Bell: Danielle Smith leaves th...
It seems to me another attempt to distract #Albertans from fraud and corruption charges.
We should stop amplifying these distractions, and instead call them out as attempts to avoid being held to account for crimes committed in office.
Every single point raised is about fossil fuels.
Does she not realize there are #farmers in #Alberta? There is #engineering which does not involve petroleum? There is manufacturing of products which are not based on plastic?
Does she realize she is supposed to #lobby for #Albertans, who pay her, and not the #OilIndustry, who are legally not allowed to pay her?
Does she realize she just declared war on #Canada and its trade negotiations with the USA?
“This American speaking tour won’t reduce #Trump #tariffs, but it will send a signal to #Albertans that #DanielleSmith is focused on her extremist base, not on them.”
https://edmonton.citynews.ca/2025/03/10/alberta-ndp-smith-cancel-ben-shapiro/
Premier Danielle Smith’s upcoming speaking appearance with conservative media personality Ben Shapiro is being criticized by the Opposition in Alberta. Calling Shapiro an “extremist,” Alberta New Democrat Leader Naheed Nenshi says Smith should cancel her meeting with the popular American personality. Smith is scheduled to speak at a March 27 fundraiser for Florida-based PragerU, a […]
Remember #Alberta
Now that Peter Guthrie has walked out on the #UCP over what his leaving suggests are CRIMINAL shenanigans, you only need to convince 8 MLA's all told to cross the floor;
WINNING a
NO CONFIDENCE VOTE
which will trigger a provincial election.
8!
#Albertans call your legislative member today and tell them you are sick of Dani' doing everything she promised the UCP wouldn't in order to get elected.
Get em OUT, NOW, before they sell your asses out for pennies on the USD
The two-month GST/HST tax break ended on Saturday. The Canadian government introduced the freeze to alleviate cost-of-living pressures on certain items, including groceries, restaurant meals, books, games, children's toys and clothing. However, the five per cent savings didn’t make much difference for the Albertans we spoke with.