Alberta will vote on whether to break away from Canada

Later this year, the province of Alberta in western Canada will conduct a vote to determine if its residents are interested in pursuing independence from the rest of the nation.

Scheduled for October 19, this vote is not immediately binding but will serve to assess whether Albertans wish to initiate a formal separation process, potentially leading to a subsequent official referendum.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith made the announcement last week, responding to growing separatist sentiment, highlighted by a petition advocating for independence, which has garnered over 300,000 signatures.

The Alberta Prosperity Project, led by gun store owner Mitch Sylvestre and attorney Jeffrey Rath, is at the forefront of this independence movement.

Advocates argue that Alberta’s economic potential has been stifled by policies crafted in Canada’s eastern provinces, especially those originating from Ottawa, the nation’s capital.

Why Alberta Separatists Want to Break From Canada 

Rich in oil resources, Alberta’s separatists contend that stringent environmental regulations introduced under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have hindered the province’s ability to construct pipelines and fully capitalize on its natural wealth.

They also believe that Alberta is a victim of ‘western alienation,’ a decades-old idea held by some in Canada’s conservative-leaning western provinces, which claims that the area is neglected by national politicians in Ottawa.

They believe elites in the country’s more populous eastern provinces have disproportionate sway in Alberta’s internal affairs. 

The province’s population is just over 5 million compared to Ontario and Quebec’s combined population of 22.7 million.

Rath, one of the separatist movement’s leaders, has traveled to Washington multiple times and met with Trump administration officials to ask for a $500 billion line of credit if the province were to become independent. 

‘The US is extremely enthusiastic about a free and independent Alberta,’ Rath said earlier this year, though the US has downplayed the meetings and emphasized that no commitments have been made.  

The separatist petition, which was launched earlier this year, needed 177,000 signatures by May to be brought before the legislature. It nearly doubled that threshold.

Court Battle Erupts Over Alberta Independence Petition 

A provincial court blocked the petition earlier this month, saying that its organizers failed to consult indigenous First Nations who would be impacted by independence.

But Premier Smith’s administration appealed the decision, saying she would not let ‘a single judge silence the voices of hundreds of thousands of Albertans.’

Despite growing separatist sentiment in Alberta, the majority of the province’s citizens, including Smith, are in favor of remaining a part of Canada per recent polling.

An anti-separation petition organized by Forever Canadian, a group led by former Alberta Deputy Premier Thomas Lukaszuk, collected more than 400,000 signatures. 

Additionally, polls indicate that a large majority of Albertans would vote to remain unified with Canada. A January Ipsos poll determined that just 28 percent of the province’s citizens would vote ‘yes’ in an independence referendum. 

And of the separatists questioned in that poll, around a fifth said that their support for independence was symbolic or conditional, amounting to more of a political bargaining tool than a total commitment to separation. 

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney is also committed to keeping Alberta unified with the rest of the country.

Prime Minister Pledges Alberta Will Stay Central to Canada 

He has shared ambitions of making the nation an ‘energy superpower,’ and Alberta’s wealth of oil is key to those plans. 

The prime minister, who was raised in Edmonton, Alberta, said earlier this month: ‘We’re renovating the country as we go, and Alberta being at the center of that is essential.’

This week, Carney said that the upcoming vote could become a ‘dangerous bluff’ and compared it to Brexit, the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union (EU) which has so far proven an economic drag.

Carney served as governor of the ⁠Bank of England during Brexit, he said: ‘I saw firsthand what happened in the United Kingdom. They’re still ​10 years later trying to undo what people didn’t think they were voting for, but ⁠what they ended up having.’

The British pound collapsed in relation to foreign currencies after the UK voted to leave the EU and it has never returned to pre-Brexit levels. 

Foreign investment has also suffered, and London’s stock market and IPO landscape have lagged in the years since. 

Some economists have estimated that the UK’s GDP was reduced by up to eight percent last year thanks to the cumulative effects of separation.

Historic Alberta Separation Vote Draws Closer 

Despite the prime minister’s warning, the vote will still take place in five months, leaving a significant stretch of time for parties on either side of the issue to make their cases.

That may lead to unexpected results when in October, the province’s citizens are asked: ‘Should Alberta remain a province of Canada or should the Government of Alberta commence the legal process required under the Canadian Constitution to hold a binding provincial referendum on whether or not Alberta should separate from Canada?’

The vote will mark the first time in Canadian history that a province other than Francophone Quebec has put the question of separation to the public. 

In 1995, Quebec narrowly avoided separating from Canada when 50.58 percent of referendum voters elected to remain unified with the country. 

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