Deputy Premier Don McMorris drunk driving in a government vehicle at double the legal limit.

A projected $1 billion dollar deficit.

Sending homeless people to BC with one-way bus tickets.

Bill Boyd paying Sask Party donors $21 million dollars for GTH land at a price of $110,000 per acre when it was appraised at $15,000 per acre.

The Husky oil spill resulting from lax inspection standards and Sask Party cuts of $2.7 million from the Sask pipeline inspection budget.

Keeping Saskatchewan Strong.™

The new $300 million dollar Regina stadium of which taxpayers are paying $80 million dollars.

Privatization of Liquor Stores.

Planned privatization of 49% of SaskTel after changing the definition of "privatization" in Saskatchewan's laws.

Brad Wall and the Sask Party's secret plan to raise the PST.

Cutting the GradWorks program for the newly unemployed people in Saskatchewan.

Preparations to raise Saskatchewan property tax on homes and pasture land.

Privatization of prison food services resulting in mouldy food being served to prisoners. "Don't like it, don't go to jail motherfuckers!"

More expensive P3 projects that our children and grandchildren will pay on for the next 30 years.

Receiving $2 million dollars in secret political donations from Alberta oil companies.

Brad Wall dropping to the third most popular Premier in Canada.

Opposing carbon pricing for no reason other than to score political points from Brad Wall's anti-science Conservative base.

Laying off mental healthcare staff in Regina.

Crying at the La Loche shooting photo op, then cutting the Northern Teachers Education Program (NORTEP), and imposing a hiring freeze on social workers and counselors in the North a few months later.

Laying off 70 healthcare workers in Saskatoon Health Region.

Taking $4 million dollars from a Workers Compensation Board surplus away from schools to 'pay down the deficit.'

Saving nothing from ten years of record resource royalty revenue, and spending the rainy day fund.

A record 8 out of 10 of the last Provincial budgets being deficit budgets, despite a bill that Brad Wall and his own government passed, making this illegal.

After contracting to a pay increase, leaving school boards on the hook to find a 1.9 percent pay increase for teachers in their budgets by robbing our kids of textbooks and staff.

Raising prescription drug fees for children and seniors by $5 per prescription.

Hatching a secret plan to amalgamate school boards and health districts and appoint Sask Party cronies to all.

Backtracking on Brad Wall's $3 million dollar handout to skipthedishes.com.

Cutting educational assistants in schools for overcrowded classrooms and students with disabilities.

Closing Lighthouse emergency shelter beds for homeless addicts and alcoholics.

Cutting funding to the Saskatchewan Assured Income for Disabilities (SAID) program.

A 27 percent increase in unemployed people in the Province since November 2015.

Breaking the law, ignoring the Canada Health Act by privatizating MRIs so that rich Sask Party donors can jump the waiting line over your sick family members.

The failed $1.5 billion dollar Boundary dam carbon capture project.

Closure of the Buffalo Narrows jail.

Reducing the number of jobs in Saskatchewan by 10,000 since 2015.

500 people laid off at Rabbit Lake Uranium Mine.

Privatizing laundry services in hospitals and nursing homes resulting in bedbugs and dirty linen in health facilities.

Spending $1.8 billion dollars on the Regina bypass highway.

Privatizing the land titles and corporate registry services as well as DirectWest.

Allowing privatized blood clinics to buy blood from poor people.

Selling off public campsites and government cabins at Cypress Hills Provincial Park and Greenwater Lake.

Helping to light Saskatchewan citizens' houses on fire through the use of Smart Meters.

Spending $45 million dollars on the LEAN program by bringing Japanese origami teachers to Saskatchewan to improve our healthcare system.

Selling off public pastureland that farmers and ranchers use.

Cancelling the Film Employment Tax Credit and losing the bid for several large films to shoot in Saskatchewan, including Kevin Smith's movie "Moose Jaws", preventing millions from being brought into the Saskatchewan economy.

Doing nothing about the high HIV infection rate in Saskatchewan, 13.8 per 100,000 population, almost double the national average of 7.8 per 100,000.

"Never going back."™