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Carney and Danielle Smith Meet in Ottawa as Alberta Separatism Debate Intensifies

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith meet in Ottawa to discuss pipelines, energy policy, and rising Alberta separatist tensions.

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It’s official. On Friday in Ottawa, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith will sit down face to face as political pressure builds over pipelines, federal–provincial relations, and growing separatist momentum in Alberta.

The meeting comes at a sensitive moment, with Alberta’s independence debate gaining national attention after separatist organizers claimed they had gathered enough signatures to trigger a potential referendum process. At the same time, tensions between Ottawa and Alberta remain high over energy policy, infrastructure development, and economic control.

Sources familiar with the political discussions say the meeting is expected to focus heavily on energy agreements, including a memorandum of understanding linked to pipeline development and broader resource strategy. However, the political backdrop is far more complex, with Alberta’s rising separatist sentiment now adding urgency to already strained federal-provincial relations.

Smith and Carney last met in a more informal setting during a public event, but Friday’s talks are expected to be more structured and politically charged. Both leaders are under pressure: Carney to maintain national unity while advancing economic priorities, and Smith to address growing frustration among some Albertans who feel disconnected from federal decision-making in Ottawa.

Political observers say the timing is critical. Alberta’s separatist movement has brought renewed scrutiny to long-standing grievances over energy regulation, taxation, and provincial autonomy. While most analysts still view separation as unlikely, the issue has forced both levels of government into more direct engagement.

The upcoming meeting is also expected to test whether both leaders can find common ground on infrastructure and investment strategies, particularly in the energy sector, which remains central to Alberta’s economy.

For now, expectations remain cautious. No major breakthroughs are anticipated, but the optics of the meeting itself are significant, signaling continued dialogue at a time of rising political tension between Alberta and the federal government.

Courtesy: calgaryherald
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