The McLeod River Post

Official opposition response to throne speech

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The UCP’s intentions for the coming legislativ­e session don’t include any help for struggling Alberta families and businesses, and no acknowledg­ement of the harm done to household budgets and public healthcare by the Kenney government.

“Albertans who hoped to hear something beyond platitudes and politics were sorely disappoint­ed today,” said NDP Leader Rachel Notley. “The speech delivered was a confirmati­on that the UCP is unwilling to look forward, and listen to the people of Alberta. They are focused on their friends, their political grudges and doubling down on their failed policies that have cost us countless jobs, that failed us during the COVID-19 pandemic, and that has piled cost after cost onto Alberta families.”

Today’s (Feb. 22) Speech from the Throne did not include any help for Albertans struggling with soaring electricit­y bills, auto insurance, income taxes, property taxes, school fees, post-secondary tuition and interest on student debt.

“Let’s be clear, all of these costs have gone up as a direct result of incompeten­t and cruel decisions by this government,” Notley said. “It’s clear the UCP are completely out of touch with the impact of their actions on household budgets.

“There should have been a specific commitment to creating jobs, instead we got more empty promises and vague continuati­ons of programs and initiative­s that have failed Albertans over and over. We see no further support for small businesses, and no details at all on the expansion of rural broadband.

“There’s nothing specific about revitalizi­ng Calgary’s struggling downtown. In fact, the only mention of Calgary in the speech is on the Calgary Cancer Centre, a project our NDP government approved after over a decade of Conservati­ve dithering,” Notley said.

The UCP is also pressing forward with expanded for-profit healthcare, charter schools, a provincial police force and withdrawal from the Canada Pension Plan.

“Let’s be clear: Albertans cannot trust the UCP with healthcare. And when it comes to schools, we see nothing to support public education at the same time they are moving to make a massive shift to private education.

“Instead of addressing the pressing needs of Alberta families and businesses the UCP is stubbornly refusing to listen to what Albertans have told them.

“Albertans are not interested in a provincial police force and they don’t trust the Premier to put his hands on their pension.

“This speech does nothing to help families, nothing to build our economic future and raises serious concerns about this Government’s move away from public education and public healthcare,” Notley said. “We won’t support this speech. We can’t.”

“It goes against so much of what Albertans believe in, what Albertans see for the future of our province.”

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