Edmonton’s mayor is pitching a plan to lower property taxes.
Parsing the symbols, signals and seriousness of Alberta’s new Sovereignty Act move
To fight Ottawa’s carbon cap, will Danielle Smith really take control of oil company emissions data?
To show how opposed her UCP government is to Ottawa’s oil and gas emissions cap, Premier Danielle Smith said Alberta would use its provincial Sovereignty Act to bar energy companies from submitting emissions data to the federal government, and from letting federal employees onto their production sites.
These actions are “bold” in the government’s own words. They’d also potentially run afoul of federal law requiring data sharing, and companies’ own obligations to shareholders and investors.
But it’s worth considering how many switches would have to flip a certain way to reach this fraught point of provincial-federal standoff over data and where federal inspectors could literally stand:
Parsing the symbols, signals and seriousness of Alberta’s new Sovereignty Act move | Read more |
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Marc Miller tells Pierre Poilievre to ‘grow a pair’ in heated exchange
Immigration Minister Marc Miller was admonished in the House of Commons during question period Thursday when he told Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to “grow a pair” and get his security clearance.
Miller withdrew the comment but has yet to apologize for the language.
The minister was responding to a question from Poilievre for the government to detail its plan to address immigration concerns that led U.S. president-elect Donald Trump to threaten a 25-per cent tariff on all Canadian imports when he takes office in January.
“According to (Miller’s) department, there are half a million people here illegally, all of whom could be tempted to go south of the border, provoking a massive retaliatory response,” Poilievre said. “So once again, what’s the plan to fix what he broke?”
Miller responded by accusing Poilievre of “pandering to people, entertaining false hope, promising visas to everyone, promising they won’t get deported.”
He then turned to Poilievre’s refusal to get a security clearance to receive classified information on foreign interference allegations, including against Conservative Party members, which Poilievre has argued would prevent him from speaking publicly about matters he may be briefed on.
“He needs to grow a pair (and) get the briefing,” Miller said, which led to a lengthy period of disorder in the House.
Marc Miller tells Pierre Poilievre to ‘grow a pair’ in heated exchange | Read more |