Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Decision Day In Alberta: Voters Head To Polls In Provincial Election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2019 06:06 PM
  • Decision Day In Alberta: Voters Head To Polls In Provincial Election

EDMONTON — Voters are heading to the polls in the Alberta election today and advance turnouts suggest it could be busy at the ballot boxes.


Almost 700,000 people voted early in malls, airports, recreation centres, public buildings and even an Ikea store. That was well ahead of the 235,000 who came out early in the 2015 election that saw Rachel Notley's NDP deliver a surprise knockout blow to the 44-year run of the Progressive Conservatives.


This time around, the Progressive Conservatives are no more.


The PCs merged with another right-centre party, the Wildrose, to create the new United Conservatives under former federal cabinet minister Jason Kenney.


The four-week campaign focused on personal attacks and on Alberta's fragile economy, which has been struggling for several years with sluggish oil prices and unemployment levels above seven per cent in Calgary and Edmonton.


Kenney has argued that Notley's government has made a bad situation worse with higher taxes, more regulations and increases in minimum wage.


Notley, in turn, has said Kenney's plan to freeze spending and pursue more private-care options in health care will have a profound impact on students in the classroom and on patients waiting for care.


The campaign also featured Alberta's relationship with Ottawa, specifically Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.


Notley said her success working with Trudeau — or picking her fights with him as necessary — is what led to progress on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to the B.C. coast. She expects construction to begin this year.


She said Kenney's promise to challenge Trudeau in court on everything from the federal carbon tax to proposed energy industry rule changes is cynical, self-defeating shadow-boxing given the collaborative realities of political decision-making.


Kenney has campaigned on the "Trudeau-Notley alliance" that he says has turned Alberta into a doormat for Trudeau and other oil industry foes with no more than a faint and as yet unrealized promise of one pipeline expansion to the coast.


Notley has also tried to make Kenney's character an issue. A number of his candidates have either quit or apologized for past comments that were anti-LGBTQ, anti-Islamic or sympathetic to white nationalism.


Kenney has called the attacks a "fear-and-smear" red herring to distract from the NDP's economic track record of multibillion-dollar budget deficits and soaring debt.


On the political fringes are the Alberta Party and the Liberals, each of which elected one candidate to the legislature in 2015.


The Alberta Party, led by former Edmonton mayor Stephen Mandel, is running a full slate of candidates. It's promising to be the safe centrist middle ground by combining the economic conservatism of the UCP with the social progressivism of the NDP.


The Liberals, led by lawyer David Khan, are running on a similar platform with one significant exception — a provincial sales tax.


History will be made no matter what.


Notley will either be the first Alberta NDP premier to win re-election or the first leader in the province to fail to win a renewed mandate on the first try.


Since its creation in 1905, Alberta has elected multi-term dynasties: the Liberals (1905-1921), the United Farmers of Alberta (1921-1935), the Social Credit (1935-1971) and the Progressive Conservatives from 1971 to 2015.

MORE National ARTICLES

Judge Blasts Ontario For Wanting To Question Elderly, Mentally Ill Patients

Judge Blasts Ontario For Wanting To Question Elderly, Mentally Ill Patients
A motion by the Ontario government to force elderly and severely mentally ill plaintiffs to submit to last-minute pre-trial questioning is little more than an unwarranted and heartless delay tactic

Judge Blasts Ontario For Wanting To Question Elderly, Mentally Ill Patients

Economic Growth Slowed In The Fourth Quarter To Cap Off Year Of 1.8% Growth

Economic Growth Slowed In The Fourth Quarter To Cap Off Year Of 1.8% Growth
The surprisingly feeble pace was Canada's slowest since the middle of 2016 and it came in lower than the two per cent growth in the previous quarter.

Economic Growth Slowed In The Fourth Quarter To Cap Off Year Of 1.8% Growth

CMHC Sets Target To Make Housing Affordable For Every Canadian By 2030

CMHC Sets Target To Make Housing Affordable For Every Canadian By 2030
A federal housing agency hopes to see every Canadian with an affordable home by 2030 with a plan that lays out a path of experimentation to make it happen.  

CMHC Sets Target To Make Housing Affordable For Every Canadian By 2030

Quebec Baby To Get Deceased Father's Surname After Mother Goes To Court

Quebec Baby To Get Deceased Father's Surname After Mother Goes To Court
MONTREAL — A Quebec mother who fought to have her deceased spouse recognized formally as the father of their child has succeeded after being obliged to go to court.

Quebec Baby To Get Deceased Father's Surname After Mother Goes To Court

Federal Legislation For Cannabis-Possession Pardon Not Enough, Critics Say

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said his new bill would waive the $631 application fee and remove the usual five-year waiting period after a conviction before an application will be accepted.

Federal Legislation For Cannabis-Possession Pardon Not Enough, Critics Say

Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney Critical Of DP Government's Tax Changes

CALGARY — Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney says tax changes under the NDP government have been a disaster and he's hinting that his party would immediately cut corporate income taxes if elected.

Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney Critical Of DP Government's Tax Changes