The Alberta United Conservative Party (UCP) and the Opposition New Democrat Party (NDP) are each suggesting that the other party is dodging media questions ahead of the provincial election on May 29.
Premier Danielle Smith said on April 14 that she would accept just one question from each reporter at news conferences during the campaign period, and the next day added that she would accept just one question in total from any single media outlet at events. She attributed the one-question policy to the election, saying she wants to allow as many reporters as possible to ask questions.
“Each media outlet will get one question instead of getting two while we’re in this period of the campaign, because I just need to make sure that we’re getting to as many people as possible,” she said on her weekly radio show, “Your Province Your Premier,” on April 15.
On April 18, in a response to an April 17 letter from the Alberta Legislature Press Gallery, the premier’s office clarified that the policy is one question per journalist, with no follow-up question, and not one question per media outlet.
The NDP says Smith is avoiding accountability.
“It is absolutely incumbent upon anybody who is seeking the support of voters across the province to make themselves available and accountable to mainstream and accredited journalists,” said Notley at an April 17 press conference, attacking Smith as being “a premier who’s hiding and showing the exact opposite of accountability and transparency.”
Election
The writ is scheduled to be dropped on May 1 for the election, for a May 29 polling day.
The two parties have already been launching campaign attacks on their rivals, each arguing why it is the one to get Albertans through cost-of-living issues and health-care accessibility.