The government is now taking steps towards fulfilling
NDP election promises, and any available money within this fiscal has been allocated to that end.
Subtracting
NDP election promises from available funds would leave a surplus of $ 1.7 billion in 2015 - 16 and $ 1.5 billion in 2019 - 20.
Not exact matches
The company says it won't throw good money after bad until someone can do something about the
NDP government of John Horgan in B.C., who
promised in the
election last summer to try to stop the project.
On the pipeline, the B.C.
NDP is trying to fulfil an
election promise made last year.
Given recent economic developments (which suggest there will be no surplus this year) and global uncertainties, together with a commitment by all three major political parties to balanced budgets and no tax increases (other than the
NDP), it would be fiscally imprudent for any political party to make new major
election «
promises» in the coming months without indicating how they would be financed.
Mr. Fildebrandt is sour from a recent interview Ms. Tait published in which she quotes him as claiming the
NDP duped Alberta voters by actually implementing
promises made during the
election (and he later referred to Ms. Tait as a b - list reporter and accused her of auditioning for a job in the Premier's Office — a comment he later retracted).
One of the main
promises made by the
NDP before their win in the May 2015 provincial
election was a commitment to ban corporate and union donations in provincial politics.
The
NDP's
election platform included a
promise to raise the carbon tax, but the increases would not begin until 2020.
The 2015 federal
election saw
promises by the
NDP and the Liberals to expand the CPP, leading Canada's finance ministers to get back to work in examining CPP reform after the dust settled from the
election.
Both the Liberals and the
NDP have made
election promises to allow for an increase in the amount Canadians can voluntarily put into the Canada Pension Plan.