A new poll suggests more than half of Canadians say they understand why Alberta might want to split from Canada — even if almost two-thirds say they don't want that to happen.
The Leger survey, which polled 1,537 Canadians between May 16 and 18, suggests that 55 per cent of Canadians understand Albertans' desire for independence.
Because the poll was conducted online, it can't be assigned a margin of error.
Seventy per cent of Albertans said they understand why their province might want to become an independent country.
The poll suggests 63 per cent of men say they grasp what's driving Alberta separatism, while 48 per cent of women report the same.
While 77 per cent of Conservative voters said they understand the reasons behind the separatism movement, only 48 per cent of Liberal supporters responded the same way.
Sébastien Dallaire, Leger's executive vice-president for Eastern Canada, said the survey suggests that there's a "level of empathy" for Albertans. He added Canadians likely don't think it's a good idea for the province to separate, given the dire consequences it would have for the entire country.
"If you're in BC, it means the country will be split in half from your perspective," Dallaire said. "If one province leaves, then it may open up, you know, more discussion about, of course, Quebec possibly also wanting to do the same, or other provinces."
Only 26 per cent of respondents said they support the idea of Alberta becoming an independent country, with 12 per cent saying they "strongly" support it and 15 per cent saying they support it "somewhat."
Sixty-two per cent of respondents said they're opposed, with 50 per cent saying they're "strongly" opposed, and 11 per cent saying they "don't know."
Among respondents who support the province of Alberta becoming a country, 76 per cent say they understand why Alberta might want to become independent.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's government introduced a bill earlier this month to make it easier to launch a citizen-initiated referendum — including one on separating from Canada.
Smith has pointed to growing alienation in her province and frustration with Ottawa and has argued that those wanting to separate "are not fringe voices."
While she said she does not support separating from Canada, Smith is hoping to negotiate a new deal for the province with Prime Minister Mark Carney. She has said repeatedly that Albertans are frustrated that the province's natural resources are landlocked and that its oil and gas exports are sold almost exclusively to the United States at a cut rate.
Almost half of respondents in Alberta — 47 per cent — said they support separation.
Just 29 per cent of Quebecers, 22 per cent of Ontarians and 14 per cent of people in BC said they think Alberta should split. Though the poll's sample size for the two provinces was small, 30 per cent of people in Manitoba and Saskatchewan said they supported the idea.
At 43 per cent, Conservative supporters were far more open to the idea of separation than Liberal supporters, at only 12 per cent.
Dallaire said the results of the recent federal election "did not satisfy everybody."
He also said the poll suggests that Albertans are very divided on the issue of separation.
"We see that there is significant support for at least trying to shake things up," he said, adding that previous referendums in Quebec have shown that numbers tend to move quite a bit once people learn the facts about what separation would mean.
"Is this really a hard level of support? At this time, probably not, but it's a clear indication that there's a potential for the movement to really gain a strong foothold in the province and it's something to really keep an eye on," he said.
"There's a potential for this to grow even stronger, depending on what happens next."
The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.
With files from Sarah Ritchie
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 23, 2025.
Comments
This Albertan finds no cause for complaint — and no justification for separation. Alberta's grievance politics has no basis in reality.
Albertans continue to enjoy the highest per capita income.
Albertans are subject to the same tax rates as everyone else.
Albertans pay more in tax per person because they are wealthy.
Poor rich Albertans.
Albertans labor under the delusion that Alberta props up the Rest of Canada (RoC).
The Alberta government does not send a cent to Ottawa or Quebec.
Most federal tax dollars are generated outside Alberta.
Alberta federal taxpayers contribute 14 cents on the dollar. The other 86 cents flows from taxpayers outside AB (2023). If Alberta secedes, Canada carries on with 86% of its original revenues.
End of argument.
Record profits on record O&G production. The biggest threat to oil industry profits is Trump's tariffs, global recession, and OPEC — not Ottawa.
Alberta's O&G mafia demands that Ottawa abandon all climate policy, while milking the government for endless subsidies. The O&G wants free rein to expand in all directions. A fossil-fuel expansion agenda to be funded increasingly by taxpayers, not investors.
Anything short of that is grounds for endless threats of separation.
Simple extortion by largely foreign-owned companies that have no loyalty to Canada, Alberta, or democracy.
If the fossil fuel industry had to pay the prohibitive environmental, climate, and health costs of its operations, it would go out of business tomorrow.
In which case, the Alberta government would face massive deficits it could never dig itself out of. Appalling mismanagement.
Alberta's "conservatives" are forever inflating Albertans' contribution to federal coffers as leverage for more pipelines.
Numerically, AB taxpayers do not outnumber, outweigh, out-earn, or out-contribute other wealthy Canadians residing elsewhere. The vast bulk of the wealth — and the vast majority of tax dollars — that fuel Canada's economy and governments are generated outside Alberta.
Alberta federal taxpayers contribute 14 cents on the dollar. The other 86 cents flows from taxpayers outside AB. (StatsCan, 2023)
The Cons want us to believe that without Alberta's 14 cents, Canada will come to a screeching halt. 86 cents of every federal tax dollar flows from taxpayers outside AB.
Ontario generates more GDP (38%) than all four Western provinces together (36.3%). (2023)
Federal revenues from Ontario (42%) exceeds revenues from all four Western provinces together (34.3%). (2023)
Quebec taxpayers contribute more to Quebec's equalization payments than AB taxpayers do.
The Quebec government generates more in sales tax than it receives from equalization.
Hard to argue that Albertans largely fund transfers including (Quebec's) equalization payments when 86% of the funds come from taxpayers in other provinces. Trace back equalization dollars to their source. Most of those dollars do not come from Albertans.
Alberta's righties have a hyper-inflated view of the province's economic significance.
Alberta's energy industry contributed an average of 3.8% of Canada's GDP from 2015 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 5.1% in 2022. (NRCan)
Alberta's energy industry accounted for an average of 0.77% of Canada's jobs from 2015 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 0.8% in 2017. (NRCan)
Canada's energy industry (all types: fossil, nuclear, hydro, renewables, etc.) directly contributed an average of 7.5% of Canada's GDP from 2015 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 9.4% in 2022. (NRCan)
Canada's energy industry directly accounted for an average of 1.5% of Canada's jobs from 2015 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 1.6% in 2020. (NRCan)
Canada's petroleum industry directly contributed an average of 5.6% of Canada's GDP from 2019 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 7.2% in 2022. (NRCan)
Canada's petroleum industry directly accounted for an average of 0.9% of Canada's jobs from 2015 to 2023 inclusive. The peak was 1.0% in 2020. (NRCan)
Careful, Geoffrey. You are confusing the narrative of the poor disgruntled high income and very loud rubes with well presented data and facts. Clarity is their enemy. It burns their tender skin. Their mission is to muddy the water to attain their political goals by cloaking the flawed and risky economics with ideological threats.
Because they trade in fossil resources, here is a very sound analysis by Energi Media of what waits ahead in several key export markets:
The first of three videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdVKWrfNMmE&t=37s
A short transcript:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHZA_aJuGa4jEoJs6KW-_pw/community?lb=U…
Jim Stanford had a great opinion in the Star the other day.
https://www.thestar.com/business/opinion/lets-drop-the-phoney-alberta-v…
IMO , too many Albertans have been indoctrinated into the Conservative world of “Every woe in Alberta , is Ottawa’s fault.”
And too many Albertans have fallen for it. And it is just not true..