Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Moves Up Election Date To Sept. 10

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2019 08:41 PM

    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister says he is moving up the next provincial election by more than a year.

     

    The next vote was scheduled for October 2020, but Pallister has set the day for this Sept. 10.


    He had been hinting for months that he was preparing to go early.


    By law, the campaign can't officially start until 28 to 35 days before Manitobans go to the ballot box. Pallister said he hasn't decided yet how long the campaign will be.


    "Much more needs to be done to create a better future for Manitobans, and this next provincial election will bring Manitoba to a very important crossroads," Pallister said Wednesday as he made the announcement on the lawn of the legislature.


    Significant challenges remain ahead, the premier said.


    "Poverty rates are consistently high. Crime, addictions rates remain far too high and more than half of Manitoba's households have less ... than $200 to spend every month after they've paid their bills."


    Pallister's Progressive Conservatives were elected in 2016 with 40 of the legislature's 57 seats — the largest majority government in Manitoba in a century.


    The Tories recently fulfilled their biggest campaign promise by cutting the provincial sales tax to seven per cent from eight.


    The cut is to take effect July 1, six years to the day after the former NDP government raised the tax.


    Manitobans will have to go to the polls twice in short order. The federal election is on Oct. 21.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Relationship With Metis Nation A Model For Reconciliation: Trudeau

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government's relationship with the Metis Nation is a tangible and concrete example of what reconciliation can be.

    Relationship With Metis Nation A Model For Reconciliation: Trudeau

    Committee Of MPs Decides Against Calling For School-Bus Seatbelts

    OTTAWA — A committee of MPs who probed bus-passenger safety in Canada has decided not to call for seatbelts to be installed in Canadian school buses, urging further study instead.

    Committee Of MPs Decides Against Calling For School-Bus Seatbelts

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling
    In a hand-delivered application on Tuesday, the Department of Justice tells the Supreme Court of Canada that it needs the stay for safety reasons.

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City
    Preliminary figures released Wednesday show the homeless count rose by two per cent to more than 2,200 in the past year, the same rate that it rose in the year previous.

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital
    VANCOUVER — Heavy drinking landed Dawn Nickel in the emergency department four times — twice for alcohol poisoning and two more times when she took pills with alcohol to try and kill herself.

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital

    Federal Government Making Electronic Logs Mandatory For Truck, Bus Drivers

     Transport Canada says it will require all commercial drivers to have electronic logging devices.

    Federal Government Making Electronic Logs Mandatory For Truck, Bus Drivers