Elections Alberta said Dec. 22 that it has approved a petition question regarding Alberta seceding from Canada and becoming an independent nation.
The petition question was submitted by the Alberta Prosperity Project (APP) group, which has until early January to put in place a financial officer and then begin collecting enough signatures in order for its proposed question to become a provincial referendum.
The proposed petition asks a yes or no question on the issue, namely: “Do you agree that the province of Alberta should cease to be a part of Canada to become an independent state?”
APP CEO Mitch Sylvestre, who is a constituency association president for the province’s ruling United Conservative Party (UCP), will have four months after appointing a financial officer to gather just shy of 178,000 signatures in order for the petition to be put forward to Albertans in a referendum.
The previous petition question was sent by the province’s chief electoral officer to the Court of the King’s Bench for judicial review, saying the proposed question brought up constitutional issues. Various intervenors were heard in the case, including five First Nations, Elections Alberta, and two lawyers in a capacity as amicus curiae, or friends of the court.
The UCP government subsequently went ahead with approving Bill 14 by the legislature, and the APP proposed its question under the new law—which has now been approved to qualify as a referendum if it meets the requirements.
Although the UCP government has enacted the legislation to remove further barriers to citizen petitions, it opposes separation, with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith saying she hopes Ottawa will work with the province to meet its demands and make the federation work.







