Lethbridge Herald

B.C. budget to be tabled Tuesday

- Dirk Meissner

British Columbia’s finance minister says the budget she tables Tuesday undertakes developmen­t of social, environmen­tal and economic initiative­s as other provinces across Canada implement cuts to programs and shifts to the right.

Carole James says her budget builds on the minority New Democrat government’s goals of making life more affordable, improving services and ensuring a sustainabl­e economy.

“I see them as hand in hand,” said James in an interview. “The investment­s we make in people and the investment­s we make in environmen­t are investment­s in a sustainabl­e, strong economy.”

Prof. David Black said he expects the social and economic agenda laid out in James’s budget to contrast sharply with the right-leaning policies in some other provinces.

Manitoba and Ontario have Conservati­ve government­s. The Coalition Avenir Quebec government, is essentiall­y conservati­ve, and the Saskatchew­an party is right-leaning. Jason Kenney’s United Conservati­ve Party in Alberta, meanwhile, is considered the front-runner in this year’s Alberta election, said Black, a political communicat­ions expert at Royal Roads University in the Victoria area.

“If the Alberta NDP lose in the spring election that leaves six out of 10 provinces with right-ofcentre control,” he said. “It puts a powerful spotlight on B.C. as a place of social democratic governance.”

Black said while many province’s fight the federal carbon tax and cut education and child care, B.C. is spending billions on affordable housing, promising 22,000 child-care places and hiring teachers.

James’s budget is expected to include new funding for the government’s poverty reduction strategy and its Clean BC plan to fight climate change.

Black said the B.C. New Democrats led by Premier John Horgan are on a social building agenda that he labelled “radical pragmatism.”

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