Logging is imminent in an area home to a threatened bison herd in northern Alberta
A group of Indigenous Elders, Knowledge Keepers and trappers has been pushing for more protection...
Danielle Smith is the premier of Alberta. After taking over as the leader of the United Conservative Party, she steered the UCP to victory over the NDP in the 2023 Alberta election.
Many thought Smith’s political career was over in 2014 when, as the leader of the now-defunct Wildrose Party, she led a mass floor crossing to the governing Progressive Conservatives.
The surprise move angered her supporters and was considered a major factor in the election of Alberta’s first NDP government. That, in turn, was a driving force in the unite the right campaign that eventually merged the PCs and the Wildrose into the current United Conservative Party.
After leaving politics, Smith soon found herself hosting a radio show and eventually heading up the Alberta Enterprise Group — a business advocacy organization which lobbied the provincial government.
Despite predictions that she’d never return to politics, Smith entered the race to become leader of the UCP in 2022 after Jason Kenney stepped aside following months of controversy and dismal polling numbers. She won the race in October 2022.
During the leadership campaign, Smith courted anger at pandemic public health policies which helped to bring down Kenney, and promised to stick it to Ottawa with her proposed Alberta Sovereignty Act that she insisted would allow the province to ignore some federal laws.
Those promises and the wave of frustration that crowned her leader of the UCP have been a source of controversy now that she’s in government.
The new premier has struggled under the weight of controversies — from claiming unproven Indigenous heritage, to her watered-down Alberta Sovereignty Act, to saying the unvaccinated face more discrimination than any other group, to her proposal to subsidize oil and gas companies to clean up their messes and a short-lived war of words over proposed federal “just transition” legislation.
A group of Indigenous Elders, Knowledge Keepers and trappers has been pushing for more protection...
Pierre Poilievre is eyeing the Port of Churchill as a way to increase fossil fuel...
One of the planet’s worst invasive species, wild pigs can ruin natural habitats, eat crops,...
Despite many shared goals, Alberta and Ottawa are on a collision course as climate politics...
Imperial Oil was the first to receive reclamation certificates based on remote sensing technologies and...
Alberta Energy terminated the contract of the person preparing the release of records of its...
In closed-door meetings with Alberta officials, lobbyists repackaged long-standing requests — on everything from wetland...
The province, long dependent on coal, is set to exceed the ambitious goal for renewable...
Newly obtained documents reveal the Alberta Energy Regulator has kept a confidential list of ‘potentially...
As members of B.C. Premier David Eby’s new cabinet headed to their swearing-in ceremony on Nov. 18, they were greeted by about two dozen people...
Continue reading