be due for a correction, but land owners and FCC say supply/demand fundamentals drive land prices – not mathematical models

in the district, which stretches from Lethbridge to Swift Current, Sask.

Hill chalks it up to the fact that he only has one opponent, Buck

Spencer, and the two candidates couldn’t be further apart on the

issues. Hill supports the single desk and Spencer opposes it, so the

choice is obvious – there is no need to get to know the candidates any

better.

That doesn’t explain why there have only been two public debates in

District 7 where four candidates are vying to become the next CWB

director, or just one in District 5 where eight people are on the

ticket.

Greg Porozni, a dual market supporter running in District 5, is

disappointed with the lack of all-candidates meetings in his district.

“My gut feeling is it’s just the economy,” said the Vegreville, Alta.,

farmer.

“I think people are just more concerned about survival than they are

about the CWB election.”

District 7 incumbent Micheal Halyk thinks part of the problem is that

the election has become a “one-trick pony” pitting dual marketers

against single desk supporters.

“I think a lot of groups were reluctant to get involved in putting on

all-candidates debates for fear that it was going to turn into a

barroom brawl. And let’s not kid ourselves, Yorkton got close,” he

said, referring to one of only two public debates held in his district.

But Halyk is still surprised by the overwhelming lack of involvement in

this election by grain companies like Saskatchewan Wheat Pool and

Agricore United and provincial farm groups such as Keystone

Agricultural Producers and the Agricultural Producers Association of

Saskatchewan.

“I did find APAS extremely silent throughout this whole campaign,” said

the Melville, Sask., farmer. “I wonder why APAS did not take it upon

themselves to organize some all-candidates meetings?”

APAS president Terry Hildebrandt said the board discussed it and

decided not to sponsor any debates, but in retrospect he thinks that

was the wrong decision.

“There was some worry that we’d be seen taking a stand one way or the

other, and we’re not here to tell people how to market their grain.”

On the other hand he realizes that APAS is funded by producer dollars

and helping inform farmers on such an important vote would be money

well spent.

“It should have probably been a role that we took up, but we opted not

to,” said Hildebrandt, adding that APAS will revisit its stance in the

next election.

Weldon Newton, president of Manitoba’s Keystone Agricultural Producers,

said his organization didn’t get involved this time around because KAP

had 12 of its own annual district meetings to organize in November.

“We have enough on our own plate this year without looking at trying to

organize forums for the election too.”

National Farmers Union president Stewart Wells said there has been a

vacuum in public debate since Sask Pool distanced itself from policy

issues. The NFU may help fill that void by sponsoring some debates in

the next election two years from now.

But he said more public meetings would not have advanced the 2002

campaign because the election has become so polarized on the pro- and

anti-board issue.

“Most farmers have their minds made up,” said Wells.

That’s something most candidates and outside observers agree is the

main factor contributing to the lack of interest in public forums this

time around.

Alanna Koch, chair of CARE, a group that supports dual market

candidates, said for many the vote is already done.

“If you already pretty much know what your decision is, what do you

need to go to a meeting for?”

There is also unanimous agreement that this year’s late harvest hasn’t

helped. Farmers can’t fill meeting halls when they are still out in

their fields.

Hill isn’t too worried about the lack of public debates because they

only attract a small percentage of the farming population and those

people are usually voters that have already made up their minds.

“The average person tends to stay away from these highly inflammatory,

politically charged meetings.”

But some candidates worry about what the lack of interest in public

forums means in the broader context of the election.

“I’m starting to wonder about voter turnout. What is that going to be

like? Is it going to be low?” Porozni wondered.

About the author

Sean Pratt

Sean Pratt

Reporter/Analyst

Sean Pratt has been working at The Western Producer since 1993 after graduating from the University of Regina’s School of Journalism. Sean also has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Saskatchewan and worked in a bank for a few years before switching careers. Sean primarily writes markets and policy stories about the grain industry and has attended more than 100 conferences over the past three decades. He has received awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Federation, North American Agricultural Journalists and the American Agricultural Editors Association.

explore

Stories from our other publications