"Will my pension be safe if Alberta separates?" It's one of the questions we hear most, so let's clear it up.
Yes. The pension you've already earned doesn't disappear. An independent Alberta could run its own plan, exactly like Quebec does with the QPP today. A province our size can absolutely manage it.
Got a question about independence you want answered straight? Drop it below. 👇
#FreeAB #ForTheLoveOfAlberta
To All Albertans:
In the next week I will present to all Albertans how we can eliminate the entire WC Dani-Carney pipeline, add 1.8 million barrels of bitumen production IN ALBERTA, and first capture 600,000 barrels per day of additional capacity using the existing pipeline network that puts royalties in Albertans' pockets, NOT BC or Ottawa.
An Albertan Citizen Dividend is an Alberta First vision.
An additional 600,000 barrels per day = 1.9 billion barrels per year x $1/barrel dividend to Albertans = $380 per year per Albertan (man, woman and child) back in your pocket vs Dani Ottawa-First that delivers nothing but debt.
I will do it without carbon removal equipment, without CO2 pipelines and put great paying jobs in Alberta.
Iin the meantime, call the Premier's office and your MLA and demand a Leadership Review and tell her to stop the pipeline. We don't need it.
Stay tuned.
https://t.co/jT4rLoGDD7
#AlbertaRenewal #AlbertaFirst #LeadershipReview
One of my favourite moments from this weekend happened at our Calgary lawn sign pop-up on Saturday, July 4th.
A gentleman who opposes Alberta independence stopped by with a long list of questions. We ended up having an honest, respectful conversation that lasted over 40 minutes.
This is exactly what democracy should look like.
No yelling. No insults. No cancel culture. Just two people with different viewpoints taking the time to listen, ask questions, challenge ideas, and have a genuine conversation.
Whether you agree with me or not, I encourage you to listen to the discussion yourself.
What I found especially interesting was that, while he remained opposed to Alberta's independence, he couldn't identify a positive reason for Alberta to remain in Canada beyond general stability. Instead, many of the concerns he raised were actually reasons Albertans often give for wanting greater sovereignty or independence.
He openly acknowledged that:
• He doesn't like how "woke" Canada has become.
• After paying his bills each month, he has only about $100 left.
• He's concerned about the direction of Mark Carney's legislation, particularly around online privacy, identity verification, and government access to personal information.
• He believes Canada's immigration system has changed significantly from the merit-based system he experienced.
We didn't agree on everything—and that's okay.
Civil conversations like this are how people learn from one another. Nobody has to walk away agreeing, but everyone benefits when we're willing to ask questions rather than shout slogans.
Take a listen, and let me know what you think. I'd especially like to hear whether you think conversations like this are the right way to discuss Alberta's future.
So happy that Smith has announced another phoney pipeline plan.
What Smith refuses to acknowledge is that it will be years before there is enough excess capacity to fill these imaginary pipelines because the Net Zero Carbon Tax Decarbonization Smith Carney MOU is driving investment out of Alberta to countries that don’t have all of these destructive taxes and regulations.
Whose going to pay for this fake pipeline? Ontario? I doubt it. They wouldn’t even let Doug “Eric Cartman” Ford have his own plane. 😂
No one cares about imperialism or colonization or mass murder or genocide or slaughter
Genghis Khan killed 10% of the world's population, and he is on the Mongolian currency and has countless statues
They even named an airport after him
No one nags them
They just hate Whites
@KryptoKenCPU@Larry5Shot You sound like a whiny incoherent retard. You scared of more people are taller than you? Relax, HGH is not dangerous when used in prescribed doses
@YukonStrong Notice that the comments are turned off in the post that says there is no plan. They don’t want people posting links to
“THE VALUE OF FREEDOM - A Draft Fiscal Plan For an Independent Alberta”
https://t.co/sGtG5MKT6l
I got you bro
-No more GST, carbon tax or federal income tax
-gun grab over
-immigration halts
-For 1st time since confederation 🆎votes will dictate their own future
Plan
-New constitution
-property rights, speech, privacy
-govt powerless to legislate w\o consent of citizenry
🚨A very important decision, and an important win for citizens, from the Alberta Court of Appeal today!
The Court of Appeal granted a partial stay of Justice Leonard’s decision.
The Court recognized the irreparable harm that would be caused by the delay. As time passes, verification becomes more difficult, public confidence in the integrity of the petition process can erode, and delaying verification causes harm to the appellant that cannot later be remedied or compensated with money. The Court found this harm was distinct from any delay in advancing the referendum itself and could not be cured after the fact.
Today’s decision is also important because it helps clear the record. There has been significant public confusion arising from these court challenges and the various resulting decisions. In my view, the litigation itself, and the way much of the legacy media chose to report on it, created far more confusion and division than the citizen initiative petition ever did.
One aspect of the Alberta Court of Appeal’s decision deserves particular attention.
The Court clarified that the constitutionality of portions of the Citizen Initiative Act has never been decided.
In other words, the respondents’ constitutional challenge remains unresolved because the chambers judge did not rule on that issue. The Court of Appeal expressly recognized that it remains outstanding and will have to be determined another day.
Importantly, the constitutional question was not decided against the appellant. It remains an open legal issue for another proceeding.
That distinction matters.
For months, many people were left with the impression that the courts had already determined the constitutionality of the legislation or the petition. They had not.
