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Notley says she'll step down from Alberta NDP helm to make way for fresh voices

EDMONTON 鈥 Former premier Rachel Notley, after almost a decade at the helm of Alberta鈥檚 NDP, is stepping down from the top job.
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Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley announces she is stepping down from her position, in Edmonton on Tuesday January 16, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON 鈥 Former premier Rachel Notley, after almost a decade at the helm of Alberta鈥檚 NDP, is stepping down from the top job.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a crazy ride,鈥 Notley, the leader of the Opposition, told reporters Tuesday while flanked at the lectern by her family.

鈥淗aving considered what I believe to be the best interests of our party, our caucus, as well as my own preferences, I鈥檓 here today to announce I will not be leading Alberta鈥檚 NDP into the next election.

鈥淯pon the selection of a new leader, I will be stepping down from that role.鈥

Notley, 59, choked up as she spoke of her mother, Sandy, and father, former NDP leader Grant Notley, 鈥渄emonstrating daily the value of hard work, compassion for neighbours, the duty of compassion for neighbours and the importance of social democratic convictions.鈥

She added, 鈥淭he opportunity to serve this party and this province has been the honour of my life."

She ruled out taking her career to Ottawa: 鈥淚 have no intention to pursue a federal role in elected politics.鈥

The provincial NDP, in a statement, said executive members will meet Jan. 27 to hammer out details and timelines for the leadership race.

Caucus members Rakhi Pancholi, David Shepherd, Sarah Hoffman and Kathleen Ganley are rumoured to be running.聽

Notley said she will not endorse a candidate.

In an interview before the announcement, Notley said she doesn't know next steps, including whether she will fulfil her term as the legislature member for Edmonton-Strathcona, a riding she won handily in five consecutive elections. She also did not rule out running again.聽

"I just don鈥檛 know. It鈥檚 a volatile world, politics," Notley said.

The announcement ends months of speculation over Notley鈥檚 future, after her NDP lost the May 2023 election to Premier Danielle Smith鈥檚 United Conservatives. Notley鈥檚 NDP captured 38 of the 87 legislature seats to become the largest Opposition in provincial history.聽

It was the second consecutive election loss for the NDP under Notley, which ended a 44-year Progressive-Conservative dynasty in 2015 with a surprise majority government only to be trounced four years later by Jason Kenney's UCP.聽

Notley was elected party leader in 2014, commanding a caucus that, except for a short-lived breakthrough in 1986, had been confined to a tiny corner of the legislature with a handful of members who could hold meetings in a subcompact sedan.

Under Notley, the NDP wiped out rival left-centre parties, including the Alberta Liberals, to establish itself as the dominant alternative to the governing right-wing UCP.

Notley said she takes the most pride in what the NDP has become under her watch 鈥 聽a mainstream alternative that listens and connects with Albertans, while staying true to its core values.

鈥淲hen we got elected in 2015, we didn鈥檛 know who voted for us. We barely knew why, because we couldn鈥檛 afford polling,鈥 said Notley.

That has all changed, she said, with more financial resources, strong candidates and more ways to find out what Albertans want in a government and from their elected representatives.

鈥淭hose relationships with stakeholders and that ability to be engaging with Albertans in a meaningful, responsive way strengthens the party, strengthens the movement,鈥 she said.

鈥淪o did we move to the centre in the traditional left-right (spectrum)? I would say no.聽

鈥淒id we get better at talking to Albertans and representing who they are, through our own lens, but representing the things that matter to them? Yeah, we did."

Asked what she considers to be her signature accomplishments as Alberta鈥檚 17th premier, Notley points to getting approval for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, building a new Calgary cancer hospital, reducing child poverty, investing in schools and hospitals, phasing out coal-fired electricity, kick-starting renewable energy investment and hiking the minimum wage.

Of those accomplishments, she said the wage hike resonates.

鈥淲e raised the minimum wage to $15 (an hour), the first jurisdiction North America to do that, and others followed because, of course, the world did not collapse as everybody suggested," she said.聽

鈥淭o this day, although a little bit less so now because we're falling behind again (on minimum wage), I still have people come up and tell me how it changed their lives. I鈥檓 very proud of that.鈥

So if the party is doing well, why step down as leader?

鈥淚鈥檓 a bit of a polarizing figure in the province,鈥 Notley replied.

"I think we have a lot of really great people who are part of our movement, and I think it鈥檚 healthy to allow other voices to have an opportunity."

Notley, as premier, was criticized from the right as an out of touch, spend-happy eco-extremist, and from the left as a pipeline-loving fossil-fuel sellout.聽

Her NDP governed during a punishing recession that saw her government rack up multibillion-dollar deficits as profits dried up in oil and gas 鈥 the wellspring of Alberta鈥檚 economy.

The UCP, under Kenney, won the 2019 election in part by painting Notley鈥檚 NDP as wide-eyed spendthrifts who never met a dollar they didn鈥檛 want to spend and couldn鈥檛 be trusted with the public purse.

Asked if she felt like she got a raw deal when she won in 2015 only to be handed the keys to a government with no money, Notley said no.

Because the NDP was in power, she said, it was able to reduce poverty, increase wages for those who needed it most, index payments for people with severe disabilities to inflation, and spend to keep pace with population growth in schools and hospitals.

"As much as we paid a price for it electorally (in 2019), I'm glad we were the ones that were there in the hard times," said Notley.聽

"It would have been a lot worse if it hadn't been us."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 16, 2023.

Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press