These are a few of my favourite Tweets
For the past while, I’ve been pretty open about my enthusiasm for Alison Redford. I’ve also been pretty critical of her main opponent, Wildrose’s Danielle Smith. I haven’t hidden it.
As such, I’ve gotten a few tweets sent my way, some of which I would like to share for your amusement. I wanted to put them on this web site before they end up down the memory hole, like quite a few pundits’ prognostications.
Here’s a sampling from your garden variety Wildrose supporters.









Those were fun. Now, I also heard from some well-known people. Here’s what three conservative pundits (whom I like a great deal) told me when I suggested that Danielle Smith would pay a price for not condemning extremists in her midst:



Those were fun, too. I also heard from pollsters, however. Here’s what some of them had to say about my suggestion (in a column) that Smith would pay a price and (in a posting) that Redford would win:


“Pay attention”! Ha! I like that. Best of all, however, was National Post reporter Jen Gerson. She was assigned to cover the Alberta election. I had thought Jen was pretty smart, but I’m not so sure about that anymore. For instance, I suggested on Facebook, Twitter and on this web site, that Wildrose extremism – like the lunatic who called for David Suzuki to be assassinated – was newsworthy, and would hurt Wildrose. Jen disagreed. Jen, who knows better, had this to say:

Get that? “Actual stories.” Like, saying gays will burn in Hell, or saying that whites are better, or calling for political adversaries to be murdered aren’t, you know, such a big deal. But I’m a bit slow, so I pressed Jen on the issue. I disagreed with her; I expressed puzzlement with her disinterest. This is what she came back with:

Isn’t that nice? What a nice person.
Anyway, you get the point, I suspect. Last night wasn’t just a big political deal. It was a big deal for four “Ps” – partisans, pundits, pollsters and press people.
Most of them were wrong, wrong, wrong. In politics, as in life, you should always ask this question: “What if I’m wrong?” I certainly am, often. In the past few days, however, so were quite a few other people. And, thanks to the wonder that is Twitter, the proof is there for us all to behold.
Have a good one, tweeters!