Notley held her first caucus meeting as Premier-designate on May 9, 2015. Three days later, Notley announced that she would be retaining the previous head of the Alberta public service, Richard Dicerni, as well as appointing NDP party strategists
Brian Topp and Adrienne King as her
chief of staff and deputy chief of staff, respectively. She also met with outgoing Premier Jim Prentice that same day, in addition to extending the deadline for the province's school boards to submit their budgets, her first major deviation from the previous Progressive Conservative government's financial commitments as Premier-designate. On May 22, 2015, Notley suspended
Calgary-Bow MLA
Deborah Drever from the Alberta NDP caucus after a series of controversial postings by Drever were discovered on
social media websites such as
Instagram and
Facebook. Notley had previously announced that she had directed Drever, as a result of the media attention, to create a plan to improve education on violence against women, particularly outreach to groups working with vulnerable young women. This was before a later image surfaced which was considered to be
homophobic, something which Notley apologized for on behalf of the party. Her twelve-member cabinet was the smallest in the country, containing only 14% of the legislature's members. The swearing-in ceremony was a public event, held on the steps of the
Alberta Legislature Building in front of a large crowd of spectators while a
folk band played the national anthem and free popsicles and food were distributed from
food trucks.
Speech from the Throne The government's first
throne speech was read by Lieutenant Governor
Lois Mitchell on June 15, 2015. The speech announced three bills intended to ban corporate and union donations to political parties and to increase taxes on large corporations and high income earners, ending the
flat tax rate that had been in place since the premiership of
Ralph Klein. Both of these proposals were promised as part of the Alberta NDP's election platform. That same day Notley also announced the creation of a seventeen-member all-party committee tasked to look into ways to improve government accountability in areas such as whistleblower protection, electioneering, and conflicts of interest. The government also reached out to the Opposition benches by having the committee be initiated through a joint motion with
Wildrose Party leader
Brian Jean, with
Liberal leader
David Swann also being tasked with helping conduct a review of provincial mental health policy along with NDP MLA
Danielle Larivee.
Aboriginal relations On June 22, 2015, Notley apologized to the Aboriginal community of Alberta for a long history of neglect by prior governments. In particular she apologized for the province not addressing the issue with decades of abuse at government- and church-operated
residential schools. Notley pledged that her government would engage and improve living conditions of Alberta's Aboriginal community. On December 8, 2015, Notley tweeted out her support of Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau's announcement that a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls would be immediately launched. On December 15, 2015, Notley expressed her support for the recommendations outlined in the Truth and Reconciliation Committee's final report. The budget of 2017 included $100 million to upgrade the provincial and federal waterworks facilities that provide drinkable water for Albertan First Nations Communities. In 2018, the Albertan government sold 150 hectares of land to the Fort McKay Métis for $1.6 million. The dealing was a precedent-setting event for the
Métis community.
Climate change and environment On November 22, 2015, Notley unveiled Alberta's updated climate change strategy, in time for the
COP 21 conference in Paris. The plan included an economy-wide
carbon price starting in 2017 and a cap on emissions from the
oil sands. The plan also included a phase-out of coal-fired electricity by 2030, a 10-year goal to halve
methane emissions, as well as incentives for renewable energy. In November 2016, $1.4 billion was paid to compensate three major Albertan power producers (
ATCO,
Capital Power, and
Transalta) to expedite the transition caused by the closure of six coal-fired power plants. The compensation was derived from the carbon tax and was to be paid over a period of 14 years. In 2017, the Notley government resumed addressing the proliferation of
abandoned wells by budgeting $235 million for the Orphan Well Association to begin land reclamation and rehabilitation of thousands of
orphan wells in the province. A partnership between the provincial government, the Tallcree First Nation, and conservation group 'Nature Conservatory of Canada' created the
Birch River Wildland Provincial Park adjacent to the south of
Wood Buffalo National Park. The park is the largest territory of protected
boreal forest in the world.
Syncrude contributed $2.3 million to the project.
Public health and welfare reforms The NDP made revisions reforms and implemented new services to public health and well-being services. In 2018, the NDP proposed legislature Bill 9 to enforce 50 metre buffer zones around abortion clinics in Alberta to ban harassment by pro-life activists against users and personnel of these facilities. Coverage for the abortion drug 'Mifegymiso' was made public in 2018. Notley's government enacted campaign promised pilot project to fund $25/day per child into 18 Early Learning Child Care services (ELCC) for daycare services. After a successful pilot project, in 2018 the NDP continued to expand the Daycare services by increasing capacity for 6,000 additional children and 100 additional ELCC centers. The expansion was made possible by a funding grant from the Federal government investing $136 million over 3 years as well from the Albertan government investing $14.5 million. Albertans with a higher risk of HIV will be provided coverage for the Anti-HIV drug
PrEP. The proposed Bill 24 designed to protect
LGBTQ rights will uphold anonymity among members of
gay–straight alliance (GSA) clubs in public schools. Additionally gay conversion therapies will be banned in Alberta. In 2019, Bill 26 was enacted which aims to combat poverty for Albertans suffering from poverty. Among the provisions are an increase of benefits for the elderly and
AISH recipients connected to the consumer price index.
