Tim Houston: All Promise. No Progress.

Tim Houston and the PCs made a lot of big promises in the last election. And after three years, Nova Scotians are wondering… where’s the progress?

He said “There’s a fixed election date. And people, Nova Scotians know the date of it”, but he called a snap election 8 months early. He promised to give everything he had to fix healthcare, but the doctor waitlist has doubled since he was elected. He made a “better paycheque guarantee”, but walked that back stating “priorities shift”. And according to him, “fix is a subjective term”, and Nova Scotians were “ridiculous” to take him at his word.

Fixed Election Date? Nah!
You can vote for a Better Deal. Explore our platform and get all the details about how we'll deliver a Better Deal for Nova Scotians.

On a Fixed Election Date

The first law Tim Houston passed as Premier set July 15, 2025 as the date of the next general election.

After he championed this law for bringing “predictability and transparency” to provincial elections and for its “significant cost savings to taxpayers”, Tim has chosen political opportunism by calling a snap election that will cost Nova Scotians $13 million.


On fixing healthcare

Tim Houston’s chief election promise was to give everything he had to fix healthcare.

Despite spending millions more on healthcare, the doctor waitlist has more than doubled and ER deaths have hit a six year high. Tim Houston has since walked back his promise and told Nova Scotians that “fix is a subjective word.”… but at least we have a new app?

All Promise, No Progress on Healthcare

On a Better Paycheque Guarantee

Tim Houston promised Nova Scotians a Better Paycheque Guarantee on Day 1 of a new PC government.

Three years later, it seems this promise isn’t going to be fulfilled. All while Nova Scotia is home to the highest poverty rate in Canada alongside wages and government supports that aren’t keeping up.


On rewarding you for buying local

A key economic plank of the Conservatives’ platform was a program to reward consumers by giving back 10% of the money they spend on local goods.

After three years, the PCs finally unveiled Nova Scotia Loyal: a $6 million program that does little more than converting taxpayer dollars into a few Scene points.


On the Coastal Protection Act

The Conservatives’ own Climate Action Plan included a promise to proclaim the Coastal Protection Act – a bill they supported when Liberals introduced it in 2019.

After several years of waffling, and despite widespread support from Nova Scotians to get it done, Tim Houston chose to abandon the Act in 2024.


Let’s make Tim a One-Term Premier

Tim Houston is All Promise, No Progress. It’s time for a Better Deal.

Tim Houston’s broken promises are adding up – and so are the costs. Nova Scotians deserve better. The NS Liberals will deliver bold solutions to the challenges people are facing – and get things done.

Add your name

Name(Required)

By completing this form, you agree to receive email updates from the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. You are free to unsubscribe at any time using the link in the footer of the email.

This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form

On delivering universal mental health

Included in the Conservatives’ promise to fix healthcare was a commitment to universal mental healthcare.

Little progress here, either. In fact, in 2024, the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health gave Nova Scotia an “F” as their final grade for mental health and substance use services.


On empowering the Privacy Commissioner

In 2021, Tim Houston promised his government would have the courage to be held accountable by the people by giving the Privacy Commissioner order-making powers.

Since being in power, however, he’s softened his stance. On the contrary, under Tim Houston’s leadership, Nova Scotia was awarded the “Code of Silence” award by the Canadian Association of Journalists for walking back this promise.


It’s become clear that, on all of these issues, Tim Houston is all promise, no progress.

So many promises, so little progress