Thursday, May 08, 2025

Doug Ford says Carney should extend an olive branch to the West. Liberal strategists agree

Story by Rahim Mohamed


Premier Danielle Smith speaks to reporters during a press conference at the Alberta Legislature, in Edmonton Tuesday May 6, 2025.

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney could soon be facing a national unity crisis after Alberta Premier Danielle Smith lowered the bar for a referendum on the province’s independence in 2026.

Liberal insiders with ties to Alberta say this is a threat that Carney shouldn’t take lightly. And Ontario Premier Doug Ford told reporters on Wednesday that he agrees.

“About two in 10 Albertans say routinely that they want to see the province separate from Canada,” says Dan Arnold, an ex-Alberta Liberal organizer who’s now an executive with Pollara Strategic Insights .

“These people are in the minority, to be clear, but they’re too numerous to be written off as a radical fringe.”

NOT TRUE THEY ARE A RADICAL FRINGE OF AMERICAN MIGRANTS WHO LIVE IN THE SOUTH OF THE PROVICE WHO SUPPORTED THE WESTERN CONCEPT PARTY WHOM PREMIER PETER LOUGHEED OPPOSED

Arnold points to the grim numbers from Pollara’s latest Western Identity Report, released in February . The report found that 55 per cent of Albertans feel that their province is being treated unfairly by the federal government.

Albertans were also the least pessimistic group anywhere in Canada about their province’s prospects outside of confederation and the least opposed to joining the United States.






Related video: Doug Ford dispels talk of feud with Danielle Smith, maintains he's against Alberta separation (Global News)
No, I'm not, I'm not for that whatsoever.
Duration 2:37


Arnold said the silver lining for Carney is that most Albertans have a gripe with Ottawa, not with Canada as a whole.

“Albertans still identify strongly as Canadians,” said Arnold. “Alberta separatism isn’t identity-based in the same way as Quebec separatism.”

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet riffed on the notion of Alberta’s lack of a distinct cultural identity when speaking with reporters on Wednesday, joking that he wasn’t sure that “oil and gas qualify to define a culture.”

Arnold also said that now is a good time for Carney to “sell Canada” to disaffected Albertans, with national pride rising in the face of tariffs and annexation threats from U.S. President Donald Trump.

He noted that next month’s G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., will give Carney a great opportunity to send a message of national unity to Albertans.

Carney reportedly gave Trump a hat and golf gear bearing the logo of the Kananaskis Country Golf Course as a gift during his visit to Washington, D.C. on Tuesday.

Ford said Wednesday that he’s personally told Carney to take a less confrontational approach to Alberta and the other western provinces than his Liberal predecessor Justin Trudeau.

“I said it’s time that your government starts showing some love to Saskatchewan and Alberta (because) the last prime minister showed no love,” Ford told reporters in Toronto.

Ford said that the two Prairie provinces, both major oil producers, had been “treated terribly” under Trudeau.

He added he was a “big believer” in pipelines and scrapping the Liberals’ Bill 69, which critics have called the “no-new-pipelines” law .

Calgary-based Liberal strategist Sabrina Grover said that Carney’s outreach to Alberta can start with the more than 600,000 Albertans who marked “Liberal” on their ballot in last week’s federal election.

“The Liberals had their best showing in Alberta in years, if you look at the number of votes they won,” said Grover.

“That tells me that Carney already has hundreds of thousands of Albertans behind him… and those are the kinds of people that you want to mobilize and bring on your team.”

Provincewide, the Liberals won 28 per cent of the popular vote, a double-digit improvement over the 15.5 per cent they won in the last federal election in 2021.

Grover said that Carney can build even more goodwill with Albertans by listening attentively to their concerns, especially surrounding natural resource development.

“You’ve had that with (Carney’s) scrapping of the carbon tax already… and I think there will be some give-and-take on things like the federal emissions cap and clean electricity regs,” said Grover.

Grover added that Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc could be a huge asset for Carney on the national unity file, assuming he stays in the portfolio when Parliament resumes.


“Dominic LeBlanc has decades of intergovernmental experience and will be a great voice to be engaging with Alberta and the other provinces,” said Grover.

LeBlanc’s office didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the story.

