News
So why would a government make it harder for older people to get vaccines against COVID, which dispatched 389 citizens from ...
Why the premier hates that Elections Alberta approved the ‘Alberta Forever Canada’ citizen initiative petition.
17h
Green Matters on MSNWhat Would Happen if Alberta Left Canada? Support Is Growing for Separatist MovementThere is growing support for the separatist movement in Alberta, Canada, believing that the province should gain independence ...
Dan Williams. Officially, he is the Minister of Municipal Affairs. In the meat-and-potatoes world it means he’s the guy ...
1hOpinion
Edmonton Journal on MSNWednesday's letters: Pushing separation isn't Smith's jobWhat would happen if I went to downtown Edmonton and encouraged 1,000 people to take over Canada Place and destroy it? My ...
5dOpinion
Edmonton Journal on MSNLorne Gunter: Chill the rhetoric on Alberta separatism referendum questionsPremier Danielle Smith and Justice Minister Mickey Amery recoiled at the second question being passed off to the courts.
The premier and her justice minister, Mickey Amery, tried to bully Chief Electoral Officer Gordon McClure into dropping his plan, announced Monday, to ask the courts to determine if a referendum ...
The Canadian Press on MSN6d
Alberta premier's request for separation referendum question approval rebuffedAlberta's chief electoral officer is rebuffing calls from Premier Danielle Smith and her justice minister to reverse course ...
4dOpinion
Calgary Herald on MSNOpinion: Premier Smith's wine tax isn't 'Canada First' - it's politics firstWhen Premier Danielle Smith stood beside B.C. Premier David Eby in May 2024 and announced a new agreement to allow ...
Opinion
6dOpinion
Calgary Herald on MSNBell: Danielle Smith vs. Gondek on Calgary bike lanes — the mayor retreatsDevin Dreeshen, Premier Danielle Smith’s point man on pavement, is one happy guy. He met with Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek about city bike lanes. He walked away with what he sees as a win for motorists.
Released this week, an Environics Research poll found that 73 per cent of Canadians support new oil pipelines. Perhaps most ...
In the 1950s, the economy was the only concern — climate change wasn't yet on government's radar. That isn't the case in 2025, and our leaders should act accordingly.
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