Nathan Cooper on the job as Speaker of the Alberta Assembly on International Francophonie Day last March.
Nathan Cooper on the job as Speaker of the Alberta Assembly on International Francophonie Day last March. Credit: Legislative Assembly of Alberta Credit: Legislative Assembly of Alberta

Having been scooped by the CBC, Nathan Cooper, who has been the Speaker of the Alberta Legislature since 2019 and United Conservative Party (UCP) MLA for Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills since 2015, admitted that the broadcaster had it right and Premier Danielle Smith has asked him to move to Washington to serve in the pretentiously titled position of the province’s “Senior Representative to the United States.”

In its scoop, the CBC described the outgoing Speaker’s new job as a “diplomatic post.”

Cooper seemed to pick up on that mischaracterization in his statement to the Legislature at the end of the day yesterday, noting that “working as the assembly’s chief diplomat has equipped me to be ready for my next role, serving Albertans in a new and meaningful way.”

Sure, just as long as we all understand that being diplomatic – which Cooper is certainly capable of doing – isn’t the same thing as being a diplomat.

I note this not to be mean to Cooper, who is a genuinely likeable person and considerably more capable of diplomatic behaviour than your average UCP MLA nowadays and not a few actual diplomats. Moreover, he has done a creditable job as Speaker of the Assembly. Lots of people like him, including a couple of former NDP cabinet ministers as the press release published by the province noted. 

Even NDP Leader Naheed Nehshi had a kind word for Cooper last night, thanking him for “his fairness, humanity, and deep respect for parliamentary tradition helped foster a more thoughtful and respectful legislature.”

That said, when he gets to the Imperial Capital, he’ll just be another lobbyist fresh off the turnip truck, albeit one who probably has a bigger-than-average expense account. 

Diplomats, it must be noted, are members of a foreign service of another country, and of the diplomatic corps made up of representatives of many nations in the host country. 

And while it is true that Alberta’s trade representatives, which is how Cooper’s new job could be more accurately described, report to the provincial government from their offices in a few foreign cities and several locations in the United States, that does not make any of them a diplomat, ambassador, envoy, or even a mere chargé d’affaires.

Nor will Cooper be invested with the power of independent action on behalf of the Alberta government, another way that his new job will differ from that of a real diplomat from a real country. 

Really, these jobs are sinecures for friends of the ruling party, and yet another way for the Alberta government to try to intrude into exclusive federal jurisdiction. 

If you doubt me, ask yourself if Cooper will be extended diplomatic immunity by the United States Government or given a diplomatic tag for his car, which would give him a pass on facing traffic and parking law enforcement. No such luck. 

Well, to give Cooper and his predecessors in the job their due, he will have an office on Canadian territory – inside the walls of the Canadian Embassy and at the pleasure of the Government of Canada. “Collocated within the Canadian Embassy,” as the news release put it, as if Edmonton and Ottawa are co-owners of the building with the best address in Washington. Not so.

Given the disdain with which the provincial government has been treating the federal government lately, this is mighty generous of Global Affairs Canada, if you ask me. 

Cooper’s resignation as Speaker and MLA will take effect on June 1. Despite its central role in the extension of U.S. power around the world, Washington is often described by longtime residents as seeming like a small town. It depends where you are of course, but it certainly has a small-town, 19th Century feel in the old neighbourhoods around the Capitol.

So perhaps the adjustment from the charms of Olds, Didsbury and Three Hills won’t be insurmountable for Cooper.

David J. Climenhaga

David J. Climenhaga

David Climenhaga is a journalist and trade union communicator who has worked in senior writing and editing positions with the Globe and Mail and the Calgary Herald. He left journalism after the strike...