The surprise announcement came the same day that Wildrose Leader Brian Jean opened the door to uniting with the Tories in order to defeat NDP Premier Rachel Notley.
The local man, who’s a well-known protester, waved his red hat for much of the hour-long event at the University of Calgary. It came at the end of a two-day cabinet retreat in the southern Alberta.
Notley didn't mention Trudeau by name, but touted the recent approval of pipelines and said the oilsands will power the global economy for generations to come.
Alberta’s conservative parties, two stubborn rams of provincial politics for almost a decade, appear poised to lock horns once again in 2017. An entirely new entity may emerge once the dust settles.
A coalition of Quebec business organizations and large unions came out in defence of Energy East, while the leader of Alberta's Wildrose Party Brian Jean accused Coderre of meddling in the process.
The Pembina Institute has released a series of FAQs dispelling myths and misinformation about Alberta's carbon tax, what some say are being used to "attack the carbon tax for being a carbon tax."
The campaign against the NDP government has begun. We better get ready. Jason Kenney’s Unite Alberta campaign is deadly serious. And seriously deadly, to us.
Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivered his endorsement of Kenney to a crowd of Canada's conservative big-whigs during a party fundraiser at the Calgary Stampede