Saskatchewan's election officially gets underway - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan's election officially gets underway

After weeks of unofficial campaigning, Saskatchewan's premier has made it official. Both the Sask Party and NDP begin to roll out election promises.

27-day campaign will lead up to voting day on April 4

Election campaign starts in Saskatchewan

9 years ago
Duration 2:03
Premier Brad Wall is Canada's most popular premier, as voters head to the polls next month

After weeks of unofficial campaigning, Saskatchewan's premier has made it official.

Brad Wall met with the province's lieutenant-governor to dissolve the Legislature, before joining Saskatchewan Party candidate KenCheveldayoff for a campaign kickoff event during the lunch hour.

Sask. Party leader Brad Wall (l) announced the election call to party faithful in Saskatoon, and NDP leader Cam Broten launched his party's campaign in Regina on Tuesday, March 8. (CBC/SRC)
There, Wall spoke to an enthusiastic group of party faithful.

"There is no issue more important today in Saskatchewan, more central to this election, than the economy," he said. The protection and the preservation of the increased numbers of jobs we have in the province today, and the environment that we need to create more jobs."

Wall tooka number of jabs at his political opponents, the Saskatchewan NDP, bringing up the party's job creation record as well as numerous cuts the NDPmade while in government.

"The choice is pretty clear in this election," he said. "Action or talk. Forward or backward. The future or the past."

The unofficial campaign has been well underway in recent weeks, with the NDP rolling out platform ideas daily in the week before the campaign began from restoring and boosting the province's film tax credit to scrapping the government's fleet of airplanes for cabinet ministers' travel.

Cam Broten promises to end privatization,review P3 contracts

NDP leader Cam Broten made a policy announcement at the Saskatchewan Legislature shortly after Wall's speech this afternoon. He promised toaxe SaskBuilds, whichBroten calledthe privatization ministry and "Europe BuildsSask."

"We will save $15 million in operations alone and hundred of millions of dollars in reckless and costly P3 (Public-Private-Partnership) deals," Broten said.

Pointing the finger at the P3 project for the Saskatchewan Hospital in North Battleford, Broten questioned why a one year maintenance budget for a new hospital dwarfed the entire maintenance budget for the entire Prairie North Health Region and all of its facilities.

"To me that makes absolutely no sense that you have a brand new building that costs more for maintenance than every other building put together in the health region."

The writ of election is the formal document signed by the chief electoral officer after the head of government goes to the head of state and formally advises him or her to dissolve parliament. (Elections Saskatchewan)

Broten also reference the province's P3 deal with VINCI, a French corporation thatentered into a P3 project for the Regina Bypass.

Broten asked why P3 contracts were being doled out to European companies rather than local constructions companies.

If elected, Broten promised to look at each P3 and see if it'sthe most cost-effective ways to deliver these major projects.

"We will not cancel projects, we will look at how to do this in the smartest and most cost-effective way possible and when you're paying a French company to plow a bypass outside of Regina, that makes no sense. When you're paying more in maintenance for one year on a brand new building than every other building the health region put together, something strange is going on and it's certainly not a good use of taxpayer dollars."

Wall spent much of last week in Vancouver, railing against a carbon tax at a meeting of the country's leaders.

Leading up to the election, the Saskatchewan Party has had a healthy lead in the polls. The NDP had been closing the gap in recent weeks, particularly in the cities, but last weekthe governing party surged back with the support of nearly one of every two voters or 49 per cent support.

This is the third campaign for Brad Wallas leader of the Saskatchewan Party.

Sask. NDP Leader Cam Broten promises to review P3 projects to see if they are the right choice for major projects in the the province. (CBC)

His party first came to power in 2007, when the party was just a decade old an amalgamation of MLAs from the former Progressive Conservative and Liberal parties.

During the 2007 campaign, Wall and the Saskatchewan Party dropped its controversial plans to sellgovernment-owned utilities if it made economic sense to do so.

Instead, Wall and the party's MLAs signed on to legislation put forward in the wake of the 2003 campaign by the NDP government to protect the Crowns from sale unless a political party campaigned on the idea first.

Wall and his party won that election against the Saskatchewan NDP and its leader Premier Lorne Calvert, with more than 50 per cent of the popular vote gaining 10 seats to elect 38 MLAs to the NDP's 20.

Premier Brad Wall meets with Lieutenant Governor Vaughn Solomon Schofield to dissolve the 27th legislative assembly. (Government of Saskatchewan)

Four years later in 2011, Wall and the Saskatchewan Party did even better with a historic 64.2 per cent of the popular vote. The NDP lost 11 seats, including that of its leader Dwain Lingenfelter sparking yet another leadership race for the official opposition party.

This time around, Cam Broten will lead the NDP into a campaign with even more seats at stake. The government added three constituencies to a redrawn electoral map, for a total of 61 MLAs to be elected on April 4.