Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Premier Prentice Says Alberta NDP Pipeline Policy Will Mirror Mulcair's

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2015 11:20 AM
    EDMONTON — Premier Jim Prentice is ratcheting up warnings of a NDP-governed Alberta, bringing federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair into the fray and saying the party has a "fundamental distrust of business."
     
    "Make no mistake about the NDP," he told 1,500 party faithful at a Progressive Conservative fundraising dinner Thursday night.
     
    "When you drill down into the policies that they are putting forward, you realize this not a new NDP.
     
    "Fundamentally, the NDP could undermine the heart of Alberta's economy and we must not let that happen."
     
    Prentice and the other party leaders have just a few days left to win over the hearts and minds of Albertans, who go to the polls Tuesday.
     
    The PCs had been expected to win handily, but polls throughout the campaign have suggested that Prentice is in a three-way tie with the Wildrose party and the NDP.
     
    In recent days, Prentice has criticized the NDP for promising to hike the corporate tax rate to 12 per cent from 10 per cent and increase income taxes on high-end earners.
     
    NDP Leader Rachel Notley has also promised to review royalty rates and initiate plans to get more refining done within the province.
     
    She has also said her party would fight for pipeline approval, but would marshal limited government resources and fight only for projects that have a realistic chance of success.
     
    Notley has said the proposed Northern Gateway line to the B.C. coast is so tied up in lawsuits and environmental concerns, it is a lost cause because it will not be built for decades, if ever.
     
    Prentice said Notley's position resembles that of her federal counterparts.
     
    "We don't need a pipeline policy in this province that feels like it was scripted by (federal NDP Leader) Thomas Mulcair. That is for sure," said Prentice.
     
    Mulcair has been a polarizing figure on pipelines in Alberta, saying he opposes lines that ship raw product for refining abroad rather than trying to build upgrader jobs in Canada.
     
    He has also said pipelines must be based on more than business need, and that environmental and social concerns must be better recognized and acted upon.
     
    Notley has said her party is the only one in the election fighting to create jobs, with such initiatives as an $89-million Job Creation Tax Credit that would refund a portion of salaries for companies hiring new workers.
     
    She has criticized Prentice for promising that all Albertans will pitch in to help the province recover from low oil prices only to exempt the corporate tax and oil royalties from increases.
     
    Last month, Prentice introduced a budget that hikes dozens of taxes and user fees and implements a separate health-care levy for above-average wage earners.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit
    OTTAWA — The Mike Duffy trial looks like it is going to go longer than the 41 days allotted, potentially dragging it into the orbit of the autumn federal election campaign.

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents
    OTTAWA — Time stands still for no one, but that didn't stop cyberattackers from trying to shut down a National Research Council service that synchronizes computer clocks.

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'
    TORONTO — CBC Radio says its revamped arts and culture show "Q" has been renamed, sort of. The new name is the same, but spelled with a lower-case "q."

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores
    TORONTO — A Shawn Mendes marketing campaign encouraging young fans to buy every single copy of the teen-pop heart-throb's new album from local stores is eliciting outrage from child advocacy groups.

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores

    Hiring At Veterans Affairs Doesn't Mean Cuts Went Too Far, O'toole Says

    OTTAWA — Veterans Affairs has been on a hiring spree this week, but the minister in charge says it's not a signal that the Conservative government believes cuts to the bureaucracy went too far.

    Hiring At Veterans Affairs Doesn't Mean Cuts Went Too Far, O'toole Says

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP
    The names released by police are Adam Lakatos, Derrick Bequette, Chadanjot Gill, Shakiel Basra, Sukhpreet Pansal, Sukhraj Chahal, Tirath Taggar and Charandeep Tiwana, all from Surrey or Delta.  Mounties have determined 11 of 19 shootings are related to groups of South Asia and Somalian descent

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP