By Herald on March 9, 2021.
Nikki Jamieson – SOUTHERN ALBERTA NEWSPAPERS ssnews@sunnysouthnews.com
Premier Jason Kenney said that it is up to voters to decide whether to implement a sales tax once the pandemic is over. In a press conference on March 2, Kenney and Finance Minister Travis Toews were asked a question regarding the possibility of a provincial sales tax. While the Albertan government had committed to not implementing a sales tax in the middle of the pandemic, they were asked that why the government won’t say there won’t be a sales tax or put one on a referendum or another major tax after the pandemic. Kenney said they have made it clear that now would be the worst time for government take more money from Albertans, and that this government will always defend and respect the Taxpayer Protection Act, noting that he had successfully lobbied then-Premier Ralph Klein’s government to bring in back in 1995. The Alberta Taxpayer Protection Act mandates that a referendum needs to take place prior to any introduction of a general sales tax. “It says that Albertans — not the government, but Albertans — through a direct referendum vote, have the final say on any potential future sales tax. So Albertans are the boss, when it comes to that,” said Kenney. “When you ask about broader, future tax policy, we did say, in our platform that we were elected on, that we would have an expert panel take a look at Alberta’s tax mix, to see if it’s the best tax policy for job creation and to support economic growth.” “We will keep that commitment with a review of Alberta’s tax policy.” Kenney said that the previous NDP government had took away “a lot of our Alberta Advantage” when they raised the top marginal income tax rate by 50 per cent, raised taxes on job-creating businesses by 20 per cent “and hammered consumers”. Kenney noted that this government’s first act was to eliminate the provincial carbon tax, and they had also rolled back the “job-killing” tax hike on businesses.
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I suppose it remains then, as to when the people of Alberta will react to lack of revenue now that we cannot depend on a waning oil and gas sector. It has become apparent that the toxic Kenney UCP cutbacks are not going to be the financial savior for Alberta. Decreasing the corporate tax rate to 8% is yet another indication of refusing to acknowledge that trickle-down economics does not work. Our own carbon tax was being reinvested back into Alberta to facilitate diversifying our economy. Now we have the federal tax with individual rebates.
is kenney even near to the best we could have as a premier? same old contrived finger pointing, same old bed buddies, same old approach, no answers or new ideas.