Close X
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rachel Notley Says She Will Continue To Push Forward After Surreal, Tumultuous Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:38 PM
  • Rachel Notley Says She Will Continue To Push Forward After Surreal, Tumultuous Year
EDMONTON — Rachel Notley is looking ahead to her first full year as Alberta premier following a groundbreaking 2015 that was so tumultuous and surreal that people mistook her for Rachel Notley.
 
The year began with four NDP legislature members tilting at Tory windmills and ended with tinted-window SUVs, security guards and national attention after her historic majority victory in May's election.
 
"It was more difficult right after the election. Now I've sort of gotten into a routine," Notley told The Canadian Press in a year-end interview.
 
The political celebrity still only stretches so far, however, and ends when Notley nips out to the corner store or is spotted in a non-political setting.
 
"Every now and then people (come up to me and) say, 'Are you who I think you are?' (or) 'Has anybody ever told you you really look like the premier?'
 
"I'm like, 'No, I just look like her,'" she laughs, but then hastens to add that if anyone asks, she always lets them know.
 
The rubber hits the road in 2016 as Notley moves to put into play ambitious plans she outlined during the campaign that toppled almost 44 years of Progressive Conservative government.
 
Those plans have been praised as grand and visionary or panned as rainbows-and-unicorns social engineering.
 
Notley says resistance is nothing new.
 
"I'm a New Democrat who grew up in Alberta. That's the bottom line. This has never been a popularity contest for me. It's about being an advocate and promoting a certain view of the world and certain values.
 
"Sometimes you win people over and that's fabulous and it's exciting.
 
"Sometimes you grind out the change you need."
 
On May 5, Notley's tiny caucus exploded into a 54-member majority government with a mandate to tackle climate change, overhaul taxes, give a hand-up to low-income families and deliver more cash to health, social care and hospitals.
 
The NDP passed legislation to trash Alberta's flat tax and introduced a progressive one in which the rich face higher levies. Corporate taxes also went up.
 
Minimum-wage increases are set to reach $15 an hour by 2018.
 
A new climate change plan that will fundamentally reshape Alberta's bedrock economy includes a broad multibillion-dollar carbon tax, a cap on oilsands emissions and an end to coal-fired electricity generation.
 
Recommendations from an oil royalty review are expected in January.
 
And there's an infrastructure construction program that will double down on building while the oil-based economy is in the tank. The bottom line is more construction jobs and a boosted GDP, but close to $50 billion in debt by the end of the decade.
 
Opposition critics say what began as reform has become recklessness.
 
Notley said her tenure will be many things, but not a wasted opportunity.
 
"Not change for change's sake, to be clear, but change in areas I think warrant it," she said. "There are a lot of people who have worked very hard for us to get here, and it should mean something.
 
"And that's not some kind of ego statement. That's about giving life to people's engagement in politics. It's actually about renewing faith in the ... democratic system."
 
She said it was dispiriting to knock on doors in past campaigns and have weary voters tell her that they would mark an X, but didn't believe anything would change.
 
"It shouldn't be that way. I think people should feel that it is possible to do something differently."
 
It has been a rough ride at times for Notley's newbies, some of whom were slotted as candidates to fill out the 87-seat election roster only to suddenly find themselves public officials.
 
They were hailed as heroes on the sun-splashed steps of the legislature when Notley and her cabinet were sworn in.
 
But oil prices continued their steep descent to where they are now at below US$40 a barrel. Thousands of oilpatch jobs have turned into layoffs.
 
In the 2016-17 budget, the government will begin borrowing millions of dollars just to finance day-to-day operating expenses.
 
And, just before year's end, Standard and Poor's knocked down Alberta's credit rating.
 
Caucus took a haymaker to the head in November when it sent conflicting messages on a farm-safety bill.
 
While the bill, since passed, will only affect paid farm workers, hundreds of farm families held protests and accused the NDP of cutting off children from farm life.
 
The opposition parties carried farmers' concerns into question period, where they hooted and shouted to the point government house leader Brian Mason called them "goons" and "gangsters."
 
Cabinet ministers were berated and sworn at in public consultation sessions. Notley was mocked in song as a clueless wine-and-spritzer nanny-stater.
 
It was a crucible that her team didn't back down from and a test that made them stronger, she said.
 
"Their experience in politics had all been, 'Woohoo look at us! We won! We're new! We're exciting! Everyone likes us!'" said Notley. "So this has been a bit of a learning experience."
 
No doubt the education continues in the new year.

MORE National ARTICLES

$34.88 Billion In Profits And Other Key Numbers For Canada's Big Banks

$34.88 Billion In Profits And Other Key Numbers For Canada's Big Banks
Despite concerns that the sluggish economy, tapped out borrowers and low interest rates could dampen the profitability of Canadian banks

$34.88 Billion In Profits And Other Key Numbers For Canada's Big Banks

Manitoba Children's Advocate Will Have New Power To Monitor Kids

Manitoba Children's Advocate Will Have New Power To Monitor Kids
WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government is following through on a promise to give the children's advocate more power.

Manitoba Children's Advocate Will Have New Power To Monitor Kids

Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert

Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert
Ken Hansen, a research fellow with the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies at Halifax's Dalhousie University, is responding to a media report on the price tag.

Rising Estimated Costs For 15 Canadian Warships No Surprise: Naval Expert

New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government

New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government
British Columbia has introduced new rules to increase fines for restaurants, transit and other businesses that violate the rights of people who use certified guide-dogs.

New Certified Guide-dog Rules Protect Rights Of Handlers: B.C. Government

B.C. Oyster Growers Take Steps To Shuck Problems With Shellfish Bacterium

The two groups are organizing a workshop to help oyster farmers develop strategies to reduce chances of a dangerous bacterium in the shellfish.

B.C. Oyster Growers Take Steps To Shuck Problems With Shellfish Bacterium

'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral

'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral
Lynelle Cantwell of Torbay says she discovered her name on a poll posted on the website ask.fm called 'Ugliest Girls in Grade 12.'

'Ugly Girl' Poll: N.L. High School Student Takes On Online Bullies, Goes Viral