Carney, who grew up in Edmonton, launched his campaign for the Liberal leadership near his childhood home in the city’s Laurier Heights neighbourhood .

He brought up his upbringing in the province when asked on Tuesday about the possibility of an Alberta referendum.

“Canada is stronger when we work together,” Carney told reporters in Washington.

“As an Albertan, I firmly believe that.”

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com




 

  1. Western Canada Concept - Wikipedia

    The Western Canada Concept was a Western Canadian federal political party founded in 1980 to promote the separation of the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, and the Yukon and Northwest Territories (which included present-day Nunavut) from Canada in order to … See more

    Alberta
    The Alberta wing first ran for office in by-elections to the 19th Alberta Legislature. One member of the party, Gordon Kesler, was elected in a 1982 … See more


    Wikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license
  2. WESTERN CANADA CONCEPT

    The Western Canada Concept was launched by a speaking tour of Western Canada in 1980 just as Doug Christie had launched the Committee for Western Independence in 1978. Every city of Western Canada had a public meeting; …

  3. How some Albertans advocated for separation in the …

    Apr 15, 2019 · In the riding of Olds-Didsbury, the candidate for the Western Canada Concept party was posing a real challenge to the more established parties in a provincial byelection race.



Provincial wings

The CoR captured about 2% of the vote in provincial elections in the 1988 Manitoba election and the 1990 Ontario election.
The CoR's Alberta wing nominated candidates in the 1986 provincial election and the … See more

Party program

The party program was set out in a website that aimed to re-establish CoR as a federal political party. Grammatical, punctuation and formatting errors have been left intact.
COR wants to become a nationwide Federal Party, and w… See more

CEOs call on Carney to 'take action' to support domestic energy sector


Story by Nick Murray
CANADIAN PRESS


Prime Minister Mark Carney responds to a question during a news conference in Ottawa on Friday, May 2, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld© The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Canada's energy CEOs are calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney to scrap the emissions cap on oil and gas producers and repeal industrial carbon pricing to help bolster the industry.

Thirty-eight CEOs of Canadian energy companies signed a letter congratulating Carney on his election win and pitching policy measures they say would help the prime minister make good on his promise to build the fastest-growing economy in the G7.

"As a major contributor to the Canadian economy, with significant untapped potential, the energy sector must play a pivotal role in your pursuit of this ambition," the letter reads.

"Your focus on fostering energy independence and enhancing Canada’s energy infrastructure and clean technology requires major sector investment and globally competitive energy and carbon policies. Over the last decade, the layering and complexity of energy policies has resulted in a lack of investor confidence and, consequently, a barrier to investment."

The CEOs say they want an overhaul of the Impact Assessment Act — which sets out the process for assessing major projects — and of the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act, which bans oil tankers carrying more than 12,500 metric tons of crude from stopping along parts of B.C.'s coastline.

Carney campaigned on expediting reviews of major energy infrastructure projects. He promised before the election to move forward with a "one project, one review" approach by recognizing assessments conducted by the provinces and territories.


Related video: B.C. moves to speed up energy projects amid growing demand and environmental concerns (cbc.ca)
Duration 2:09


The energy CEOs also called on Carney to repeal the industrial carbon pricing system. Carney campaigned on strengthening the policy after he scrapped the consumer carbon price.

"The current federal price and stringency trajectory results in uncompetitive costs compared to those we compete with to deliver our products to market," the CEOs wrote.

"A solution is to revert to the functioning system where provinces administer the policies and pricing to enable emissions-reduction investments, improve emissions performance, and maintain competitiveness."

The federal government unveiled its proposed emissions cap regulations late last year. They would compel upstream oil and gas operations to reduce emissions to 35 per cent below where they were in 2019 by sometime between 2030 and 2032.

Carney said before the election he wouldn't be scrapping the regulations.

"We continue to believe the federal government’s cap on emissions creates uncertainty, is redundant, will limit growth and unnecessarily result in production cuts, and stifle infrastructure investments," the CEOs wrote.

"Together, we can drive investment into emissions reductions by simplifying the regulatory regime, establishing an attractive fiscal environment, and ensuring carbon policies protect our export industries."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 7, 2025.

