Edmonton Journal

NDP’s McLean opts not to run in 2019

‘Life’s ambition has been the law,’ she says

- YOLANDE COLE

Stephanie McLean, an NDP cabinet minister from Calgary, will not seek re-election in 2019.

McLean, minister for Service Alberta and status of women, said the decision not to run again was not easy, but she is eager to pursue her legal practice.

“Serving the people of Calgary-Varsity and working in the Notley government has been, and remains, an enormous honour,” she said in a statement Thursday.

“At the same time, my life’s ambition has been the law. And as a young lawyer, I am eager to pursue my practice. I have no doubt that all I have learned and come to appreciate in government will make me a better lawyer advancing the cause of justice in a meaningful, if less public, way.”

McLean was elected on May 5, 2015. Before serving as an MLA, she started a small business practising law and later partnered to create GTM LLP, where she practised family and criminal litigation, according to her biography on the province’s website.

She was the first MLA in Alberta history to give birth while in office.

Two other Calgary cabinet ministers, Brandy Payne and Kathleen Ganley, have also had children while in office. Payne announced in late March that she will not seek re-election in 2019, citing a decision to spend more time with her family. Ganley is seeking re-election in the riding of Calgary-Mountain View.

In her statement, McLean highlighte­d her work as minister on “protecting vulnerable Albertans from predatory lending practices and implementi­ng first-of-its-kind strategy to combat sexual violence.”

She added that she recognizes “the significan­ce that is attached to my being able to do this work while giving birth to my first child.”

“This government’s commitment to women’s equality and to breaking down barriers that have kept women from politics is a major and long-overdue step forward for our province,” she said.

Mount Royal University political science professor Duane Bratt said these kinds of announceme­nts are not uncommon in the leadup to provincial elections.

“There’s going to be those that say, ‘They’re not going to get re-elected and they ’re pulling out,’ ” he said. “I’m not convinced of that because this type of turnover happens all the time.”

 ??  ?? Stephanie McLean
Stephanie McLean

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