US source but a solid read.

      • @Tm12@lemmy.caOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        914 days ago

        UCP won all but 3 Calgary seats. Calgarians should be pressuring their UCP MLA’s, especially given the internal divisions within the party, and their slimming majority. 🦗 🦗

        • Sixty
          link
          fedilink
          English
          8
          edit-2
          14 days ago

          As someone in Alberta I’m not convinced the people didn’t slide to the alt right along with the party. Basically, it’s the Wildrose party in all but name. The crazies ate the short sighted moderates who merged with them to avoid losing again.

          Nobody hates on Jason Kenney like they should. He killed this province. Whether he and/or Smith are symptoms of the same disease rotting the floor boards out of the USA aside.

        • @sugarfoot00@lemmy.ca
          link
          fedilink
          English
          414 days ago

          No they didn’t. Calgary has 25 seats, 14 of which are NDP. In 2023 there were 5 more that were lost by fewer than 1100 votes combined, which would have changed the outcome of the election. This was the best head-to-head showing by the NDP in Alberta ever.

          And with high-visibility Calgary-centric Nenshi as leader, It’s entirely possible that that balance flips.

          Calgary isn’t as conservative as you might want to believe.

        • @potate@lemmy.ca
          link
          fedilink
          214 days ago

          A bunch o’ ridings were gearing up for recall campaigns before the federal election got called. A whole lot of folks were distributing literature and rallying volunteers until folks refocused on the federal election.

          Once the election is done, I’m pretty confident that’ll ramp up again - the UCP ain’t getting less corrupt. Check out abresistance.ca for info.

    • Sixty
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1014 days ago

      Half of Calgary too. The seats in Calgary were very close calls for a UCP victory.

  • @droopy4096@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    2014 days ago

    UCP has majority only thanks to FPP. There’s plenty Albertans who’d vote different but feel trapped between two parties (Liberals are a non-existent entity there). I can guarantee you that anecdotally and from pure math majority government of AB represents views of 30% of it’s population, meaning 70% did not vote for tham. And of those 30% representation only a very vocal minority is driving separatist talk… We can all thank FPP for that.

      • StinkyFingerItchyBum
        link
        fedilink
        English
        314 days ago

        Seems odd. To be consistent, they should jail opposition candidates and stuff ballot boxes and murder traitorous opposition to the one true leader. I propose a new model : The Thunderdome. Two go in, one comes out, until the leader is chosen.

    • @Warehouse@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      614 days ago

      UCP has majority only thanks to FPP.

      As much as I would like that to be true, the UCP got 52% of the vote last election. So even under MMP they would have got a majority government.

      • @droopy4096@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        3
        edit-2
        14 days ago

        look at the math: 60% turn-out, of which 52% voted UCP… that makes it ~31% at best. Which is my point. With FPP whoever is not willing to vote for any of the “major contestants” doesn’t feel like their vote matters. So you’ve got 70% who did not vote for UCP for one or other reason

        • @droopy4096@lemmy.ca
          link
          fedilink
          314 days ago

          Now think about this fact: last election conservatives knew they were threatened by NDP, so you’d expect all the UCP loyalists to show up, but in fact turn-out is lower and results are way worse than prior election. In other words if we assume that those 70% contain more UCP supporters (or secession folk) I can’t find plausible evidence to support that. So that’s their entire electorate give or take a few thousands. The rest wants nothing to do with them. If it wasn’t for FPP, AB governance would look very different. But like I said earlier - none of the parties (NDP included) is willing to change that.

          • @Warehouse@lemmy.ca
            link
            fedilink
            English
            314 days ago

            none of the parties (NDP included) is willing to change that.

            The NDP got to form government due to vote splitting, and should the UCP split vote splitting would hand them the election again so I wouldn’t be that surprised.

  • @Darkcoffee@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    814 days ago

    I hate to say it but compared to Quebec we almost don’t care if they leave or not, cuz they’re being petulent children about it.

    I have many friends from Alberta. I don’t hate Albertans. But damn your politics are stupid.

    • @Auli@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      614 days ago

      No the people are stupid also. Complain about government then vote same government in again and again.

  • @Dearche@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    614 days ago

    What’s a threat to Canadian unity isn’t Alberta, but it’s pushing Alberta isolation like this that’s doing it.

    It seems like only 20% of Alberta actually wants succession, and a lot of it is conditional on BC joining them, which is basically a nonstarter for BC anyways.

    The threat to Canada is Alberta feeling isolated and articles like this furthers such sentiment.

    • Victor Villas
      link
      fedilink
      5
      edit-2
      14 days ago

      It seems like only 20% of Alberta actually wants succession

      I get your point but Alberta’s government, chosen by Albertans, are putting unity at stake. So while I agree that public support isn’t favourable to this ones specific decision, the people in power are testing the waters and this also matters a lot, so the article isn’t suddenly invalidated just because it’s the wishes of a minority. It can still be dangerous.

      • @Dearche@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        214 days ago

        Oh I agree that Alberta’s premier is part of the problem. But she’s also a greater problem for Alberta in general on a wide variety of issues.

        I just think that it’s unfair to bash the entire province for the views of a minority that’s so small that they make Quebecan separatism feel like they’re only an election away from a super majority.

        From what I can tell (though maybe I’m reading things wrong since I’m not an Albertan) is that Albertans are just frustrated with having no control over their own province and being jostled around by Ontario just because it’s a larger and better established province who’s entire attention is occupied by Quebec when not looking inwards.

        That said, I do also think that a massive amount of Alberta’s problems are entirely self-inflicted, what with how much the resource companies are getting away with such low taxes and doing nothing to value add the resources Albertans are practically giving away to the US at a discounted price.

        • Victor Villas
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          13 days ago

          I just think that it’s unfair to bash the entire province for the views of a minority that’s so small that they make Quebecan separatism feel like they’re only an election away from a super majority.

          I think the intent here is not to bash anyone, let alone the collective on its entirety. You can read “Alberta is a threat to Canadian unity” more as “Alberta’s Government is a threat to Canadian unity”. And if next election cycle the people of Alberta decides to re-elect Danielle Smith, then you’ll have your awaited answer on whether albertans themselves, as a collective, are also a threat to Canadian unity.

    • @wampus@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      214 days ago

      Western alienation has been around for decades and decades.

      It’s difficult to consider something a threat, when it’s become the status quo.

  • @AGM@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    5
    edit-2
    14 days ago

    As a former Albertan, there’s still a lot I like about the province, such as lots of people who are educated, principled, and hard working.

    Of course, that’s not everyone, and even among the well-educated are many engineers who think in black and white and lack much of the education from the humanities that would give perspective on history. The oil industry is also very powerful, full of arrogance about the industry, dominated by US business, and tends to celebrate good times from high oil prices as a sign of their own excellence while blaming hard times from low oil prices on the rest of Canada and “liberal policies”.

    Calgary and Edmonton are also both much more politically diverse than the rest of the province and are pretty socially conscious and have a lot of people who dislike that about the province’s politics.

    I just worry about Albertans being specifically targeted from outside Canada via US social platforms and oil industry professional networks to undermine unity and foment separatism.

  • @CircaV@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    -214 days ago

    Fuck AB I hope they leave. AB would be very VERY tiny cause they can’t secede lands that aren’t theirs eg. indigenous territory.

    • @Sicsurfer@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      914 days ago

      Are you attempting to help the American propaganda machine? Because that’s how you do it. Fuck people who think like this and spew that nonsense on social media

      • @CircaV@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        English
        014 days ago

        No, but I am sick and tired of hearing Preston Manning and Marlaina of AB whinging and crying for them to leave. Fine leave then dipshits. It’s not that easy though.