Nick Murray, The Canadian Press
Canadian American Business Council CEO says she was ‘heartened’ by comments from Trump-Carney meeting

By Daniel Johnson
Published: May 06, 2025 


Beth Burke, CEO of the Canadian American Business Council, breaks down the Carney-Trump meeting and what it means for Canada-U.S. business ties.

The chief executive officer of the Canadian American Business Council says she is optimistic following the meeting between Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump.

The highly anticipated meeting took place at the White House Tuesday and was the first in-person meeting since the Canadian election, coming amid trade tensions between the two nations. Carney said there were “very comprehensive and tangible discussions,” and that the two leaders did “make progress.”

“I think it’s exactly what we had all hoped for, the beginning of a conversation that brings us back to business. Having a conversation about how we work well together is so important because we’ve done it in all of our history,” Beth Burke, the CEO of the Canadian American Business Council told BNN Bloomberg Tuesday afternoon.

“We have collaborated, to make our economies stronger and having the conversation to get back to that place is really important and I feel heartened by the comments today.”

Earlier Tuesday morning, Trump posted a message on Truth Social saying the U.S. doesn’t need “ANYTHING” Canada has, including cars, lumber and energy.

Burke said she thinks the U.S. president’s comments on the issue are part of the negotiation.

“You put all of your leverage as far as you can out in the beginning. You don’t want to concede the points before you’re in the negotiation. So, I think it’s a tool and something we’ve seen him do before,” she said.

When asked if there was anything Carney could say for the U.S. to lift tariffs on Canadians goods, Trump said “No.” Burke said she hopes that position is also a negotiation tactic.

“I think we’ve seen, as he’s utilized this throughout really the beginning of his presidency to today, he has been open to conversations and shifting the position a bit as facts come to light and impacts show,” she said.

“I think we have a job as the business community to highlight those impacts and really show the interconnectedness. I think we’ve been doing it, and we will continue to come to the table to talk about how important our economic reliance and security on one another really is.”

 BNNBloomberg.ca


WORKERS CAPITAL

Oxford Properties to buy CPPIB stake in US$1.1 billion of offices


P3 PUBLIC PENSIONS FUND PRIVATE CAPITALI$M

Published: 

Oxford Properties, which helped develop New York City’s Hudson Yards, struck a deal to buy out Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s stake in seven office buildings, valuing the portfolio at $1.5 billion (US$1.1 billion), according to a person familiar with the matter.

Oxford, the real estate arm of the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, agreed to purchase the 50 per cent of the portfolio that it doesn’t already own, said the person, who asked not to be identified discussing private information.

The portfolio is made up of three properties in Calgary and four in Vancouver, including one that’s a recently completed tower call the Stack, the person said. Spokespeople for Oxford and CPPIB declined to comment.

While the North American office market was walloped by the pandemic and the rise in remote work, there’s been some tentative signs of stabilization in recent years. At the end of last year, vacancy rates for Canada’s downtown office buildings inched down for the first time since 2020.

In the U.S., Blackstone Inc. has been seeking a stake in a New York City office tower, Bloomberg News has reported.

While Oxford is digging deeper into the office market with its purchase, other major investors, including CPPIB, have been looking to cut their exposure to those properties.

In 2023, the pension sold stakes in two U.S. office properties at steep discounts, including a deal to offload one in Manhattan for just US$1 plus CPPIB’s share of debt. This year, CPPIB said it sold its stake in a Toronto office building.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that Canada’s second-largest pension manager, the Caisse de Dépôt et Placement du Québec, is looking to sell a Chicago office tower in a deal expected to generate bids 59 per cent lower than its last purchase price about eight years ago.

Omers has not been spared from the pain spurring its peers to get out of offices. Last year, the pension’s real estate portfolio posted a net loss of 4.9 per cent, due in part to declines in the valuations of office and life science building. But the fund manager noted that there were signs of improved office leasing for high-quality buildings.

Along with its Canadian portfolio, Oxford Properties also has exposure to office buildings in cities including New York. The firm partnered with Related Cos. on its sprawling Hudson Yards development on the western side of Manhattan.

Ari Altstedter and Layan Odeh, Bloomberg News