Edmonton Journal

‘SNEAKY’ TAX MOVE

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The Opposition NDP said Friday the move was an underhande­d way of getting more revenue from taxpayers without technicall­y raising taxes. The indexation pause wasn’t in the UCP’S platform, Edmonton-whitemud NDP MLA Rakhi Pancholi said.

Pancholi called the move hypocritic­al, handing out an excerpt of a 20-year-old exchange in the House of Commons from when Premier Jason Kenney was the member of Parliament for Calgary Southeast.

In the 1999 exchange, Kenney criticizes then-prime minister Jean Chretien’s tax policies as not providing enough relief for Canadians.

“A fair chunk of (increased revenue) is attributab­le to higher tax rates through the pernicious, invidious tax bracket creep which sucks about a billion additional dollars out of the pockets of middle income Canadians every year ...” Kenney said the time.

Said Pancholi: “The fact that he’s bringing this forward when he railed against it for so long just shows how sneaky and backhanded he’s being.”

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation, of which Kenney was once CEO, also panned the move, calling it a “sneaky tax hike” at a time people can’t afford it.

Income brackets should rise with inflation because people are also paying higher living expenses, Franco Terrazzano, Alberta director of the federation, said Friday.

“Albertans gave the government a clear mandate to get the fiscal house in order without raising taxes,” he said.

Government spokesman Harrison Fleming said Albertans won’t be paying more in taxes.

“Income taxes have not been increased,” he said in an emailed statement. “If you earn the same amount of money next year, you will pay no extra income tax. It’s beyond rich for the NDP, which raised taxes on job-creators, income, property, and fuel & home heating with their carbon tax, to now claim they care about taxpayers.”

Government budget documents say Albertans will continue to pay the lowest provincial taxes in Canada “for the foreseeabl­e future.”

In 2019, Alberta had the highest personal amount tax free. Saskatchew­an residents are next, with a $16,065 personal amount, and Nova Scotia has the lowest threshold at $8,481. However, some provinces with lower personal amounts pay lower tax rates.

In 2019, Albertans who earn below $131,220 pay 10 per cent income tax. Earners in the highest income bracket pay 15 per cent.

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