Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tears, Tributes As Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Bids Farewell To Legislature

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Dec, 2017 12:03 PM
    REGINA — There were tears and tributes as Brad Wall bid farewell to the Saskatchewan legislature Thursday after a decade in the premier's office.
     
     
    Wall gave his final speech to the house after an hour of memories and praise shared by colleagues and opponents alike.
     
     
    Wall is retiring next month after holding the Swift Current seat for the Saskatchewan Party for almost 20 years.
     
     
    He told the legislature he never lost a feeling of awe when he walked through the front doors of the legislature to represent his community.
     
     
    "I have been humbled and blessed with the honour of my working life," Wall told his colleagues and many guests sitting in the legislature gallery.
     
     
    He said the names on the doors of ministry offices change, but the institution of democracy will remain.
     
     
    Wall, saying he believed renewal would be good for the Saskatchewan Party and the province, announced in August that he was retiring. He is staying on as premier until his successor as leader is chosen Jan. 27.
     
     
    He was first elected as a member of the legislature in 1999 under the banner of the newly formed party and made a successful bid for the top job after the party lost a 2003 election many felt it should have won.
     
     
    He would go on to lead the party to three consecutive victories, starting in 2007, and most recently in 2016 by winning 51 of 61 seats.
     
     
    The party, which formed 20 years ago out of an alliance of disaffected Tories and Liberals, took more than 50 per cent of the popular vote in each of the contests.
     
     
    Over the years he became one of Canada’s most high-profile premiers. He rose to national prominence for his down-to-earth style, sharp wit and, more recently, his willingness to lock horns with Ottawa.
     
     
    Wall, 52, routinely placed high in opinion polls ranking the country’s most popular premiers.
     
     
    But he faced headwinds in recent months, especially after his government tabled an austerity budget last spring.
     
     
    In May, a poll suggested Wall's party had dropped steeply in voter support and had fallen nine points behind the leaderless Opposition New Democrats.
     
     
    With trouble at home, Wall trained his political guns afar. He railed against opposition to pipeline projects and criticized Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over the federal government’s plan to force provinces to put a price on carbon, pledging to fight the move in court if necessary.
     
     
    Saskatchewan's carbon plan introduced this week does not include a tax.
     
     
    Wall told the house Thursday that there is a sign hanging above the door of the cabinet room which asks: "Did you leave things better than you found them?"
     
     
    He pointed to new schools, new hospitals, the hiring of more nurses and the welcome given to newcomers to the province during his tenure.
     
     
    "Things are better than when we found them," Wall said. "There is still more work to be done."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog
      Pakistan's Punjab province chief minister Shehbaz Sharif has suggested to his Indian Punjab counterpart a regional cooperation arrangement to tackle the issue of smog as well as pollution.

    Pakistan Punjab CM Shehbaz Sharif Writes To Amarinder Singh, Seeks Cooperation To Combat Smog

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker
    Searchers from across Metro Vancouver are scouring a rugged area in Coquitlam for a woman and three dogs she was walking.

    Search Teams, Helicopter Scour Rugged Coquitlam Area For Missing Dogwalker

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.
    A coalition of child and youth advocates says one in five children in British Columbia lives in poverty, but immigrant kids, off-reserve Indigenous kids and those from visible minority backgrounds are even worse off.

    Report Calls On Federal And Provincial Policies To Address Child Poverty In B.C.

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur
    The pamphlets, carrying a picture of a Bollywood actress, warned people against 'love jihad' and also claimed that two Muslim actors had left their Hindu wives.

    Booklet, Pamphlet On 'Love Jihad' Distributed At Spiritual Fair In Jaipur

    Security Guard Stabbed At Delta Walmart After Confronting Shoplifter; Suspect In Custody

    On November 18,2017, at approximately 12:30 p.m., Delta Police responded to the 7200 blk of 120th Street in relation to a stabbing that had just occurred at the Walmart. 

    Security Guard Stabbed At Delta Walmart After Confronting Shoplifter; Suspect In Custody

    Mother Of Slain Kids Lives In Fear, Won't Know If Killer Allowed Into Community

    Mother Of Slain Kids Lives In Fear, Won't Know If Killer Allowed Into Community
    'He Could Be In Our Community At Any Time Without The Public’s Knowledge,' Says Darcie Clarke

    Mother Of Slain Kids Lives In Fear, Won't Know If Killer Allowed Into Community