The separation referendum is being stalled by a referendum to stay within Canada, where the petition to start it has already received enough signatures to start the referendum at 456K signatures.
Polling for separation is laughably low. This is not something that will happen, and not something legally feasible because of Treaty rights, and other numerous legal barriers. Smith herself has admitted she herself does not support separation, but has felt backed into a corner by her base as she fears a party split handing the NDP a win next election cycle more than she does the referendum succeeding, as she sees the former as a far more likely scenario. This can already be seen with the variety of right-wing parties in Alberta as opposed to the province’s left-wing being much more unified behind one party. Basically all this is an issue that could solved by implementing proportional representation in the province.
The pushback is currently being coordinated, it has only been a week since the back-to-work order, I personally feel it is way too early to judge a lack of action, but regardless students have been pushing back in the meantime the labour movement sorts things out on their end.
I do appreciate being distinguished as an individual and not as a part of the government or the worst of the crowd that voted them in.







“No they won’t”
Right, because other unions didn’t come out in support for Air Canada flight attendants to help them with their win.
Clearly labour leaders, especially ones that oversee over 170,000 union members, will do nothing and learn nothing from what was accomplished with Air Canada.
I don’t buy that one bit.
Edit: I got the number wrong, whoops.