“Every time I look at the latest news from Canada I ask why my province is still part of a dysfunctional country.
I want out, and I can't understand why everyone in Alberta doesn't want the same thing.
Alberta can be so much better. Fortune favours the brave.”
Canada Can't Be Fixed. Alberta Needs to Chart Its Own Course
JEFFREY RATH:
Friends, I’ve said it before and I’ll keep saying it. Alberta’s future does not lie within a broken, dysfunctional Canada. It lies in our own hands, building an independent Alberta, run by Albertans, for Albertans.
I had the privilege of addressing a room full of hardworking, freedom-loving Albertans recently. If you missed it, I want you to hear exactly what I told them. The stakes couldn’t be higher, and the time for polite conversations is long gone.
The Truth They Don’t Want You to Hear
For over 100 years, Alberta has been treated like Ottawa’s colony. We’ve been stripped of wealth, muzzled by regulation, and told to sit quietly while Eastern politicians decide our fate. Meanwhile, our resources bankroll Quebec’s surpluses and our families pay the price with higher taxes, unemployment, and lost opportunities.
Ottawa’s latest trick? Universal Basic Income to create a nation of dependent voters. Lower the voting age ...
Danielle Smith's UCP cleaning up mess made by Premier Jason Kenny and Energy Minister Sonya Savage...
Alberta settles $16-billion coal case
The Globe and Mail Ontario Report on Business
By EMMA GRANEYFri, Jul 4, 2025
Alberta has settled with two of the companies suing the province for a combined $16-billion over the government's flip-flop on coal policy.
Evolve Power Ltd. and Atrum Coal Ltd. say they have reached agreements with the government to resolve their claims alleging the de facto expropriation of their coal assets, according to notices posted to each company's website.
What Albertans will pay the coal mining companies, however, remains unknown.
Both Evolve and Atrum noted that details of the settlement are still being discussed and would remain confidential until they are finalized, but said they expect to update shareholders on the agreements later this year.
Peter Doyle, the chief executive officer of Evolve, told The Globe and Mail he was unable to comment while negotiations are under way.
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