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Election fact-checker: Leaders debate edition

Albertans tuned in to watch Rachel Notley, Jason Kenney, David Khan and Stephen Mandel debate the issues, but how much was true?

Separating the true from the false in the televised debate

United Conservative Party leader Jason Kenney, left to right, Alberta Liberal Party leader David Khan, Alberta New Democrat Party leader and incumbent premier Rachel Notley and Alberta Party leader Stephen Mandel pose before the start of the 2019 Alberta Leaders Debate in Edmonton, Alta., on Thursday, April 4, 2019. (Codie McLachlan/The Canadian Press)

Albertans tuned in to watchRachel Notley, Jason Kenney, David Khan and Stephen Mandel debate the issues Thursday evening.

CBC News examined claims made by the party leaders during the debate and all four had misleading claims.

Comments made by politicians and the parties online areranked astrue, false or muddy inCBC News fact-checker articles.

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The muddy moments

David Khan, Liberal Party

"The UCP and the Alberta Party have talked about privatizing health care."

Alberta Party leader Stephen Mandel: "No, we haven't!"

Khan: "Yes, Mr. Clark was on QR 77last week suggesting that your party would look at privatizing some parts of the health care system."

Mandel: "No, we didn't. I don't know where you heard that from?!"

Ranking: Muddy

Here's why:The health-care portion of the Alberta Party platformdoes notmention privatization, or private delivery of services. In fact, the party wants to increase health benefits by adding an annual dental care check up for children ages 12 and under.

Here's the actual exchange between a radio talk-show host and former Alberta Party MLA Greg Clark, during a March 21 interview:

Host: "We already have lots of private care, ways to pay privately to get services done in the health world. Your view on, can we go a little farther that way? Do we have to pull back? How do we use the private health care to help the public system?"

Clark: "You know, I do think we need to start thinking about some of that. I won't say a definitive no. I will say the Alberta Party is totally committed to a public health-care system. We need to make sure we maintain equal access and have a focus on quality and access, but we also need to start looking at creative ways of reducing costs."


Stephen Mandel, Alberta Party

"The reality is we don't have enough pipelines to send our oil south. We don't have any pipelines to send it west or east. Part of that [was the] responsibility of Mr. Kenney and his government. When he was there, they could have pushed Northern Gateway through, but he didn't do that."

Ranking: Muddy

Here's why: Stephen Harper's federal Conservative government, which included Kenney, signed off on the Northern Gateway pipeline. But Ottawa's approval was overturned by the Federal Court of Appeal in 2016, and the Liberal government did not appeal the court decision.


Jason Kenney, UCP

On wait times and Alberta's healthcare: "And that's with a government that is spending more, with the most expensive system in Canada."

Ranking: Muddy

Here's why: Statistics from 2018 show that Alberta does spend more per person than any other province. However, the territories certainly have the most expensive health-care systems in Canada. For example, health-care costs per person in the Northwest Territories were more than double that of per-person costs in Alberta in 2018, according to the Canadian Institute for Health Information.


Rachel Notley, NDP

"Here's the thing: pipelines, pipelines, pipelines. I've just now said the word two more times than Mr. Kenney did when he was a cabinet minister."

Ranking: Muddy

Here's why: It is impossible to check every speaking engagement and media scrum over Kenney's nearly 20-year federal career. Technically, Kenney said the word "pipeline" three times in the House of Commons, although he was an opposition MP and not a cabinet minister at the time. Kenney also mentioned the Northern Gateway pipeline by name in the House of Commons. While he was federal employment minister in 2014, he said "pipeline" several times when speaking to CBC about the impact of falling oil prices.

Here are the two Hansard records of whenhe mentioned the word "pipeline" for a total of three times in Ottawa (withtranscripts):

UCP Leader Jason Kenney, NDP Leader Rachel Notley, Liberal Leader David Khan and Alberta Party Leader Stephen Mandel participated in the Alberta Leaders Debate in Edmonton Thursday. (CBC)

The facts

Jason Kenney, UCP

"We need to focus on things like the huge decline in math scores for Alberta students."

Ranking: True

Here's why: In 2018, one-third of Alberta Grade 9 students failed the provincial exams for math. An international test taken by Alberta Grade 4 students in 2015 showed math scores had been slipping over 10 years.


Rachel Notley, NDP

"Mr. Kenney's caucus voted against Bill 24 [An Act to Support Gay-Straight Alliances] when we brought it in."

Ranking: True

Here's why: The NDP's Bill 24 prevented teachers from outing students who join a gay-straight alliance (GSA) at school. When the bill passed in November 2017, the 23 MLAswho voted against it were from the UCP caucus. One UCP MLA, former Wildrose leader Brian Jean, was absent from the vote. Another, Leela Aheer, abstained.


David Khan, Liberal Party

"There has been money for class-size reductions for years, and we do not know where it has gone."

Ranking: True

Here's why: An auditor general's report, delivered in 2018, showed that Alberta Education has spent billions of dollars over 13 years to try and reduce class sizes, without actually reducing class sizes. The auditor general also found that the government wasn't tracking how that money was spent within school districts.


Stephen Mandel, Alberta Party

"We have to be concerned about bigotry and intolerance. That's something nobody can tolerate anywhere. And that seems to be something that is following Mr. Kenney's party on an ongoing basis."

Ranking: True

Here's why: Over the past several weeks, there have been high-profile controversies involving UCP candidates making sexist, homophobic, or racist remarks. Two of those candidates, Caylan Ford and Eva Kiryakos, have since resigned. Mark Smith, the candidate for Drayton Valley-Devon, has apologized for remarks he made about homosexual relationships.

As part of an ongoing effort to hold Alberta's political leaders and political parties accountable,CBCNews will fact-check commentsmade by politicians and photos posted online at various times along the campaign trail.

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With files from Lindsay Highmoor