Braid: Trudeau trash talks Alberta climate change action, drawing hot response from Smith

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is either clueless about what’s going in Alberta, or cares nothing for the truth.

That’s the unpleasant choice in his inflammatory remarks about provincial action on climate change.

“One of the challenges is there is a political class in Alberta that has decided that anything to do with climate change is going to be bad for them or for Alberta,” Trudeau said in an interview with Reuters, the business news service with a worldwide audience.

Says the nation wrecking eco-nutbar

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Ottawa must scrap polarizing term ‘just transition’: Alberta environment minister

Alberta’s environment minister says Ottawa must stop using the term “just transition” because she believes it is shorthand for phasing out Canada’s oil and gas industry.

“The problem with the just transition, it’s a polarizing term,” Sonya Savage said. “And they’ve been using it.”

Savage told CBC’s Rosemary Barton Live on Sunday that the Alberta government and Ottawa agree on many things, including reducing emissions from the oil and gas sector. But she said while the federal Liberals have “walked away” from using the “divisive term,” it’s still being used on Natural Resources Canada’s website.

The LPC lies – they will shutdown the oil and gas industry.

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Conservatives in Western Canada Pass Law Rejecting Federal Sovereignty

A new law in the province of Alberta radically circumscribes federal authority, advancing the agenda of the province’s far-right secessionist movement.

OTTAWA — In the heavily conservative western prairie province of Alberta, Canada, many residents, especially those on the far right, chafed at the Covid-19 restrictions imposed by the Liberal federal government in Ottawa, the country’s capital.

The widespread resentment helped fuel the enormous truck blockade this year that disrupted trade with the United States and paralyzed Ottawa for a month.

Now, oil-rich Alberta has ratcheted up the long-running schism between western and eastern Canada by approving a bill allowing the province to ignore any federal laws and regulations it opposes, a move some critics described as an unconstitutional threat to the basic fabric of the country’s government.

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GOLDSTEIN: It’s nonsense to claim Canada’s oil and gas sector is dying

In the real world, as opposed to the fantasy one which too many Canadian politicians inhabit, oil and natural gas are going to be major sources of Canadian and global energy for decades to come.

The federal government’s Canada Energy Regulator projected in 2019 that Canada’s oil sector will grow by almost 50%, and the natural gas sector by 30%, from 2018 to 2040.

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Carson Jerema: Surprise, Danielle Smith’s sovereignty act is very likely constitutional

What you think you might know about Danielle Smith’s Alberta Sovereignty Act is probably wrong. Whatever the demerits of the bill, which enables provincial non-enforcement of federal laws, it is not “unconstitutional.” Nor does it “erase the rule of law,” or empower the legislature to circumvent the courts, as Premier Smith’s critics argue. Those criticisms were valid against earlier versions of this proposal, but have no bearing here.

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Danielle Smith unveils sovereignty act in attempt to shield Alberta from federal laws

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has introduced her highly anticipated sovereignty act, which would allow cabinet to direct cities, police, health authorities, universities and other entities to ignore federal laws that the government believes are unconstitutional or harmful to the province.

The bill, formally known as the Alberta Sovereignty Within a United Canada Act, was a central promise of Ms. Smith’s successful United Conservative Party leadership campaign, which focused on escalating the province’s fight with Ottawa on a range of issues from environmental protection to gun control. Legal scholars previously panned the idea as unconstitutional and it has been divisive even within the UCP, with former premier Jason Kenney and most of Ms. Smith’s leadership rivals condemning it during the campaign.

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Premier Danielle Smith to end agreement with World Economic Forum

EDMONTON – Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said she is cancelling a health consulting agreement involving the World Economic Forum — an agency at the centre of global domination conspiracy theories — because she won’t work with a group that talks about controlling governments.

“I find it distasteful when billionaires brag about how much control they have over political leaders,” Smith said at a news conference Monday after her new cabinet was sworn in.

“That is offensive … the people who should be directing government are the people who vote for them.

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Finally! A sane Canadian leader

Canada at the national level is run by a fascist man-child, purported son of Fidel Castro, Prime Minister Trudeau. He has been hurtling Canada down a dark path leading to tyranny. He is a tyrant with a pretty smile.

But as with the United States, Canada is a federal system and the provinces each have their own governments. I am no expert on Canadian politics–come on, who is?–but even I know that Western Canada has some much saner residents than Toronto and Vancouver.

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Danielle Smith considers dropping COVID lockdown charges, apologizes to unvaccinated

The premier of Alberta, Canada, said she is working on a plan to pardon residents who were fined or arrested over breaking coronavirus protocols, and apologized to unvaccinated Canadians who faced “discrimination.”

“I’m deeply sorry for anyone who was inappropriately subjected to discrimination as a result of their vaccine status,”Premier Danielle Smith said Saturday. “I am deeply sorry for any government employee that was fired from their job because of their vaccine status, and I welcome them back if they want to come back.”

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That was fast…

In reversal of policy, adviser says Danielle Smith’s sovereignty act would respect Supreme Court decisions

The top adviser to incoming Alberta premier Danielle Smith says her proposed sovereignty act would respect Supreme Court of Canada decisions — a reversal of her core policy promise on how she would challenge Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government.

Rob Anderson, Smith’s campaign chair for the United Conservative Party leadership and now executive director of her transition team, told CBC in a story published Saturday that Smith’s proposed sovereignty act won’t empower Alberta to disregard Supreme Court rulings.

But Anderson promised that the act, which has yet to be drafted, would “have a whole head of very sharp teeth” and “change the dynamic” with Trudeau’s Liberal government.

How many voted  for just that policy? Just another bullshit politician.

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‘I think we would win that battle’: Danielle Smith promises to fight for resource development in Alberta

OTTAWA – Alberta premier-designate Danielle Smith says she’s ready to take the fight to Ottawa for Alberta’s autonomy to develop its resources, so that it can build pipelines to get oil and gas to market and boost the forestry and agriculture sectors.

“We’ve always been treated like a subordinate level of government,” she said in an interview on CTV’s Question Period, airing Sunday. “We’ve acted like it. But we’re going to stop acting like that. We’re going to take our place as a senior partner in Confederation.”

Smith also plans to take the federal carbon tax back to the Supreme Court, after it ruled just last year that the policy is constitutional.

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GUNTER: Smith would do well to tie Notley to Trudeau ahead of spring Alberta election

If you want to know why Danielle Smith’s anti-Ottawa message was so popular during the recently concluded UCP leadership campaign, consider this one statistic. Annual investment in Alberta’s energy sector remains only about one-half of what it was before the world price of oil collapsed in 2014.

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Other oil-producing countries, such as the United States, Norway and Saudi Arabia, that aren’t in the midst of war or domestic turmoil (Russia, Venezuela, Iran), have seen their oil and gas investment return to 70 per cent or more of 2014 levels. But not Canada.

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Carson Jerema: It’s now Danielle Smith vs. Justin Trudeau

EDMONTON — Only a fool would believe that Alberta’s new premier, Danielle Smith, only appeals to malcontents blindly raging at intrusive COVID policies and Justin Trudeau. That is certainly part of her base — the new United Conservative Party leader actively courted separatists and vaccine refusers — but the anger Smith has so expertly marshalled to her side is the same resentment that the man she is replacing, Jason Kenney, rode to electoral victory just three-and-a-half years ago.

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