The Wildrose Party remains the official opposition, with the PCs dropping to third and the Alberta Liberal Party and Alberta Party winning one seat each. 2019 Alberta general election.

Although the party gained near 10% of the popular vote, an increase from 2.29% in 2015, it lost all three ridings it held going into the election and won no seats in the Legislature. The Alberta Party … Another $5 million each year will help replace 100 aging and outdated playgrounds in mature neighbourhoods,Spend $100 million over five years to grow the artificial intelligence sector in Alberta,Invest $100 million in a technology diversification plan and continue with a five-year plan to create 3,000 new high-tech training seats in Alberta universities and colleges,Expand the Agrivalue Processing Business Incubator,Build, expand and modernize more schools, including a major new high school in north Calgary,Establish a provincial unit to fight hate crimes and extremism in Alberta,Intervene at all National Energy Board hearings that affect Alberta oil and gas interests,Create crown corporation to facilitate First Nations financial participation in major resource projects,Force large emitters to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 10 per cent each year,a "practical plan" to control greenhouse gas,Fight for international market access by pressuring federal government and eliminating inter-provincial trade barriers,Cut corporate tax rate from 12 to eight per cent over four,Use the prospect of a referendum on equalization as leverage for federal action on pipelines,Ask Ottawa to increase the limit of the Fiscal Stabilization Fund, cut income tax rates and stop payroll increases for CPP,Reform immigration program to attract entrepreneurs,Streamline recognition of foreign credential,s and push for harmonized regulatory procedures across Canada,Replace Alberta's School Act with the former Education Act,Disclose domestic violence records to intimate partners,Begin search for consultant to do performance review of,Maintain or increase health-care spending, while looking for efficiencies,Spend $2 million to expand the use of specialized electronic monitoring technology,Review medical and forensic gathering standards in rural,Cancel plans for a $590-million Alberta ",Create Big Island Provincial Park, a 770-hectare park in Edmonton's southwest river valley,Launch a new conservation plan to protect trails, create a back-country land-use plan,Set up a Caribou Range Task Force to review the NDP's Alberta Caribou Draft Plan,Increase annual funding on efforts to fight mountain pine beetle from $25 to $30 million,Introduce a law that would allow for recall of a sitting MLA if petitioned by voters,MLA expense claims for fuel and vehicle maintenance, but keep allowances for mileage,a minister in charge of eliminating 'red tape',CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices. Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted.By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. The Alberta Party ran a full slate of candidates for the first time. Anyone can form a political party, but only parties that have registered with the Chief Electoral Officer can be included on a ballot for an election. The COVID-19 pandemic is prompting Alberta political parties to move their annual general meetings from packed hotel ballrooms and hospitality suites to the Internet. While there’s nothing worse than not voting at all, an uninformed vote is only marginally better — which means that you’ve got some homework to do before filling out that ballot and helping decide what kind of Alberta you’ll live in for what will likely be the next four years. With Albertans heading to the polls on April 16, the biggest political players in the province are already vying for votes.Through the course of the 28-day campaign, CBC News will track some of the most noteworthy promises made by Rachel Notley, Jason Kenney, Stephen Mandel, David Khan and Derek Fildebrandt leading up to election night.From pipelines to public policy, the list below will give you an overview of the promises being made by each campaign.To encourage thoughtful and respectful conversations, first and last names will appear with each submission to CBC/Radio-Canada's online communities (except in children and youth-oriented communities). Please note that CBC does not endorse the opinions expressed in comments.