NDP promises to axe proposed plan to quit CPP if it wins 2027 Alberta election
Global News
Alberta's road to quitting the Canada Pension Plan would run smack into a scheduled 2027 provincial election, with Opposition New Democrats promising to kill the idea if they win.
Alberta’s long road to quitting the Canada Pension Plan would run smack into the scheduled 2027 provincial election, with Opposition New Democrats promising to kill the idea if they win.
Opposition finance critic Samir Kayande says an NDP government would cancel the plan at that late date as a last resort, regardless of whether Albertans vote in favour of ditching the CPP in a referendum.
Kayande says Albertans have already made their voices heard that they don’t want Premier Danielle Smith’s United Conservative Party government touching Canada’s $575-billion retirement nest egg.
“We’re not going to support the cancellation of the CPP,” Kayande told reporters Friday.
“We don’t need a referendum. People have already spoken. They don’t like the idea.
Kayande’s comments come a day after Smith announced that her government will consult with Albertans, with an eye to holding a referendum on whether to leave the CPP and create a separate Alberta pension plan.
The Alberta government website timeline suggests at this point that any referendum would come sometime in 2025.
Leaving CPP requires three years’ notice, and the next Alberta election is set for May 31, 2027.