Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson commits to Oct. 3 vote - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson commits to Oct. 3 vote

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson may have endedwhateverspeculation still existed about the possibility of an early election.

Stefanson previously gave herself an out, saying exceptional circumstances could necessitate earlier vote

Woman with serious expression stands at a podium.
'The election will be on Oct. 3,' Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said Tuesday in an interview on CBC Radio One. (Prabhjot Singh Lotey/CBC)

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson may have ended whatever speculation still existed about the possibility of an early election.

Stefanson saiddefinitively that she's sticking with the scheduled provincial election date of Oct. 3in an interview Tuesday with CBC Manitoba'sInformation Radiohost Marcy Markusa.

Asked if she'd rule out an early election, Stefanson chuckled.

"The election will be on Oct. 3," she said.

"That sounds like you've ruled out an early election call for us this morning," Markusa replied.

Stefanson has previously signalled she's leaning toward the fixed election date, but wouldn't be pinned down on it.

LISTEN | Marcy Markusa interviews Premier Heather Stefanson on Information Radio:

In a March interview, she gave herself an out by sayingOct. 3 is the election date "as of now."

She said there could be "different complicating matters," citing the potential for a federal election in the same time period.

"Manitobans don't want to have two elections at the same time, or overlapping elections. I think they want us to be at work getting the job done for them, and we'll continue to do that," she toldCBC Winnipeg News at 6after presenting her government's budget.

Progressive Conservative House leader Kelvin Goertzen had dampened election speculation in November, when he said the government fully intends to hold the election on the scheduled date, but he too brought up the potential for exceptional circumstances prompting a visit to the polls before Oct. 3.

On Tuesday, Stefanson's answer was succinct, yet definitive.

The last provincial election in Manitoba happened in 2019, a year earlier than the fixed election date.

Christopher Adams, adjunct professor ofpolitical studies at the University of Manitoba, said the premier is wise to stick with a fall date.

It gives the Progressive Conservatives more time to reap the benefits of their promises, including those contained in the 2023 budget, which increased spending for every government department, he said.

"It allows many ofthose things to start working their way through the system," Adams said.

"Ifyou're promising more things than health care, recruiting nurses, those sorts of things, those things don't happen immediately."

He said the Tories havemomentum on their side. The NDPstill enjoys the support of more Manitobans, polling data from Probe Research suggests, but their popular-opinion advantage over the governing PCs has slipped from 11 percentage points to six percentage points.

A man speaks behind a podium, equipped with microphones.
As of April 2023, the NDP under leader Wab Kinew has selected 37 of its 57 candidates. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The approachof the Progressive Conservatives has shifted from trying to avoid an embarrassingdefeat to striving to win, Adams said.

The election campaign is shapingup, with the Progressive Conservativesspending more than $1 million to promote government initiatives, while theNew Democrats went into PC territoryMonday to make the case they can fix health care in rural Manitoba.

However, the parties still need morecandidates to contest an election.

The Progressive Conservative Partystill has more than 20 candidates to nominate, including many in the Winnipeg seats currently held by the NDP. The Tories have selected just two candidates in the 18 NDP-held constituencies.

Party websites state the PCs have currentlynominated 31 of a possible 57 candidates, while the NDPhave 37 hopefuls selected, the Liberals 10and the Green Party seven.

Heckling getting more heated: Stefanson

Meanwhile, Stefanson said she'd like to see a change in the way politicians treat each other in the legislature, after high-profile incidents in which accusations of heckling and profanity were raised.

The premier said heckling has been part of question period for her two-plus decades at the legislature, but it's getting "more heated" than she's seen it.

"I don't like it at all, frankly," Stefanson said."I'm not a combative person, I don't like that kind ofbehaviour in general, but I will say that it's their side of the house as much as it is ours.

"I think the important thing here is we do have children visiting in the gallery, sometimes during question period. We need to maintain that decorum."

'The election will be on Oct. 3': Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson

1 year ago
Duration 1:35
There's been speculation for months. Would the Progressive Conservative government have reason to call an early election before October? Today, Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson may have put that speculation to rest.

With files from The Canadian Press