Varcoe: Alberta businesses not sold on benefits of ditching CPP or creating police force yyc yeg abpoli ableg UCP NDP SovereigntyAct
Shandro was asked to finalize a decision on establishing an Alberta police service; Smith has previously said she’d like to see a provincial force augment the RCMP.
The idea of creating a new provincial revenue agency to collect provincial and federal taxes within Alberta also saw a drop, with 44 per cent saying it would be a disadvantage, while 35 per cent saw it as a benefit.The survey found 56 per cent of respondents see it as a disadvantage to their businesses, up from 29 per cent in 2020, while those considering it a benefit increased slightly to 34 per cent.
Alberta chambers CEO Shauna Feth said Friday the group hasn’t adopted a formal position on these proposals, but conducted the survey to inform debate on the matters. At the end of September, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board reported net assets of $529 billion, with a 10-year annualized net return of 10.1 per cent.Article content
Alberta pollster Janet Brown said the results from the chamber’s survey are not a surprise, following similar trends seen in the general population toward some of the Fair Deal proposals.
المملكة العربية السعودية أحدث الأخبار, المملكة العربية السعودية عناوين
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Bell: Kaboom! Danielle Smith, Notley and sovereignty act fireworksAlberta Premier Danielle Smith, Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley cross swords over UCP\u0027s sovereignty act, a wild ride in Alberta politics.
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Varcoe: Canadian chamber warns 'business could be caught in the middle' of sovereignty act falloutCanadian chamber warns 'business could be caught in the middle' of sovereignty act fallout. Column by ChrisVarcoe: yyc yycbiz ableg abpoli cdnpoli
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Varcoe: Canadian chamber warns 'business could be caught in the middle' of sovereignty act falloutICYMI: Canadian chamber warns 'business could be caught in the middle' of sovereignty act fallout. Column by ChrisVarcoe: yyc yycbiz ableg abpoli cdnpoli
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Feds should view Alberta Sovereignty Act as 'a warning' that needs careful 'wait-and-see' response, say strategistsObservers say Alberta Premier Danielle Smith would “love nothing more” than for Ottawa to take an aggressive response to her proposed sovereignty act, but instead the federal government should use a “unique Canadian strategy” to shape the narrative: “boring them to death.” Smith unveiled her much-anticipated bill—officially titled the Alberta Sovereignty within a United Canada Act—on Nov. 29, after months of build-up since she first proposed the idea during her run to be United Conservative Party (UCP) leader. While much of the speculation in the lead-up to the bill centred on how it would affect relations between Alberta and Ottawa, observers say some of the most concerning parts of the bill are how it would expand the executive powers of the Alberta government and diminish the legislature. That’s why many are suggesting that rather than engage in a jurisdictional squabble with a premier who may be looking to frame the debate on that very issue, the federal government should monitor the situation closely but not overplay its hand. Brian Topp, an NDP strategist who has served both the federal party and NDP provincial governments in Alberta and Saskachewan, said that a de-escalating approach is the best bet. NDP strategist Brian Topp said the federal government should use ‘a unique Canadian strategy’ on proponents of the act: ‘boring them to death.’ The Hill Times file photograph “The federal government under multiple recent prime ministers has dealt effectively with separatists in Quebec by boring them to death—by taking care to avoid provocations and real causes of grievance,” said Topp, whose time in government included a stint as chief of staff to former Alberta premier Rachel Notley. “It’s a unique Canadian strategy, perfectly suited to our national temperament,” he said, “and one that might work well with Danielle Smith, too.” Yan Plante, a Conservative strategist who has worked in the department of intergovernmental affairs, said the federal government would b
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COVID vaccine policy for Arctic Winter Games not due to Alberta influence: officialYELLOWKNIFE — An official with the Arctic Winter Games says its decision to revoke a mandatory COVID\u002D19 vaccine policy for the upcoming event had nothing to do…
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Legal experts say federal government unlikely to be 'main combatant' in Alberta sovereignty fightCALGARY — Constitutional law experts say it’s unlikely Ottawa will rush to fight Alberta over a proposed sovereignty bill that would give the provincial…
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