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Poll seeks to unpack some of Alberta's key political differences . Bob Weber · The Canadian Press · Posted: Jun 05, 2023 10:34 AM EDT | Last Updated: June 5, 2023.
EDMONTON - Alberta has announced new regulations that will once again allow corporate and union donations in local elections. Updated Oct. 18, 2024 at 10:00 p.m. Oct. 18, 2024 ...
Data from CBC News’ recent polling suggests an increase in political polarization amongst Albertans, pointing toward possibly more contentious times ahead for the prairie province.
EDMONTON — Take Back Alberta, the third-party advertiser that made headlines for its role in the high-profile ouster of former premier Jason Kenney, has been fined more than $100,000 by ...
Alberta was getting “choked,” Mr. Grundberg said, because its oil revenues contributed to federal coffers without getting the political influence that he said Alberta deserved.
Independent MLA Peter Guthrie says it's time for a new political option in Alberta, and for him, that means reviving an old one. The Cochrane-based MLA confirmed that he and fellow Independent MLA ...
Individuals resident in Alberta may, at any time, contribute a maximum of $30,000 per calendar year to any combination of political TPAs or election TPAs (ETPAs).
Two former members of Alberta's governing United Conservative Party are resuscitating the province's once-dominant Progressive Conservative Party.
The whole premise that Alberta would be entitled to over 50 per cent of the CPP’s assets is perhaps the most obvious — and consequential — example of such wishful thinking.
Former Alberta Premier Dave Hancock, shown here in August 2014, earlier served as education minister in Ed Stelmach’s government after the 2008 election.
But Alberta is kind of where the U.S. was in 2004 on the eve of the Tea Party movement.” Duane Bratt is a political scientist at Calgary’s Mount Royal University, not part of the Common Ground ...