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Smith meets Carney, demands oil policy changes and warns national unity at stake

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Prime Minister Mark Carney skates with the Edmonton Oilers during a visit to Edmonton on Thursday, March 20, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says that in her first face-to-face meeting with the new prime minister she gave him an earful on wildfires and oil sales and warned him national unity hangs in the balance.

“I provided a specific list of demands the next prime minister, regardless of who that is, must address within the first six months of their term to avoid an unprecedented national unity crisis,” Smith said in a statement Thursday after a morning meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney in the Alberta capital.

Smith has been a longtime critic of former prime minister Justin Trudeau, saying federal Liberal government policies for years have illegally encroached on Alberta’s resource rights and strangled its wellspring oil and gas industry.

Smith said it was Carney’s idea to meet and it was a “frank discussion.”

“I made it clear that Albertans will no longer tolerate the way we've been treated by the federal Liberals over the past 10 years," she said.

Smith repeated a number of policies she wants changed, including unfettered cross-boundary access to build pipelines and an end to the proposed greenhouse gas emissions cap, which Alberta says would hamstring resource production.

A day earlier, Smith told reporters she is skeptical that Carney can deliver. "I can tell you I'm not encouraged by what I've seen so far," Smith said. “I think there's a real danger that the new prime minister is worse than the old prime minister."

At an unrelated press conference in Edmonton later Thursday, Carney acknowledged the meeting with Smith and said he is committed to making Canada's oil industry more competitive.

"The commitment is to deliver projects like those that we agreed are national priorities," Carney said. "It's about getting, yes, pipelines built across this country so that we can displace imports of foreign oil."

Alberta NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi said Smith's threat of a national unity crisis is "childish" and "juvenile" and will fail to get any concessions from the federal government.

He said if the premier wants to keep threatening a national unity crisis, she should call a referendum on Alberta separation and resign if it fails.

Carney spent the day in shoes and skates. Late in the morning, the former varsity hockey goaltender stopped by Rogers Place to skate with the Edmonton Oilers at practice.

Canada’s 24th prime minster wore a blue Oilers jersey with 24 and his last name on the back. He spoke to coaches, joined players in a passing drill and shook hands with goaltender Calvin Pickard.

Also Thursday, Carney's office laid out $187 million in new funding to help rebuild Jasper. It's the largest funding package announced for Jasper since a runaway wildfire ripped through Jasper National Park and destroyed a third of the town in July.

Smith said she talked about Jasper with Carney.

"I made it clear that federal mismanagement of Jasper and Banff national parks resulted in last year’s tragic wildfire in Jasper and is endangering Banff, and the situation must be rectified immediately," she said.

Carney also made an affordability announcement. The federal government is eliminating GST on new or "substantially renovated" homes sold for less than $1 million to first-time homebuyers.

The prime minister's trip to Edmonton came as all parties gear up to hit the hustings.

Sources say Carney is to go to Gov. Gen. Mary Simon on Sunday to dissolve Parliament and launch a federal election campaign.

Carney's Liberals will have their work cut out for them in Alberta. The party only has two sitting members in the province with Randy Boissonnault in Edmonton and George Chahal in Calgary. Both are seeking re-election.

Carney said he knows his party has a big hill to climb out west but said they will have a number of strong candidates.

Carney's visit to Edmonton, his childhood home, was his first since he made his Liberal leadership bid announcement in the city in January. Born in the Northwest Territories, Carney grew up in Edmonton before leaving to study economics at Harvard and Oxford University.

At his leadership announcement, Carney recalled lacing up his skates to play outdoor hockey at the Laurier Heights Community League rink in west Edmonton.

“I can still hear the blades of the skates tapping on the floor as we try to get the blood flowing into our toes,” he said at the time, joking about Edmonton's weather.

— With files from Fakiha Baig and Lisa Johnson in Edmonton and Matthew Scace in Calgary

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 20, 2025.

Jack Farrell, The Canadian Press


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