Lawyers and the legacy media have an important responsibility to help the public understand what the courts have actually decided and what they have not. Rather than feeding confusion or sensationalizing ongoing litigation, they should strive to provide clear, accurate, and balanced information. An informed public is essential to maintaining confidence in both our justice system and our democracy.
Hopefully, going forward, we can all do better by informing the public with accuracy rather than adding to confusion.
SAY IT LOUDER BEN MULRONEY!! LOUDER @BenMulroney
This is 100% RACISM!!
Government job postings that openly say “BIPOC only” and explicitly state “Caucasian not permitted to apply.”
Your tax dollars — from every single Canadian, including white Canadians — are good enough to take, spend, and waste.
But YOU are not good enough to even apply for the job because of the colour of your skin.
This isn’t “equity.”
This isn’t a “remedy.”
This is straight-up anti-white racism, government-sanctioned and taxpayer-funded.
And the Liberals defend it like it’s normal.
Call it what it is: RACISM.
Pure. Simple. Disgusting.
Who else is done with this anti-white double standard? 👇
#cdnpoli #Racism #CanadaFirst
Good Morning Alberta.
I have been looking at the Alberta Pension Plan possibility:
We would be crazy not to vote Yes for APP.
Our Seniors would benefit tremendously
For decades, Alberta workers have been paying way more into the Canada Pension Plan than seniors here actually get back.
Between 2008 and 2017 alone, Alberta’s net contribution was $27.9 billion far more than any other province.
Over a longer stretch from 1981 to 2022, that number reached $53.6 billion.
That money has been helping fund pensions across the rest of Canada.
An Alberta Pension Plan would change that.
Instead of sending big surpluses to Ottawa, we’d keep the contributions and the investment returns right here in Alberta.
The numbers look promising.
An APP could run with much lower contribution rates around 5.91% combined instead of the current 9.9% under CPP.
That could save workers and employers up to $1,425 a year each, or $2,850 a year for self-employed Albertans.
Those savings could go straight into personal retirement accounts.
Combined with a well-funded APP that starts with a large asset base, many analyses show Albertans could end up with significantly more retirement income in some projections, nearly double what they’d get under the current system when you factor in the extra savings over a full career.
It’s simple: keep more of our own money working for Alberta workers and seniors, instead of subsidizing everyone else.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Let Alberta Decide Responds to Calgary Chamber: “The Real Economic Risk Is Alberta Staying Under Ottawa’s Control”
Calgary, Alberta, June 24, 2026 — Let Alberta Decide is responding to today’s Calgary Chamber of Commerce news release by saying the Chamber has focused on fear while ignoring the larger economic reality: Alberta’s economy has been held back for more than a decade by federal policies that have driven away investment, constrained resource development, and limited Alberta’s potential.
Keith Wilson, K.C., co-lead of Let Alberta Decide, said the Chamber’s release misses the central issue.
“The Chamber is measuring fear, not opportunity,” said Wilson. “It is warning Albertans about hypothetical uncertainty from independence while ignoring the real uncertainty Alberta businesses have lived with under Ottawa. The greatest threat to Alberta’s economy is not Albertans having a democratic vote on their future. The greatest threat is allowing Ottawa to keep blocking, capping, taxing, delaying, and politicizing the industries that built this province.”
Wilson said Alberta remains one of Canada’s strongest economies despite federal policies that have discouraged investment in energy, infrastructure, agriculture, and resource development.
“Alberta’s farmland is not moving. Alberta’s oil and gas reserves are not moving. Our skilled trades, engineers, entrepreneurs, service companies, infrastructure, and young workforce are here,” Wilson said. “Alberta is not a branch office economy. Alberta is a producing economy.”
Let Alberta Decide says the Chamber’s release also ignores the massive capital flight Canada has experienced under the current federal policy environment, with recent economic analysis reporting that more than $1 trillion in investment left Canada between 2015 and 2024.
“Businesses do not leave because a people debate their future,” Wilson said. “Investment leaves when governments make the rules unpredictable, and Ottawa has done that to Alberta for more than a decade. That capital did not leave Canada because Albertans were discussing independence. It left under the current federal system.”
Wilson said independence would give Alberta authority over resource regulation, taxation, immigration policy, infrastructure approvals, trade policy, pipeline approvals, and market access.
“Albertans should be making the decisions that shape Alberta’s economy,” Wilson said. “Those decisions determine whether projects get built, whether jobs are created, and whether young Albertans can build their futures here at home.”
Wilson rejected the Chamber’s reliance on Brexit as a comparison.
“Brexit is the wrong analogy,” Wilson said. “The UK moved away from its largest market. Alberta independence would allow Alberta to negotiate directly with our largest and most important market—the United States—without Ottawa sacrificing Alberta’s interests to protect Central Canadian priorities.”
Let Alberta Decide noted that the Chamber’s survey was not a representative poll of Albertans or Alberta businesses. It was a survey of Chamber members who chose to respond. Even then, the Chamber’s numbers show that a majority of respondents did not say they would relocate if Albertans voted to begin the independence process.
“If the Chamber wants its poll treated as evidence, it should release the evidence,” Wilson said. “Albertans deserve to see the questions, sample size, response rate, and methodology.”
“Alberta has the resources, institutions, workforce, and economic capacity to be a successful independent country,” Wilson said.
Media Contact:
Let Alberta Decide
[email protected]