Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alberta NDP Promises Balanced Budget Later Than UCP, But Says UCP Math Is Wrong

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2019 04:39 PM
  • Alberta NDP Promises Balanced Budget Later Than UCP, But Says UCP Math Is Wrong

EDMONTON — Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley promised to balance the province's budget by 2023-24 as she unveiled her party's election platform Sunday, while also pledging to expand $25 per day child care, build long-term care beds for seniors and construct new schools.


Notley's date for balancing the books is a year later than what's promised by her principal rival, United Conservative Party Leader Jason Kenney, who released his platform a day earlier.


But Notley said Kenney's math doesn't add up, noting the UCP plan saves money by scrapping a government-supported program to move oil by rail until new pipelines are built, but then doesn't record the revenue the province would have earned from that oil.


"He's booked the cancelled cost but he's failed to book the lost revenue. As such, there's a $2.5 billion math mistake at the heart of his platform," Notley said as she released the NDP policy document at a community hall in front of supporters and their families.


The NDP says the $25 per day child-care plan expands on a pilot project Notley started, and Notley said it will apply to every child-care space in the province. She also said 13,000 additional spaces will be created to meet growing demand and help women participate in the workforce.


The party's platform further pledges to build 70 new schools, hire 1,000 new teachers and support staff, and eliminate tuition for high school upgrading and English language programs.


It also promises to get the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion built, which Notley said she has been fighting for — despite UCP claims to the contrary.


"I haven't been shouting, I haven't been stomping my feet. Rather, we have been working strategically to build a national consensus with determination and with conviction," Notley said.


"And today, a majority of Canadians support a pipeline that we all own — a pipeline that will get built."


The UCP responded that the NDP promised in the last election campaign to balance the budget in 2018, which was then delayed to 2019 and is now being pushed back to 2023.


Kenney has promised a $714-million surplus by 2023.


Jason Nixon, the UCP's house leader, said the NDP will run deeper deficits or hike taxes, and most likely will do both.


"They didn't include the carbon tax in 2015, only to force one on Albertans months later," Nixon told reporters on Sunday.


"So what will Albertans learn about a re-elected NDP's plan after election day?"


Voting day is set for April 16.


The NDP platform also notes a made-in-Alberta plan to upgrade its resources in the province, which it says will attract $75 billion in private-sector investment and create 75,000 jobs.


As well, the platform promises to ban programs that claim to change someone's sexual orientation or gender identity, and it says it will give the election commissioner more latitude to report on investigations.


An NDP government would also continue to work towards reducing greenhouse gasses and create a provincial hate crimes unit.


"Four years ago, Albertans put an end to 44 years of one-party rule and asked me and my team to focus on what matters — good jobs, good schools, good hospitals in a more diversified and resilient economy," Notley said, referring to the 2015 election that ended Progressive Conservative rule stretching back to 1971.


"We've made good progress."

MORE National ARTICLES

Student To Get Apology After Being Told Her Crop Top Was Too Distracting For Gym

FREDERICTON — A Fredericton student who was told that the crop top she wore to a campus gym was too distracting will get an apology from St. Thomas University.

Student To Get Apology After Being Told Her Crop Top Was Too Distracting For Gym

Report On Buddhist Leader's Alleged Misconduct Expected In January

Report On Buddhist Leader's Alleged Misconduct Expected In January
HALIFAX — An independent probe into allegations against the spiritual leader of one of the western world's largest Buddhist organizations has finished accepting new claims, with a final report into sexual misconduct accusations expected by early January.

Report On Buddhist Leader's Alleged Misconduct Expected In January

Girl, 4, Killed In N.S. Christmas Parade Was 'Full Of Love And Life'

YARMOUTH, N.S. — As residents of a small Nova Scotia town mourn a little girl who was run over by a float in the annual Christmas parade, questions are being raised about safety measures along the parade route.

Girl, 4, Killed In N.S. Christmas Parade Was 'Full Of Love And Life'

Otter Dines On More Prized Koi In Vancouver Garden; Continues To Evade Capture

VANCOUVER — An opportunistic otter that is preying on koi in a unique downtown Vancouver garden has eaten at least three more of the large fish and continues to evade efforts to trap and remove it.

Otter Dines On More Prized Koi In Vancouver Garden; Continues To Evade Capture

Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia

Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia
VICTORIA — The Health Employers Association and The B.C. Nurses' Union bargaining group have announced a tentative agreement for the province's 44,000 nurses.

Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia

Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work

Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work
VANCOUVER — The two top officials in British Columbia's legislature say they're humiliated after being placed on administrative leave and don't know what they've done to provoke a police investigation, but they want their jobs and their reputations back.

Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work