The party released its platform on Sunday, a day after the rival UCP unveiled its plan.
The plan relies in large part on an expected rise in government revenues and oil sands investments to pay for nearly $3.2 billion in new initiatives over the next five years, including expanding child-care and cutting prescription drug costs for seniors.
If elected, the United Conservative Party is promising to rely on market forces to produce a small surplus after four years and reduce emissions without taxing carbon or subsidizing renewable energy.
The party revealed its platform Saturday in Calgary. It was filled with details on how it would intend to run Alberta’s government, if it wins enough seats in the April 16 provincial election.
UCP Leader Jason Kenney held a rally before his platform announcement at Spruce Meadows equestrian park in south Calgary. He then spoke to reporters, laying out his 117 page plan.#abpoli #ableg
Trudeau came under heavy fire from politicians and advocates alike
after his comments and the Liberal fundraiser Wednesday night.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Trudeau’s comments were a “sad example”
of the “colonial disregard for Indigenous lives” that he says
contributed to the suffering in Grassy Narrows.
“Instead of showing respect for people fighting for clean water [and]
funding, Trudeau sides with his rich donors to get a laugh,” Singh
tweeted.
his comment at the fundraiser is indicative of his real standpoint when it comes to first nations people.
They are only important when it comes to his media image. They are not important enough for him to actually DO something. The pipeline issues, the MMIW investigation, grassy narrows as well as OTHER funding issues that his government have been dragging their feet on…. it all shows that he cares about as much about justice and proper treatment for our indiginous peoples as the Conservatives do.
He just wants to make it SEEM like he cares, and that’s it.
I’m not affiliated
with any political party. I vote for the party that I feel best shares my
values and ideals. I was quite impressed with Trudeau before he was elected.
Closer to the election I was troubled by how quickly he would
reverse his opinion on issues when his popularity in the polls dropped. A good
example was the war in Syria. Like Tom Mulcair, he supported bringing all of
our troops home. After this cost him in the polls, he claimed he
supported the war and would send in more troops.
Then there was the
niqab issue, or the “dead cat thrown on the table” by the
Conservatives. Mulcair’s views cost him a huge drop in the polls, and Harper’s
stance went up. Trudeau saw how controversial the issue became, so he wisely
kept out of it for the most part.
He made huge, I mean
really huge, promises to Indigenous people. As ‘Rabble’ reported:
Since his election,
Trudeau has made the same core promises to recognize and implement Indigenous
rights in a multitude of strategically timed announcements. He campaigned on
reviewing and repealing all laws imposed on First Nations by the former
Conservative government headed by Stephen Harper. He promised to implement the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), including
the provision of free, prior and informed consent, which he confirmed meant a
veto for First Nations.
Everyone has seen
this promise broken over and over again. It’s similar to the lie that he keeps
repeating that we can resolve environmental issues and ramp up fossil fuel
development and production at the same time. Does anyone actually believe this?
@ursinos said,
“He just wants to make it SEEM like he cares, and that’s it.”
That’s Trudeau in a nut shell. If you’re one
of the folks who fell into the “strategic voting” trend, you have my
permission to bang your head against the wall. Do it twice — in case you’re one
of my friends who I tried to advise you against it.
Oh, and by the
way….
I was initially so
impressed with Trudeau that I joined the Liberal party. LOL, and they’re still
asking me for money. Check out the letter I received from them today. The
subject line said, “Steve, does this look right?”
In the audio recording of the Dec. 19 phone call that Wilson-Raybould
provided to the Justice Committee on Friday, Wernick warns
Wilson-Raybould of a potential “collision” with the prime minister over
her decision not to offer SNC-Lavalin a deferred prosecution agreement
that would forestall its criminal prosecution on bribery and corruption
charges in exchange for the payment of a hefty fine.
Wilson-Raybould, who resigned from cabinet last month, tells Wernick
that “we are treading on dangerous ground here” and adds that “this is
going to look like political interference by the prime minister.”
In an interview on CBC’s The National, United Conservative Party (UCP) leader Jason Kenney last month espoused a view that is persistent in Alberta politics — that the province can once again make a fortune in the oil industry.
“We’re talking about trillions of dollars of potential wealth,” Kenney said, perched on a chair in a coffee shop across from CBC host Rosemary Barton. “There’s a growing global demand, whether people like it or not, for oil and gas through at least the year 2040.”
But with changes in the world’s appetite for oil — and global goals to reduce carbon emissions — Albertans are left to wonder if this is still a safe assumption.
“It’s a pipe dream,” Gordon Laxer, a political economist and professor emeritus at the University of Alberta, told The Narwhal. “We are in the twilight of oil.”