Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Premier Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel to get feedback at third town hall

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2025 10:02 AM
  • Premier Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel to get feedback at third town hall

A travelling panel collecting public feedback on Alberta's grievances with Ottawa is set to make its third summer town hall stop tonight.

Premier Danielle Smith and 15 other members of her Alberta Next panel are scheduled to be in Edmonton to brainstorm with people about possible future referendum questions.

The premier has said one of the reasons for the panel is to address concerns that are inspiring separatist sentiment in the province.

Its agenda focuses on six policy ideas, including pulling out of the Canada Pension Plan and creating a provincial police force to replace the RCMP.

Earlier events were held last month in Red Deer and Edmonton.

At those town halls, some Albertans offered support for the proposals, some protested at the gates and others dismissed the panel as a self-serving political exercise meant to stir up discontent and division.

It is set to host events in Fort McMurray and Lloydminster in two weeks.

The panel has also faced criticism for presenting online survey questions that left no option to disagree.

The government later added options to some survey questions. The changes were made after 32,000 people had already filled out the surveys. 

The premier’s office has said the survey results for the different versions will be separated.

Opposition NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi has dismissed the panel as a way for Smith to curry favour with extreme elements of her United Conservative Party to keep them from splintering off.

He's also said the government is using it to conjure up unreliable data to support things it already wants to do.

Alberta public opinion pollster Janet Brown has said the government's effort is not a polling exercise but a public engagement exercise and that changing the survey questions midstream underscores that.

She has said the survey will offer a good idea of who participated in the process but it's not a random representative sample that reflects public opinion.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Todd Korol

MORE National ARTICLES

Several Canadian flights cancelled after London fire caused power outage at Heathrow

Several Canadian flights cancelled after London fire caused power outage at Heathrow
Several arriving and departing flights between cities across Canada and London's Heathrow Airport were cancelled after an overnight fire caused a power outage and forced the British airport to close Friday, with further flight disruptions expected to last for days. As of early Friday, Toronto's Pearson airport listed at least five scheduled arriving flights from Heathrow as cancelled, as well as two departing flights. Airports in Vancouver and Montreal also listed multiple cancelled flights.

Several Canadian flights cancelled after London fire caused power outage at Heathrow

Feds give millions to B.C.'s STEMCELL Technologies and HTEC for facility construction

Feds give millions to B.C.'s STEMCELL Technologies and HTEC for facility construction
The Ministry of Innovation, Science and Industry says North Vancouver-based HTEC, a hydrogen energy firm, is getting $49 million toward a facility that turns "industrial byproduct hydrogen" into fuel. 

Feds give millions to B.C.'s STEMCELL Technologies and HTEC for facility construction

Mark Carney will maintain oil and gas emissions cap, environment minister says

Mark Carney will maintain oil and gas emissions cap, environment minister says
Environment Minister Terry Duguid says a Mark Carney government will maintain a cap on oil and gas production emissions. In an interview with The Canadian Press, Duguid says Canada wants the energy but not the pollution that comes with its production.

Mark Carney will maintain oil and gas emissions cap, environment minister says

In latest blow to Tesla, regulators recall nearly all Cybertrucks

In latest blow to Tesla, regulators recall nearly all Cybertrucks
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's recall, which covers more than 46,000 Cybertrucks, warned that an exterior panel that runs along the left and right sight of the windshield can detach while driving, creating a dangerous road hazard for other drivers, increasing the risk of a crash.

In latest blow to Tesla, regulators recall nearly all Cybertrucks

Federal government commits $187M to rebuild critical infrastructure in Jasper

Federal government commits $187M to rebuild critical infrastructure in Jasper
More financial support is on the way for fire-ravaged Jasper, Alta., as the federal government has announced $187 million in new funding for the town's rebuild. It is the largest funding package to be announced since a runaway wildfire ripped through Jasper National Park and destroyed a third of the town last July.

Federal government commits $187M to rebuild critical infrastructure in Jasper

Confused about Mark Carney's blind trust? Here's how they work

Confused about Mark Carney's blind trust? Here's how they work
Prime Minister Mark Carney's critics have been asking pointed questions lately about the assets in the former central banker's blind trust — a tool meant to allow politicians to avoid conflicts of interest. How do blind trusts work?

Confused about Mark Carney's blind trust? Here's how they work