Times Colonist

Alberta to shift fixed election date to fall when disaster risk is lower

- LISA JOHNSON

EDMONTON — Alberta is moving its election date from the spring to the fall to avoid clashing with major natural disasters — but the Opposition says in doing so, Premier Danielle Smith’s government is convenient­ly granting itself six extra months of power.

Smith’s United Conservati­ves introduced a bill Thursday to move the scheduled vote date from the fourth week of May every four years to the third week of October.

That would mean the next election will be Oct. 18, 2027, a time when there is less risk the province will face wildfires, droughts and floods.

Smith told reporters last year’s election was a prime example of the dilemma as her government had to campaign while also fighting fires and organizing evacuation­s.

She had to be careful to not appear to be using the crisis to boost her profile while also needing to raise her profile to get the word out to Albertans on what was happening with the fires.

“Running an election parallel to this crisis made a difficult situation more challengin­g,” Smith said prior to the bill being introduced in the house.

She noted she and her ministers faced the threat of fines from Elections Alberta for using government resources during the campaign.

Last year’s record-breaking wildfire season saw almost 30,000 people forced from their homes by early May, days after the spring election campaign had officially kicked off.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley said given climate change is making natural emergencie­s more frequent, she is not opposed to reconsider­ing the fixed election date. But she said Smith could have looked at going to the polls earlier than the current date, such as February 2027 or October 2026.

“Giving themselves an extra six months seems very selfservin­g and opportunis­tic from a government that has a strong record of being very self-serving and opportunis­tic,” Notley told reporters.

Notley said if the problem is a need for proper communicat­ion, the government could instead have had public servants lead public emergency updates.

The bill, if passed, would also give the province the authority to quickly take over local emergency response efforts in what it considers extreme circumstan­ces. That includes situations where the municipali­ty becomes overwhelme­d or is working at cross purposes with the province.

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