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Lots of sniping in UCP leadership race, but so few shots fired over inflation

Lots of sniping in UCP leadership race, but so few shots fired over inflation

CBC
Monday, September 19, 2022 08:53:27 AM UTC

Many would-be successors to Premier Jason Kenney have gamely taken aim at him this campaign, from his past approaches toward COVID and Ottawa to his occasional interventions as lame-duck United Conservative Party leader with weeks left to go in his power seat.

So what kind of dust did Kenney kick up among leadership candidates when his cabinet pledged where the province's $13.2-billion oil-price-fuelled surplus would go — a bit to inflation-proofing income tax charges, some to Alberta's savings fund and the rest to debt repayment?

Not much dust got kicked up, really. Because generally, the candidates would have done just what the outgoing premier did with the extra money.

There's been no shortage of sniping during the race to become UCP leader and Alberta premier, most notably around the contest's most explosive idea, Danielle Smith's constitutionally-dubious Alberta Sovereignty Act.

But division and contrast is muted when it comes to how they'd handle the rising cost of living, which polls have routinely shown is the biggest issue or stress-causer among Albertans. And when it comes to managing this once-in-a-generation fiscal bounty that oil prices and production have given this province, they're a field of truly united Conservatives. 

Some key inflation relief measures were already in place before a near-failing party leadership review pushed Kenney to announce an early retirement. To blunt the impact of year-over-year inflation that's hovered around eight per cent, the UCP government had suspended the gasoline tax and instituted rebates on electricity and natural gas bills.

What Kenney resisted doing, unlike the premiers of Saskatchewan and Quebec, was stealing a page from former premier Ralph Klein's playbook and offering direct payments to residents. This left the opportunity for any of the candidates to offer a flashy "[Your name here] Bucks" promise, but they almost uniformly resisted the idea.

The exception is Rajan Sawhney, the former transportation minister, who proposed in early July to send every household a monthly "affordability cheque" for $75, plus extra for children and rural residents. But in the months since, she's done little to promote this idea, which would cost more than $3 billion, if cheques flowed for a year.

Other candidates' promises have been lower-key than that. 

Independent MLA Todd Loewen has said he'd eliminate small business tax, while former children's services minister Rebecca Schulz pledged a temporary holiday from it. On energy costs, Travis Toews has promised to make the fuel and utility breaks permanent, extending these temporary measures he greenlighted this spring as Kenney's finance minister.

He's also promised something novel for young drivers — to eliminate the final step for graduated drivers' licences, a $150 savings, and also promised a $2,000-per-child tax credit for families.

Former Wildrose Party leader Brian Jean has pledged price-busting policies of his own, with a plan to give oil companies royalty breaks on oil made into gasoline in Alberta, and to use provincial surpluses to decrease some power bill charges.

Danielle Smith, the contest's apparent front-runner, hasn't formally released policy on inflation or most other fiscal matters. She's at times suggested borrowing ideas from Toews' and Jean's platforms — Schulz has said she'd do the same — and has proposed modifying rules around electricity rates and transmission charges.

But here's an indication of how Ottawa-centric Smith's campaign has been. When asked at a Fort McMurray leadership forum how she'd combat inflation and rising grocery bills, she responded with warnings about the federal climate plan's impact on fertilizer use — none of which has yet to take effect or even be finalized, so it wouldn't be showing up yet in supermarket prices.

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