Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jim Prentice Wins Alberta Tory Leadership And Will Be Next Premier

The Canadian Press , 06 Sep, 2014 10:51 PM
    EDMONTON - Jim Prentice won the Progressive Conservative leadership race Saturday and will soon be sworn in as Alberta's 16th premier.
     
    The 58-year-old former Calgary MP handily defeated former provincial cabinet ministers Ric McIver and Thomas Lukaszuk in a vote overshadowed by computer and phone foul-ups that left some members saying they were unable to cast a ballot.
     
    Prentice takes over a PC government that has fallen sharply in the polls this year following the travel and spending controversies of former premier Alison Redford.
     
    "The end of this leadership campaign represents a new beginning for Alberta," Prentice told party members in a room at the Expo Convention Centre Saturday night, minutes after the vote totals were announced. 
     
    "Today we begin the work of restoring trust in government and making Albertans proud of the people who represent them and serve our province."
     
    Prentice captured almost 77 per cent of the votes cast, more than the 50 per cent plus one needed to avoid a run-off vote.
     
    McIver, the member of the legislature for Calgary-Hays, took 12 per cent.
     
    Lukaszuk, the member for Edmonton-Castle Downs, collected 11 per cent.
     
    Prentice now needs to gain a seat in the legislature and has already promised to call a byelection as soon as possible.
     
    The only vacant seat is the one that was held by Redford, although Neil Brown of Calgary-Mackay-Nose Hill has offered to leave his seat so Prentice can run.
     
    The next general election is slated for 2016.
     
    Redford resigned as premier in March with a caucus revolt brewing over her leadership style and spending. She resigned her seat last month ahead of a damning auditor's report examining her travel expenses that was forwarded by the government to the RCMP.
     
    Prentice tried to distance himself from that era in his speech.
     
    "Over time the govenrment has lost its way, and watching from afar, I was dissapointed and as frustrated as anyone," he said. "I wasn't at the table when those decisions were made, but I am at the table now."
     
    Prentice had been the favourite from the time he announced his candidacy.
     
    Almost all members of the PC caucus announced their support for him. His campaign raised $1.8 million, more than double the $300,000 raised by Lukaszuk and $417,000 raised by McIver combined.
     
    His pedigree is in federal politics. He served as minister of environment, aboriginal affairs and industry while in Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government.
     
    He quit politics in 2010 to take an executive position with CIBC.
     
    Harper congratulated Prentice after the results were announced.
     
    "I look forward to working with Mr. Prentice on issues of importance for Albertans and all Canadians, including the economy, responsible resource development and job creation," Harper said in a news release.
     
    Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi also added his kudos.
     
    "The new premier will have an eager partner at City Hall," Nenshi said in a statement.
     
    Prentice has promised to refocus the Tory government and return integrity to it.
     
    During the campaign, he pledged not to hike taxes or tinker with oil royalties. There will be an accelerated paydown of Alberta's debt and a push to get new schools built.
     
    Prentice has also promised a slimmed-down cabinet to reflect his government's commitment to fiscal austerity.
     
    He ran a campaign positioning himself as the outsider, untainted by Redford's scandals
     
    Prentice castigated Lukaszuk and McIver for sitting idly by in cabinet during the worst of Redford's excesses.
     
    Prentice has been pilloried in turn by Lukaszuk and McIver for giving away memberships to supporters. The party had asked all candidates to sell the memberships at $10 apiece.
     
    Lukaszuk and McIver labelled the actions underhanded and undemocratic.
     
    It was the party's third leadership vote in eight years, and the number of voters continued to decline.
     
    The party announced 23,000 votes in total.
     
    In 2006, 97,000 voted in the first ballot in the campaign ultimately won by Ed Stelmach.
     
    In 2011, 59,000 voted on the first ballot in a race Redford eventually won.
     
    This was the first time the PCs gave voters the option of voting online or by phone as well as casting a ballot in person.
     
    It was a rocky process. Over Friday and Saturday, voters complained that they had not received the required 20-digit PIN. Others had a PIN but were disqualified due to home address mix-ups or for other reasons.
     
    Still others reported facing long delays or not being able to gain access to the system at all.
     
    A quick look at the career of Jim Prentice, who will be Alberta's next premier
     
     
    Age: 58
     
    Former occupation: vice-chairman CIBC.
     
    Quote: "Today we begin the work of restoring trust in government and making Albertans proud of the people who represent them and serve our province."
     
    Political career: Elected in the federal riding of Calgary Centre-North in 2004. Held cabinet posts in Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Environment and Industry under Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Stepped away from politics abruptly in 2010.
     
    Outside politics: In addition to job at CIBC, pipeline company Enbridge hired Prentice to try and bring First Nations onside with its Northern Gateway project through northern B.C. Sits on the boards of Canadian Pacific Railway and Bell Canada. Has a degree in commerce from the University of Alberta and a law degree from Dalhousie.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two
    KELOWNA, B.C. - A Kelowna, B.C., man has been sentenced to 15 months in jail, one year probation and banned from driving for two years for causing a fatal crash in neighbouring West Kelowna.

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater
    Christopher Cloutier was camping with friends in Nopiming Provincial Park in southeastern Manitoba when they got separated.

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator
    VANCOUVER - Teachers and the B.C. government's negotiator are expected to bring their bargaining committees to discussions with veteran mediator Vince Ready today.

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor
    MERRITT, B.C. - The Mounties say a dashboard camera from a tractor-trailer captured a tour bus rollover that injured dozens of people on a B.C. highway and it appears speed is not a factor.

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014
    The normally green David Lam Park in Vancouver’s Yaletown district turned into a sea of white for the third annual Vancouver Dîner en Blanc outdoor dining phenomenon last week. 

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003
    NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. - Human remains found in the mountains near North Vancouver have been identified as those of a 20-year-old Ontario man who went missing more than a decade ago while visiting his grandmother in British Columbia.

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003