Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Smith's Alberta Next panel hears cheers for deportation, separation in Lloydminster

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2025 10:39 AM
  • Smith's Alberta Next panel hears cheers for deportation, separation in Lloydminster

Loud cheers for mass deportations and Alberta separation were the peaks of an otherwise tame and quiet town hall for Premier Danielle Smith's Alberta Next panel in Lloydminster.

Smith's panel, which is touring the province to hear from the public on ways to shield the province from federal overreach, drew a friendly crowd of about 350 to a public recreation centre Wednesday night.

The panel's pre-selected topics, which range from asking Albertans if they'd support creating a provincial pension plan to supporting changes to the Canadian constitution, were easily approved by the crowd.

Some said Smith needed to just get to work already.

"I'd like to change all these questions instead of 'should Alberta', to Alberta should," said Rick Strankman, a former provincial legislature member who served under the Wildrose Party banner when Smith was leader.

"It's high time, ladies and gentlemen, that we stood up."

The loudest cheers weren't heard, however, until the panel reached the topic of immigration and its proposal to create a new provincial system that would withhold social services from immigrants who weren't approved.

One speaker, who didn't identify herself, said her family is looking to leave Canada over Ottawa's immigration policies.

"This has to be stopped," she said. "We're not vetting these people, they're harming our children, and it's putting a real damage on our environment."

The woman then asked Smith to negotiate with United States President Donald Trump to create an asylum system for people like her.

"Hard-working Albertans who are Christian, who believe in the nuclear family, who are patriotic and don't have any faith in any of the governments," she said, once the applause and hollers died down.

The next speaker then asked Smith if the panel's proposal would include a mass deportation effort, a suggestion that also garnered major cheers from the crowd.

Smith, in response, said her plan was to see how many people leave after their permits expire, but she didn't think immigration to Alberta had reached the point of deportations "just yet."

"We have to just monitor on a case-by-case basis," Smith said.

"Let's stop the problem and then let's see whether or not over a period of time those who are here can be absorbed and we can get everybody working to the level of their ability."

Smith also said, in response to a woman who wanted immigration deterred because her grandchildren are struggling to find jobs, that her government plans to announce a new policy next week to address youth unemployment.

She said the province is also asking employers to reduce their reliance on the temporary foreign worker program — a program Smith acknowledged was advantageous for business owners.

"But we are cutting ourselves off if we don't give that child, that kid, a first job (because) then they don't get their second job, and the third job, and their fourth job," Smith said.

"We've got to reset and make sure that our young people are taken care of."

As in past panel events, straw polls done after each topic showed overwhelming support for each of the panel's six proposals.

Only two hands shot up in disagreement when it came to immigration.

The enthusiastic support shown to Smith's panel followed a similar turnout in Fort McMurray the night before, and at past events in Edmonton and Red Deer.

Some protesters did show up in Lloydminster.

About two dozen people lined the halls of the recreation centre before the event started with signs criticizing Smith's push for a provincial pension plan, her recent move to make Albertans pay out of pocket for COVID-19 vaccines this fall, and other issues.

One protester, Colleen Henning, told The Canadian Press she was there to make sure Smith knew not everyone signed off on the panel's proposals.

"She's trying to make issues where there are not issues," said Henning, a resident of Vermilion, 60 kilometres west of Lloydminster.

Henning also said Smith was stoking separatist desire and bending to the more extreme factions of her United Conservative Party base.

"(People) don't want many of the things the extremists in her party want, but she just has to keep trying to play to her base so that she can stay in power."

Smith's panel will travel to Medicine Hat next week, which will be the first of five town halls scheduled throughout September.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

MORE National ARTICLES

CBC head calls for a 'national conversation' on Conservatives' pledge to defund

CBC head calls for a 'national conversation' on Conservatives' pledge to defund
With Donald Trump making "territorial claims," the new head of CBC says defunding the public broadcaster could erode a pillar of Canada's cultural identity. Marie-Philippe Bouchard, CEO of CBC-Radio-Canada, is calling for a "national conversation" on the Conservative promise to defund, and is launching a tour to get it started.

CBC head calls for a 'national conversation' on Conservatives' pledge to defund

These industries would be hit hardest by Trump's 25 per cent tariffs

These industries would be hit hardest by Trump's 25 per cent tariffs
Statistics Canada says the value of Canadian exports to the United States in 2023 exceeded $594 billion. More than 43 per cent of that came from just six industries: oil and gas extraction, oil and gas refining, auto manufacturing, aluminum production and processing, aerospace and crop and animal production.

These industries would be hit hardest by Trump's 25 per cent tariffs

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire
Many of the 300,000 Ukrainians who have come to Canada on three-year emergency visas since 2022 face an uncertain future as their temporary resident permits come closer to expiring, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress warned Wednesday. Congress executive director Ihor Michalchyshyn said he met with Immigration Minister Marc Miller last week to ask his department to automatically renew the visas for another three years.

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday
The relationship between the U.S. and Canada has "fundamentally changed," regardless of whether U.S. President Donald Trump's promised tariffs on Canadian goods materialize on Saturday, according to the chair of a new B.C. cabinet "war room" to tackle the threat. Ravi Kahlon, who is also British Columbia's housing minister, said the provincial government would work to diversify the province's economy and reduce its reliance on the United States.

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report
A report says a plane was doing a training spin at a lower-than-recommended altitude when it went down in a lake near Edmonton, killing a flight instructor and a student pilot. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says the plane was working properly and the weather was fine when it crashed in August 2023.

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate
The latest report from Jennifer Charlesworth's office says up to 83,000 young people with disabilities are not receiving adequate services in the province, and while spending increased by 190 per cent in the 18 years her office has been in place, the majority of that went to salaries and a narrow set of programs.

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate