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The disconnect between Alberta and Canada

Max speaks to Derek Fildebrandt, a former politician and head of a major right-leaning provincial publication, about whether there's a solution to Alberta's disconnection from Canada on the 7th episode of Maxed Out.

Alberta hasn’t been happy with Ottawa for a long time. There is a feeling that Albertans pay more than their share into the Canadian economy but don't get enough in return. Some are saying Canada is broken and Alberta should leave the federation.

On today's episode, host Max Fawcett chats with Derek Fildebrandt, a former member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and the publisher, president and chief executive officer of Western Standard New Media Corp., a right-leaning media group. The topic? A possible solution to the province’s disconnection with the rest of the country.

A few minutes in, it's clear the two disagree on how Alberta’s Premier Danielle Smith has responded to the federal government's plan to create the “just transition” legislation. Earlier this year, Smith took aim at a package of federal briefing materials that discussed the effect a transition to a low-carbon economy would have on local jobs.

For Max, Smith and her staff deliberately misrepresented the memo's contents, which said the jobs would be impacted, not eliminated.

For Fildebrandt, the document is an attempt by the federal government to “shut down the industry” and “cushion the transition that they’ve been hastening along.”

Some Albertans say Canada is broken and the province should leave the federation and go it alone. But is there another solution to the discontent? #MaxedOut
Maxed Out Episode 7 - Derek Fildebrandt_Quote
Former politician Derek Fildebrandt talks about the effect a transition to a low-carbon economy would have on local jobs on the newest episode of Maxed Out.

It wasn’t all diverging opinions, though. Max and Fildebrandt also spent some time bonding over their chosen identity as Albertans.

As someone born and raised in Vancouver, Max finds that the most passionate Albertans tend to be from somewhere else.

Fildebrandt, who was raised in Ontario, weirdly agrees. For him, people who chose to settle in Alberta from other parts of the country came here because they “saw it as something unique and different” with a “strong regional identity.”

To listen in on the discussion around the history behind Alberta’s brewing nationhood, check out the full episode of Maxed Out on Apple Podcast or Spotify.

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