Economy and labour Alberta's minimum wage was raised incrementally from $10.20 an hour in 2015 to $15.00 an hour in 2018. Notley's government revised labour regulations with the implementation of the 'Fair and Family-friendly Act' (Bill 17), which came into effect in 2018. The revisions were the first overhaul of Alberta's labour laws in three decades. In early 2018, an inter-provincial trade dispute between the
BC NDP and Alberta NDP hampered the export of resources. Alberta's AGLC ceased to export wine produced in BC. Notley's government chose this as retaliation for BC premier
John Horgan's government decision to limit export of Bitumen from Alberta as protest to ongoing discussion of the proposed
Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion. In 2017, Alberta imported $72 million of BC wine. However hospitality service businesses in Alberta worried their industry could be harmed with a prolonged embargo. The government's Bill 31 of 2017 'A Better Deal for Consumers and Businesses Act' enacted a number of reforms to enhance consumer protections. In 2019, the Albertan government agreed to lease 4,400 oil cars from
Canadian Pacific Railway and
Canadian National Railway. On December 2, 2018, Notely announced the Alberta government would be instating oil production curtailments. The curtailments were meant to minimize lost revenue due to oil being sold at a lower market value as a bottleneck in transportation. The Alberta government rarely utilized this power, the last time was during the
National Energy Program to limit federal revenues. Curtailments took effect in January 2019, under the
Oil and Gas Conservation Act with the
Alberta Energy Regulator monitoring the program.
Education In 2015, Notley's government froze tuition fees for post-secondary students. The freeze was initially meant to last two years, but it was extended until 2018. The NDP government also reversed a 1.4 per cent cut to post-secondary institutions and instead increased base funding by two per cent. In 2016, to fulfill her campaign promise, Notley's government implemented a pilot program aimed at providing Alberta's neediest children with nutritious sustenance lunch programs.
Fort McMurray wildfire In 2016, a
wildfire devastated Fort McMurray. In October 2016 Notley visited the construction site of the first rebuilt house. She rededicated an overpass crossing
Highway 63, where first responders had welcomed residents home, as 'Responders Way Bridge'.
Threats against Notley After becoming Premier, Notley started to encounter abuse from Albertans who did not align with her values. As stated by the
Edmonton Sun, "The statistics show that from 2003 to 2015,
Alberta Sheriffs recorded 55 security incidents involving six premiers. 19 of those came in the last half of 2015, which happened to be Notley's first months in office. At least three of those incidents required police intervention." Most of the threats against Notley proliferated online with photos and posts, encouraging violence against the premier. According to statistics in 2016 from Alberta Justice, Notley is the Alberta premier with the most death threats. She was the subject of 412 harassment communiques, of which 26 were investigated by law enforcement. Most of these threats had been attributed to the NDP government's farm safety legislation, Bill 6, which made Worker Compensation Board coverage mandatory on Alberta farms with paid, non-family employees, leading to thousands of protesters. Official Opposition leader and Wildrose Party Leader
Brian Jean, despite criticizing Bill 6, made a call for the abuse directed at Notley to cease or else he would alert authorities. In late August 2016, Jean joked "I've been beating this drum for 10, 11 years. I will continue to beat it, I promise. But it's against the law to beat Rachel Notley", for which he apologized immediately for what he called "an inappropriate attempt at humour."
2019 election Following Notley's win in the 2015 provincial election, the Opposition
Wildrose Party and third-place
Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta, both right-of-centre, began contemplating forming a
united right-wing party. Following referendums in both parties, they merged in 2017 into the
United Conservative Party (UCP), with former federal minister and former PC leader
Jason Kenney elected as leader later that year. In the
2019 provincial election, the UCP won a majority of seats and about 55% of the popular vote. While the NDP retained all but one of their seats in Edmonton, significant losses in Calgary and rural Alberta reduced them to Official Opposition status. Notley pledged on election night to continue serving as
Leader of the Opposition. The NDP government's defeat was the first time a governing party in Alberta had been defeated after a single term in office. The NDP opposition caucus with 24 seats was the largest in Alberta since
Laurence Decore's
Liberals won 32 seats in
1993. ==Opposition leader (2019–2024)==