Journal Pioneer

Making promises

New Brunswick Liberals release platform featuring 118 commitment­s

- BY KEVIN BISSETT

The leaders of New Brunswick’s two main parties presented vastly different descriptio­ns of the province’s economic status during a televised roundtable discussion Thursday night - their last face-to-face exchange before the provincial election on Monday night. Liberal Premier Brian Gallant, who released his party’s full platform earlier in the day, presented a rosy picture, insisting the province has been blessed with economic growth, a growing population that has reached record levels while wages have gone up and the jobless rate has gone down. “The deficit has been cut by more than half and we had a budget surplus - the first in 10 years - and we’re seeing hope again,” Gallant told the live audience at St. Thomas University in Fredericto­n. “We’ve grown the economy every single year.” By contrast, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Blaine Higgs painted a bleak picture, saying Gallant’s “tremendous thirst to spend money” has resulted in the worst economic performanc­e in Canada, “in every category.” “We’re closer to the cliff now than we were four years ago,” Higgs said, quoting an economist’s recent assessment of the province’s economic performanc­e. “I spent 33 years in getting results for money being spent,” the former finance minister said, referring to his previous career as an executive with Irving Oil. “We can’t be in last place and continue to say like Brian Gallant does, ‘Let’s just invest more.”’ Green party Leader David Coon drew the biggest applause of the night when he challenged Higgs’ suggestion that taxpayers should be treated like business customers. “Running a government is not like running Irving Oil, so let’s get real,” he said about midway through the discussion, broadcast live by CTV. For the most part, the exchanges between the three men were civil. But sparks often flew when Gallant repeatedly accused Higgs of wanting to cut $500 million in spending and eliminate 2,000 public service jobs, which Higgs denied. “In this (election) scenario, we see Brian Gallant spending more and getting less,” Higgs said, repeating a theme that he has turned to throughout the campaign. Gallant accused Higgs of fearmonger­ing and trying to divide New Brunswicke­rs, and Higgs responded with more accusation­s that the Liberal leader has been irresponsi­ble with public funds. And the discussion reached a low point when Gallant accused Higgs of lying when he recently claimed that Gallant had offered him a job as finance minister after the Liberals won the 2014 election. As Gallant and Higgs locked horns, Coon kept his cool, at one point calling attention to the bickering by saying, “There you go again.” Earlier in the day, the Liberals released their platform, which includes 118 commitment­s at a projected cost of $155 million over four years. The document also revealed the party is planning for higher deficits before achieving a surplus. Most of the promises had been released previously during the campaign, including a four-year freeze on power rates, improvemen­ts to a free tuition program, and tuition help for the middle class - but the 26-page document does include a few new items. If re-elected, a Liberal government would develop a teacher recruitmen­t plan to fill vacancies created by retirement­s. They would also double the limit on how much alcohol individual­s can be bring into the province.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? NB Premier and Liberal Leader Brian Gallant participat­es in the CBC provincial election Leaders’ debate, in Riverview, N.B., earlier this month.
CP PHOTO NB Premier and Liberal Leader Brian Gallant participat­es in the CBC provincial election Leaders’ debate, in Riverview, N.B., earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada