Toronto Star

Prentice vows to fix economy, calls election

Alberta campaign plays out amid oil-price slump and faltering provincial economy

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON— Premier Jim Prentice dropped the writ a year early for an election that will send Albertans to the polls on May 5.

By law, the province was not slated to hold a vote until the spring of 2016, but Prentice told cheering supporters in Edmonton on Tuesday that his plan to remake the economy demands an endorsemen­t from the people.

“Tough choices need to be made and our province needs a realistic plan to the immediate challenges that we face and also for the long term,” said Prentice, surrounded by candidates at a community hall just after he met with Lt.-Gov. Don Ethell to dissolve the legislatur­e.

“I am asking Albertans for a mandate to implement the changes that this province needs so badly.”

The law allows earlier votes if circumstan­ces warrant.

This year’s budget, introduced March 26, is intended to reshape the foundation­s of government bookkeepin­g so that day-to-day program spending is no longer hostage to the wild swings in oil prices.

A recent sharp drop in those prices has erased an estimated $7 billion from Alberta’s bottom line this year.

Prentice’s prescripti­on calls for increases in taxes and fees virtually across the board, along with cuts to public services, a $5-billion deficit this year and a $30-billion debt by the end of the decade.

But while Prentice has said everyone must help fix Alberta’s cracked fiscal foundation, he has not raised oil royalties or changed corporate taxes. Doing that, he said, could harm the economic recovery.

The Tories held 70 seats in the 87seat legislatur­e at dissolutio­n and political watchers say the election is once again theirs to lose. The PCs have won 12 consecutiv­e majority government­s dating back to 1971.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley said Prentice’s budget, coupled with years of financial mismanagem­ent and scandal under the Tories, means Albertans are looking elsewhere.

“I’m running to be premier. I don’t run to be second place,” Notley told reporters. The NDP has four members in the legislatur­e, all from Edmonton.

Prentice became premier last fall after former premier Alison Redford resigned amid escalating revelation­s of profligate spending on herself and her inner circle.

Wildrose Leader Brian Jean has said he is focused on getting his fivemember team off the mat and back into the fight with the goal of retaining official Opposition status.

The Wildrose, focusing on fiscal discipline, saw 11 of its 17 members — including former leader Danielle Smith — cross the floor late last year to Prentice and the Tories. Another member of the Wildrose had been sitting as an independen­t.

Smith later lost a PC nomination fight in her Highwood riding.

Jean said future floor crossings will be met with swift pocketbook punishment. He said each Wildrose candidate will be required to sign a contract agreeing to a $100,000 fine should they cross the floor.

The Liberals had five members in the legislatur­e, but only two — party leader David Swann and house leader Laurie Blakeman — are campaignin­g again.

Blakeman is also running under the Alberta party and Green party banners in an effort to fend off the Tories.

Swann said his party, which had nominated 30 candidates as of Tuesday, expects to win voters over with ideas.

“We are fielding as many candidates as we possibly can, mostly in the cities,” said Swann.

There were two vacancies in the last legislatur­e, caused by the resignatio­n of two cabinet ministers.

 ?? JASON FRANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Alberta wasn’t slated to hold an election until spring 2016, but the vote has now been called for next month.
JASON FRANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Alberta wasn’t slated to hold an election until spring 2016, but the vote has now been called for next month.

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