Alberta sovereignty act is unworkable, dictatorial and much too wide\u002Dranging. It should be canned so government can focus on real problems
Everybody involved is appalled that this is happening.
The UCP, in its late-pandemic denialism, has not publicly raised a genuine system breakdown to anything like the level it deserves. The sovereignty act has three massive problems; it’s genuinely dictatorial, too broad in scope, and completely impractical. The federal government recently used the tactic in its bill on greenhouse gas pricing. Alberta opposed it vigorously in the Supreme Court.
Second, the sovereignty act is ludicrously wide-ranging. It would confer power to defy federal law not just when a federal move is arguably unconstitutional, but even when virtually anything Ottawa says offends the government.Article content
المملكة العربية السعودية أحدث الأخبار, المملكة العربية السعودية عناوين
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Braid: Dictatorial, unworkable sovereignty act may be worst legislation in Alberta historyAlberta sovereignty act is unworkable, dictatorial and much too wide\u002Dranging. It should be canned so government can focus on real problems
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Braid: Dictatorial, unworkable sovereignty act may be worst legislation in Alberta historyAlberta sovereignty act is unworkable, dictatorial and much too wide\u002Dranging. It should be canned so government can focus on real problems
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Smith wants Alberta's sovereigntyOTTAWA—Alberta Premier Danielle Smith wants sovereignty in a united Canada. She claims it has nothing to do with a desire to separate, but the first bill she tabled as premier says otherwise. The crux of the bill is to give her cabinet the right to refuse to proceed with any federal legislation or action that it perceives as detrimental to Alberta. Notwithstanding her promises while running for the United Conservative Party leadership, she makes it very plain that her cabinet decisions take precedence over the Canadian Constitution. Observers have underscored problems with the legislation, but they have more to do with internal Alberta politics than anything coming from Ottawa. The decision to give cabinet the right to overturn all laws could actually cause problems for democracy in Alberta. The move certainly seems to diminish the power of the legislature’s involvement in the approval, rejection, or amendment of any legislation. In a majority government, the cabinet recommendation is usually carried by the legislature. But that is not a given. Minority governments are unlikely in Alberta, given the dominance of only two political parties. But the decision to simply override parliamentary opinion by way of a cabinet fiat is definitely a political mistake. At this point, the premier has to be a lot more concerned about her standing amongst Alberta voters than her popularity, or lack thereof, in the rest of the country. She has to face the voters in less than six months, and even her immediate predecessor has made it very clear that he disagrees with her sovereignty pitch. In resigning on the same day that Smith tabled the sovereignty bill, outgoing premier Jason Kenney took an indirect hit at Smith’s first piece of legislation by way of his retirement statement: “I am concerned that our democratic life is veering away from ordinary prudential debate towards a polarization that undermines our bedrock institutions and principles.” There has never been any love lost
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KINSELLA: Alberta Premier Danielle Smith picking fight with Canada to get re-electedThe Trudeau government has gone too far, this time.
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Alberta changing sovereignty bill to reverse provision giving cabinet unchecked powerAlberta Premier Danielle Smith says her government is crafting changes to be debated next week to reverse the part of a bill that gives her cabinet unfettered power to rewrite laws behind closed doors without legislature approval.
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Alberta changing sovereignty bill to reverse provision giving cabinet unchecked powerPremier Danielle Smith told a radio talk show Saturday that her sovereignty bill was never supposed to give cabinet such sweeping authority
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