Moe and Meili offer differing perspectives on pandemic recovery, reopening and masks
Economic recovery from impact of COVID-19 key campaign issue
COVID-19 will be an election campaign issue as both Saskatchewan Party Leader Scott Moe and NDP Leader Ryan Meili have been asked about the pandemic's effect on the provincial economy, restrictions and mask use.
Both Moe and Meili have made the economic effects of the pandemic central in their election messages.
In his campaign opening media conference on Tuesday, Moe said the election is about who the voters "trust" to recover the Saskatchewan economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The NDP slogan is "People First," with Meili claiming the Saskatchewan Party plans "dangerous cuts during a pandemic."
While both leaders have zeroed in on a message that their party is best suited to take on the economic fallout from the pandemic, they do not agree on the response and measures that should be taken.
Reopening plan
Saskatchewan was the first province to announce its "reopening" plan but not the first to execute it.
On April 22, Moe made an address declaring the province had "flattened the curve" and would reopen its economy in phases.
Various businesses and services reopened in five phases over four months and have remained open, with only a few exceptions when cases of COVID-19 caused temporary restrictions.
On Tuesday, Moe criticized the NDP saying it wanted to "slow down or even stop our reopening plan."
Moe said the province was able to control the spread of COVID-19 and reopen the economy "safely."
In May, Meili called on the government to delay Phase 2 of the reopening. At the time he said, "business owners have more questions than answers about how to open safely,"
On Wednesday, Meili said the idea the NDP wanted to stop the reopening plan was "preposterous."
"We want to come out of COVID-19 as successfully as possible, but we want to make sure is that we do that safely and wisely. We do not want to see a situation where we're back in lockdown," Meili said.
Meili again criticized the government's school reopening plan which he said was a "last-minute scramble."