Saskatchewan United Party | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SUP |
Leader | Jon Hromek |
President | Dwight Bunyan |
Founder | Nadine Wilson |
Founded | 2022 |
Registered | November 30, 2022 |
Split from | Saskatchewan Party |
Headquarters | PO Box 187 Lumsden, SK S0C 3G0 [1] |
Ideology | |
Political position | Right-wing |
Colours |
|
Slogan | Your conservative option for uniting Saskatchewan. |
Seats in Legislature | 1 / 61 |
Website | |
saskunited.ca | |
The Saskatchewan United Party (SUP) is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The party was registered in November 2022. SUP was started by former Saskatchewan Party MLA Nadine Wilson, and has promoted a right-wing populist ideology.
Conservative organizers—including Independent and former Saskatchewan Party MLA Nadine Wilson, former Conservative Member of Parliament and federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz, and former Maverick Party candidate Ken Rutherford—began holding meetings in early 2022 to try and establish another conservative political option for Saskatchewan. [2] Wilson had become a vocal critic of the governing Saskatchewan Party's management of the COVID-19 pandemic, and resigned from the Saskatchewan Party caucus in September 2021 with the party revealing that she had lied about her COVID-19 vaccination status. [3] [4] An opposition to pandemic-related public health measures was at the centre of Wilson and Ritz's efforts in early 2022, and they worked alongside members of the anti-mandate group Unified Grassroots. [5] The organizers also engaged with the organizers of the Christian conservative True North Saskatchewan as well as the Buffalo Party, discussing possible future mergers. [6]
The Saskatchewan Progressive Conservative Party has alleged that these organizers attempted a "takeover" of the PC party with a plan to rebrand as the Saskatchewan Conservative Party with Wilson as its leader. [7] In addition to the Conservative brand, such a move would have provided access to a $2.7 million trust fund. [8] However, the takeover was rejected, and attention turned to establishing a new party. In 2023, the PCs alleged that Sask. United organizers stole a hard drive containing member and donor information, a charge those organizers denied. [8] [9]
The Saskatchewan United Party (SUP) was registered with Elections Saskatchewan on November 30, 2022, with Nadine Wilson appointed party leader and becoming its first member in the Legislature. [10]
In social media posts, the newly-formed party promoted stances against mass immigration, COVID-19 lockdowns, and vaccine mandates. [5] SaskatoonStarPhoenix columnist Phil Tank classified the party's stance against mass immigration as being in line with other right-wing populist movements, and noted Wilson's previous involvement in the anti-mandate group Unified Grassroots. [5]
On Wilson's first day in the Legislature as SUP leader, she invited guests who purported to have suffered "vaccine injuries" and urged the government to meet with them. [11]
The party hosted an official launch event on February 28, 2023 in Saskatoon, where it introduced its logo and policy agenda. [12] The party's positions include promoting the agriculture, energy, and natural resource industries; promoting provincial sovereignty against federal and foreign powers; promoting gun rights; promoting "efficiency and opportunity" and less bureaucracy in health care; removing "ideologies" from school curricula; and increasing parental involvement in education. [12] [13] [14]
The party ran a candidate for the first time in the August 2023 Lumsden-Morse by-election; SUP candidate Jon Hromek finished second to the Saskatchewan Party's Blaine McLeod with 23% of the vote. [15] Wilson, who stated that she was "very pleased" with the result, attributed it to the party advocating for more parental involvement in the education system. [16] In the fall of 2023, Hromek was named the deputy leader of SUP. [17]
When, later in August 2023, the Saskatchewan Party introduced new education policies limiting sexual health education and requiring parental consent when students under the age of 16 desired to have their chosen names and pronouns affirmed at school, pressure from SUP was widely cited as the impetus. [18] [19] [20] SUP took credit for forcing the government to adopt the policy in social media posts. [21] [22] The policies were ultimately enshrined in legislation called the Parents' Bill of Rights, with the government invoking the notwithstanding clause as part of the legislative process; Wilson voted in favour of the legislation. [23]
On May 16, 2024, Wilson announced that she would step down as party leader, although she still intended to run for SUP in the 2024 election. [24] Former deputy leader Jon Hromek, who had donated $200,000 to the party, was appointed as the new SUP leader. [24]
In September 2024, it was announced that two former Saskatchewan Party MLA's would be running under the Saskatchewan United Party banner in the upcoming election:
Greg Brkich, running in Saskatoon Southeast, said that the Saskatchewan Party under premier Scott Moe “is not Brad Wall’s Sask. Party anymore. The lack of leadership and vision can’t go on any longer. There is time to fix this province and Jon Hromek is the guy that can do it. Working with him reminds me of the early days with Brad Wall.” [25]
Denis Allchurch, running in Meadow Lake, had lost the Saskatchewan Party nomination in a contested bid for Rosthern-Shellbrook for the 2011 election to then-newcomer, Moe. Allchurch said, "Scott Moe has taken the Sask. Party down a liberal path. Jon Hromek and Sask. United offer a true conservative alternative to Scott Moe’s Sask. Party.” [25]
† denotes acting or interim leader
# | Party Leader | Tenure | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Nadine Wilson | November 30, 2022 – May 16, 2024 | Wilson was a Saskatchewan Party MLA from 2007–2021, and an Independent MLA from 2021–2022. With the Saskatchewan Party, Wilson served as Provincial Secretary in the governments of Brad Wall and Scott Moe. |
2 | Jon Hromek | May 16, 2024 – present | Previously served as deputy leader of the party from 2023–2024. |
Member | District | First elected | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Nadine Wilson | Saskatchewan Rivers | 2007 | Wilson has been elected four times, each time as a member of the Saskatchewan Party. |
Election | Leader | Seats | Change | Place | Votes | % | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | Jon Hromek | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
The Saskatchewan Party is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The party was founded in 1997 by a coalition of former provincial Progressive Conservative and Liberal Party members who sought to unite opposition to the governing New Democratic Party. Since 2007, the Saskatchewan Party has been the province's governing party, and both the party and the province are currently led by Premier Scott Moe.
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