Carla Beck (born October 15, 1973) is a Canadian politician who has served as leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party and Saskatchewan's Official Opposition since 2022. Beck was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan for the district of Regina Lakeview in the 2016 provincial election. Beck is the first elected female leader of the Saskatchewan NDP.
Beck graduated with two bachelors degrees from the University of Regina: a Sociology degree in 1998 and a Social Work degree in 2004. Beck worked as a social worker in Regina for more than two decades, including working with the Regina General Hospital and as an assistant executive director at a women's shelter. Beck also worked as an active community volunteer, including through the Saskatchewan Abilities Council, the Saskatchewan Coalition Against Racism, Camp Easter Seal, the Autism Resource Centre, and the MS Society. In 2007, Beck became a founding member and spokesperson for RealRenewal, a coalition of parents and community members formed in response to the Regina public school board’s "10-Year Renewal Plan", which could have led to the closure of more than a dozen inner city schools; the school board plan was ultimately abandoned in the face of community opposition before it was fully implemented.
In 2015, Beck won a contested NDP nomination race for the Regina Lakeview constituency. Beck was elected to the Legislative Assembly in the 2016 provincial election. In the 2020 provincial election, Beck was re-elected by a wide margin with 65.5% of the vote in Regina Lakeview. Starting in 2016, Beck served as the Opposition critic for Education, Early Learning and Child Care. Beck also served as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Opposition Caucus Chair and the critic for Labour. Beck also served as the Education critic during the COVID-19 pandemic in Saskatchewan.
With Beck as leader, the Saskatchewan NDP won two Regina by-elections in August 2023. In Beck's first full year as leader, she identified cost-of-living concerns and healthcare as the major issues facing people in the province. Beck also emphasized accountability and criticized the governing Saskatchewan Party on this front, including by triggering conflict-of-interest investigations against Saskatchewan Party MLAs Jeremy Cockrill and Gary Grewal in 2024.
On August 29, 2024, Beck launched the NDP's campaign ahead of the 2024 provincial election with a focus on cost-of-living by making a pledge to not increase income, business, sales, or corporate taxes; Beck emphasized that its financial plans would include cutting wasteful government spending. For instance, Beck committed to scrapping the controversial rollout of the Saskatchewan Marshals police service, which was slated to cost the province $20 million annually. The following week, and in the wake of protracted job action on the part of Saskatchewan teachers, Beck unveiled a commitment to increase education funding by $2 billion over four years. Adding commitments to pause the provincial gas tax, to launch a school nutrition program, and to target organized crime, Beck's campaign drew comparisons to the successful 2023 campaign of the Manitoba NDP. When Beck released the party's full platform, it also included a $1 billion commitment over four years to the healthcare sector.
The NDP saw a late surge in polling during the campaign, with multiple polls suggesting the party was in a position to win the election. Ultimately, the party fell short of a victory but more than doubled its seat count compared to the 2020 election, winning 27 seats. This was mainly on the strength of taking all of Regina and all but one seat in Saskatoon; it was the NDP's best election result since 2003.
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