Thursday, January 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Coronation Now A Horse Race: Alberta Election Enters Final Two Weeks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2015 02:55 PM
    EDMONTON — The Alberta election was supposed to be a coronation for Premier Jim Prentice — and it still might be.
     
    But at the campaign's midpoint, the Progressive Conservative leader finds himself rewriting the script as he gets squeezed by the left-leaning NDP and by a Wildrose party dispatched into that good night returning to rage, rage against the dying of the right.
     
    "I don't think (Prentice’s Tories) expected that the Wildrose would still exist," said Bob Murray, vice president of research with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
     
    "The fact that the Wildrose is polling as well as it is in rural areas and its message is resonating, (the Tories) feel that they're going to have to up their game and go more on the offensive and move the party to the right."
     
    Things looked a lot simpler for Prentice in December when he effectively crushed the Wildrose, a party of fellow conservatives with a strong rural base.
     
    Many of them had left the Tory tent to protest record spending under former premiers Ed Stelmach and Alison Redford.
     
    But with Prentice preaching fiscal rectitude once again, Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith led eight caucus members across the floor, leaving a rump of five on the other side of the aisle.
     
    With the right more or less secured, it was believed Prentice was free to clean up on the NDP and secure a 13th consecutive PC majority in an election called a year before required.
     
    But it hasn't worked out that way.
     
    The Wildrose has rallied under a new leader named just days before the campaign, former Conservative MP Brian Jean.
     
    Opinion polls have the NDP, the Wildrose and the Tories meeting in the middle with the opposition parties trending up and the Tories trending down.
     
    Jean is proposing a plan to avoid tax hikes and balance the budget by, among other things, jettisoning thousands of civil service management jobs and reprioritizing infrastructure plans.
     
    He has accused Prentice of losing his fiscally conservative nerve by running on a centrist budget of tax hikes, deficits, and debt.
     
    Political scientist Duane Bratt said the Tories misjudged the anger Albertans felt over the floor cross and Prentice’s tough-love budget, but noted it’s hard to make broad assumptions on rural ridings.
     
    "Rural campaigns are about family and friends and about being at the local coffee shop," said Bratt with Mount Royal University in Calgary.
     
    "Those are tough campaigns to measure because you have to go beyond the leader's tour and you have to look at almost every riding individually."
     
    Prentice tacked his party right this week to attack the Wildrose head on, announcing that he will chop a quarter of Alberta’s 320 agencies boards and commissions this year.
     
    He also announced he would offer no wage hikes to unionized staff until the budget is balanced and he dispatched six cabinet ministers to attack gaps in the Wildrose budget plan.
     
    But Prentice must also contend with a surging NDP, which Murray said has become the progressive alternative.
     
    The NDP, with new leader Rachel Notley, is fighting to expand beyond its Edmonton base.
     
    With a recent spike in fundraising — $406,883 in the first three months of this year — it is running cheeky TV ads featuring Notley, the daughter of popular former NDP leader Grant Notley, in her best bedside manner urging Albertans to "kick the PC habit."
     
    The broad PC strategy, say observers, is for the Tories to retain their traditional popularity in Calgary and by tacking right, lose ground to the NDP in Edmonton in order to regain some of the lost support in the rural Wildrose areas.
     
    Both Murray and Bratt said that despite the PCs' problems, it's hard not to think they will win the minimum 44 of 87 seats needed to form a majority government on May 5.
     
    The PCs had 70 seats at dissolution.
     
    Pollster Janet Brown said while she believes the early polls are over emphasizing anger with the Tories, Thursday's televised leaders' debate "has the potential to be a big turning point."
     
    "A bad performance — or an exceptionally good performance — by one of the leaders could turn the tides."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Canadian jail looks at ways of keeping out drug drones flying overhead

    New Canadian jail looks at ways of keeping out drug drones flying overhead
    HALIFAX — One of Canada's newest jails is researching the use of detectors to prevent the invasion of drug-bearing drones that have plagued some North American prisons.

    New Canadian jail looks at ways of keeping out drug drones flying overhead

    Body recovered near Natuashish in Labrador is missing teen: Innu chief

    Body recovered near Natuashish in Labrador is missing teen: Innu chief
    NATUASHISH, N.L. — The chief of Natuashish in Labrador says a body recovered on sea ice near the Innu community is that of James Poker, a teenager who was reported missing 10 days ago.

    Body recovered near Natuashish in Labrador is missing teen: Innu chief

    Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study

    Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study
    A study says the federal government is ignoring dozens of recommendations on how to reduce the number of missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study

    Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month

    Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month
    CALGARY — More time is needed to complete a psychiatric assessment of a Calgary man who used Kijiji to find pets he methodically abused, starved and killed.

    Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month

    Family of 3 slain children fears father who killed them remains high-risk

    COQUITLAM, B.C. — The family of three murdered B.C. children whose father stabbed and smothered them fears he will unleash harm in the community if he is granted limited release, despite his psychiatrist's assurances.

    Family of 3 slain children fears father who killed them remains high-risk

    B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears

    B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man accused of plotting to bomb the provincial legislature on Canada Day told an undercover RCMP officer that he didn't wish to die a martyr because he wanted to continue his mission, his trial has heard.

    B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears