Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Progressive Conservatives finishing voting among 3 candidates to pick new leader and premier

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Sep, 2014 12:37 PM
    EDMONTON - Members of Alberta's PC party are voting today for a new leader and premier.
     
    Ric McIver, Thomas Lukaszuk and Jim Prentice will continue trying today to get out the vote by phone, online or in person.
     
    Results are to be announced around 7:30 p.m. at the Expo Centre.
     
    This is the first time that the party has used electronic voting to pick a leader.
     
    Organizers have been working hard to fix glitches from the first day of voting on Friday.
     
    Party members looking to phone in or register their vote online have faced long delays, blank screens, busy signals, lost PIN numbers or mix-ups matching them to the master voting list.
     
    And the voting may not be over.
     
    If none of the three candidates has a majority of votes by the end of today, the top two finishers move to a second and final run-off vote on Sept. 20.
     
    Prentice, a former Calgary MP, has been considered the front-runner. He has the support of almost all the PC caucus and raised $1.8 million in donations, dwarfing the $417,000 raised by McIver, and the $300,000 by Lukaszuk.
     
    The vote caps a campaign that has been running since the spring, when then-premier Alison Redford stepped down from the top job as party and caucus support evaporated over revelations she spent lavishly on travel and office perks for herself and her inner circle.
     
    Those revelations continued to drop like artillery charges into the leadership campaign, and all three candidates have promised to clean up any lingering sense of government entitlement.
     
    Prentice, a former federal MP, has used Redford's record to bludgeon Redford-era cabinet ministers McIver and Lukaszuk.
     
    Both, said Prentice, were derelict for not stopping the worst of Redford's excesses, including plans to build a swank penthouse atop a government building.
     
    McIver and Lukaszuk in turn have accused Prentice of being another elitist member of the political old boys club.
     
    They say he is trying to buy the premiership by giving away party memberships to supporters rather than selling them for the normal $10 price.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse
    VANCOUVER - The British Columbia government said on Sunday it expects to be helping parents pay the costs of daycare because the first day of school appears to be delayed indefinitely by an ongoing teachers' strike.

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail
    CN spokeswoman Lindsay Fedchyshyn says 15 grain cars went off the track near Hondo, approximately 180 kilometres northwest of Edmonton, early Sunday.

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children: Activists

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children:  Activists
    MONTREAL - For the past month, Sheila Sedinger woke up every morning fraught with worry over the prospect of being deported to Mexico without her two young children.

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children: Activists

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Diana Snow's grandfather was among hundreds of Newfoundlanders who lined up a century ago to fight in the First World War as part of a fervent bid to help Britain.

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees

    Nato Pushes For Bigger Crisis Response Brigade As Canada Mulls Opportunity

    Nato Pushes For Bigger Crisis Response Brigade As Canada Mulls Opportunity
    OTTAWA - Canada will send troops, jets and warships to participate in a massive NATO training exercise next year in a deployment that could be the first step towards deeper involvement in the alliance's long-term strategy to counter a resurgent Russia.

    Nato Pushes For Bigger Crisis Response Brigade As Canada Mulls Opportunity

    Australian Drug Trade 'high-reward' For Canadian Criminals: Police

    Australian Drug Trade 'high-reward' For Canadian Criminals: Police
    There is an increasing Canadian presence in the Australian drug scene, where traffickers brave harsh enforcement for large profits in a "high-risk, high-reward" market, authorities say.

    Australian Drug Trade 'high-reward' For Canadian Criminals: Police