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Smith headlining fundraiser with commentator who said Canadians would welcome U.S. invasion

#5 of 6 articles from the Special Report: The Takeover

Photos: Alberta Newsroom and Gage Skidmore via Flickr. Illustration by Canada's National Observer.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is flying to Florida on the taxpayers’ dime to help fundraise for PragerU, a media platform that promotes “pro-American values” and is funded by fossil fuel interests.

Smith is scheduled to co-host PragerU’s east coast fundraising gala on March 27 alongside Ben Shapiro, a conservative political commentator who has made light of President Donald Trump’s threats to annex Canada. Individual tickets to the gala start at $1,500 USD.

In a December 2024 clip from the Ben Shapiro Show posted to YouTube, Shapiro predicted Canadians “will greet us as liberators” if Trump follows through with his annexationist threats while at the same time bemoaning how “humourless” Canadians have been about the threat to their national sovereignty. 

“I’m not saying Canadians should vote in American elections, god forbid. We can annex it and call it an outlying territory, like Puerto Rico but of the north,” Shapiro added.

Smith spokesperson Sam Blackett told Canada’s National Observer the premier’s expenses associated with attending the gala in south Florida will be covered by Albertans.   

“At this event, the Premier will be able to share Alberta and Canada’s message with an active, engaged, and influential U.S. audience, amidst the ongoing trade war,” Blackett said. “Given this travel will be part of the Premier’s advocacy in the U.S. the costs for the Premier’s travel and accommodations will be covered by Alberta’s government.”

This will be Smith’s second trip to Florida this year. In January, with the threat of tariffs looming, she visited Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort for a “friendly and constructive conversation” about the importance of the Canadian oil and gas industry. 

Danielle Smith's spokesperson said the premier’s expenses associated with attending the gala in south Florida will be covered by Albertans.

Keith Brownsey, a political scientist at Mount Royal University in Calgary, told Canada’s National Observer that to “be very generous,” there’s nothing inherently wrong with speaking to Trump supporters about the negative impact of tariffs on both sides of the border. This trip is different, he added.

“She’s actually going down for a fundraiser with the far right, which puts her in a unique place in Canadian political life. I would be very reticent to think that this just has the motive of trying to convince Americans that Trump’s tariffs are wrong,” he said. 

PragerU, which is not an accredited academic institution, was co-founded by conservative talk radio host Dennis Prager and filmmaker Allen Estrin in 2009. Its signature five-minute videos routinely dismiss the role that burning fossil fuels play in rising global temperatures, in addition to expounding on the superiority of “Judeo-Christian” values and downplaying the evils of American slavery. 

On Monday, Alberta NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi issued a statement demanding that Smith “cancel this event immediately,” referring to PragerU as a “far-right online platform” and Shapiro an “extremist.”

Danielle Smith isn’t the only Canadian Conservative politician who has associated with Shapiro and PragerU in recent years. 

Drinking from a cup labelled “Leftist Tears,” former Prime Minister Stephen Harper appeared on the Ben Shapiro Show in 2018, and in 2019 produced two five-minute videos for PragerU — one titled “Politics and Populism” and another called “Israel and Human Rights.”  

However, Harper was not a sitting Member of Parliament at the time, and, Brownsey noted, did not use taxpayer resources to help fundraise for PragerU. “There’s a big difference there,” he said. 

Shapiro, the founder of conservative media outlet the Daily Wire, has also weighed in on Canada’s federal politics, lending support for Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre. On Jan. 7, Shapiro responded to a tweet from Poilievre proclaiming that “Canada will never be the 51st state,” saying the U.S. “will call off the planned invasion if you are elected PM.”

Shapiro has taken a more conciliatory approach towards Canada since then, criticizing Trump’s decision to level tariffs on Canada for increasing energy prices for U.S. consumers, as well as for hurting Poilievre’s electoral prospects.

Beyond his flippant approach towards Canadian sovereignty, Shapiro and other contributors to his website, including Jordan Peterson, have been key players in promulgating broader transnational culture war narratives, including climate denial. 

Shapiro insists he believes in climate change but questions “what percentage of global warming is attributable to human activity” and has decried “climate change hysteria.” In 2018, Shapiro suggested that people whose coastal residences are at risk of flooding “just sell their homes and move.” 

Fossil Fuel Funding

Both PragerU and Shapiro’s Daily Wire are funded by fracking billionaires Farris and Dan Wilks. Farris Wilks, who is a pastor, told his congregants in 2013: “If (God) wants the polar caps to remain in place, then he will leave them there.”

In 2013, two years after PragerU was founded, the Wilks brothers donated $6.5 million to the non-profit, which Dennis Prager has said “enabled PragerU to expand more rapidly.”

When the Daily Wire was founded in 2015, the Wilks brothers provided $4.77 million in seed funding to the business. 

PragerU has produced many videos questioning the scientific consensus around climate change, with titles such as, “Fossil Fuels: The Greenest Energy,” “The Paris Agreement Won’t Change the Climate” and “Do 97% of Climate Scientists Really Agree?

In a July 2015 video, entitled The Truth about CO2, Patrick Moore, a Canadian former environmentalist turned fossil fuel enthusiast, argues that fossil fuels are 100 per cent organic.

“If there were no carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere, the Earth would be a dead planet. Period,” he said in the video. 

In November 2024, Premier Danielle Smith’s UCP membership voted overwhelmingly in support of a resolution calling on her to abandon any CO2 emissions reduction targets

Representatives of PragerU didn’t acknowledge a request for comment on why they invited Alberta’s premier to headline their fundraiser.

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