RAJESH ANGRAL

RAJESH

ANGRAL

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#ableg #cdnpoli #abjustice

DON BRAID: “Since the video came out, Danielle Smith hasn’t voice a word about Artur Pawlowski’s views, or said she should not have taken that call.”

The Lake of Fire consumed then-Wildrose leader Danielle Smith’s campaign in 2012. Now the identical problem — her failure to condemn intolerant and repugnant views — may do it again to the now UCP premier.

One irony is that extremist pastor Artur Pawlowski, the cause of her current troubles, condemned Smith in 2012. He said she was too tolerant.

Pawlowski spotted a photo of Smith at a Hindu ceremony, wearing traditional clothes and asking the gods for a blessing. This was standard campaign behaviour, but Pawlowski exploded.

He wouldn’t vote for Smith, he said, “because she crossed the line from being tolerant of other people and their beliefs to actively participating in their idolatrous practices.”

Now she takes a cheery call from that very pastor about his court charges. The same guy she once blasted for extremism.

Wildrose was coasting to victory for the first two weeks of that 2012 campaign. Voters annoyed at Alison Redford’s PCs beat them up furiously in the polls.

But when it seemed Wildrose might actually win, all eyes turned to Smith. And people saw a leader so stuck in her libertarianism that she would allow her candidates to say pretty much anything.

The most stunning example came from Allan Hunsperger, another pastor, who was an Edmonton Wildrose candidate.

In a video rooted out by PC scandal-seekers, he said gays “who live the way you were born, and die the way you were born, will suffer the rest of eternity in a lake of fire, hell, a place of eternal suffering.”

Lake of Fire — capitalized — instantly became part of Alberta’s political vocabulary.

Smith’s senior campaigners almost begged her to fire Hunsperger, and also Ron Leech, a Calgary candidate who had said he was best able to mediate among ethnic groups in his riding.

Smith’s senior campaigners almost begged her to fire Hunsperger, and also Ron Leech, a Calgary candidate who had said he was best able to mediate among ethnic groups in his riding.

Smith’s senior campaigners almost begged her to fire Hunsperger, and also Ron Leech, a Calgary candidate who had said he was best able to mediate among ethnic groups in his riding.

When then-interim PC leader Ric McIver participated in Pawlowski’s anti-gay March for Jesus, Smith condemned him in 2014.

“It’s beyond the pale,” she said. “It’s extreme. I think Albertans expect that political leaders will stand up against this intolerance.”

Pawlowski’s rhetoric was as vile then as it is now. He said LGBTQ+ people “openly proclaim and manifest that they are not ashamed to declare the name of their master (Satan)”

The great 2013 flood in Calgary and southern Alberta, he said, was caused by “Jesus weeping for the perversions of homosexuality, which includes the walking out the pride of their abominations in the streets of our cities.” He also blamed abortion.

Despite all this, and far more words and actions in Pawlowski’s history, the premier and the pastor chatted about the charges against him for his activities at the Coutts border crossing, and his desire to get them dropped.

The premier was sympathetic while saying she no longer believed she has the power to do anything.

Smith even said she had been aware of Pawlowski’s “advocacy” for years. She didn’t imply anything negative about it.

The political side of this may no longer be the claims that Smith talked to prosecutors, which she denies to the point of a lawsuit threat against the CBC.

Rather, it’s her chronic lack of judgment, now magnified by the fact that she is the premier.

Smith is ideologically stuck on her view that charges against protesters are unfair and illegitimate. She seems blinkered to the record of this person she considers a victim.

Since the video came out she hasn’t voiced a word about Pawlowski’s views, or said she should not have taken that call.

Artur Pawlowski could prove to be Lake of Fire 2.0. And once again, Danielle Smith wades right in.

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#ableg #abpoli #abvote

While Danielle Smith and the UCP find new ways to make you pay to see your doctor, our team is focused on what really matters: More doctors and better health care, where and when it’s needed.

We will make sure the one million Albertans who need a family doctor, get a family doctor.

Today, bad UCP decisions have chased doctors out of Alberta, with no doctors taking new patients in Lethbridge, Red Deer, and the Bow Valley. Recent data shows that more than 650,000 Albertans have no family doctor, and that number is rising.

Physicians and health professionals are counting on Alberta’s leaders to reimagine family health care, so doctors spend less time doing paperwork and more time caring for you.

We are standing with family doctors to put forward a new plan to transform family medicine in this province. With Rachel Notley as Premier, we will bring forward an innovative plan for primary care that we call Family Health Teams.

Family Health Teams mean you have access to a doctor who works closely with other professionals like nurse practitioners, Registered and Licensed Practical Nurses, mental health therapists, pharmacists, social workers, dietitians, community paramedics, community health navigators, physiotherapists, midwives, speech language therapists, and more.

This will include expanding current clinics and establishing new clinics in high-demand areas so more Albertans have access to modern, innovative primary care.

Our commitment to integrated team-based care delivered in Family Health Clinics will mean that within ten years, up to one million more Albertans will have access to a doctor within a day or two as part of family health clinics.

The Alberta NDP Family Care Teams Plan will ensure:

  • Better care and health outcomes for Albertans.
  • Care closer to home.
  • Access to a family doctor within a day or two.
  • Great places to work and care for patients.
  • Doctors who have time to focus more on medical care and less on administration.
  • Decreased pressure on Emergency Rooms, EMS, and hospitals and lower costs for the acute care system over time.
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#yyc #yeg #yql #ymm

ou deserve to know your retirement is secure, and you can count on that security with Rachel Notley and the Alberta NDP.

Your Pension Is Yours

Retirement is supposed to be focused on spending time with your families and loved ones.

But if Danielle Smith gets her way, she will play politics with your pension and could pull Alberta out of the Canada Pension Plan, risking millions of Albertans retirement security.

As well, in 2019, the UCP introduced Bill 22 with no consultation. The legislation dramatically restructured how public pensions were governed, affecting the retirement security of hundreds of thousands of Albertans.

It’s time for better leadership when it comes to your pension. We will legislate the protection of the CPP, by passing a law preventing any Alberta government from leaving the plan.

An Alberta NDP government will:

  • Stay in the Canada Pension Plan
  • Expand Private Workplace Pensions
  • Reform Governance of Public Sector Pensions Plans

The Alberta NDP will protect your pension.

Remaining in the CPP will save hundreds of millions dollars that Danielle Smith would be forced to spend to start up and operate an Alberta-based pension plan.

From the pipeline technician who heads out in -40C, to the teacher who burns the midnight oil to plan the next day’s lessons, you and your neighbours work hard to keep our economy moving and create a province in which the next generation of leaders and innovators can thrive.

You deserve to know your retirement is secure, and you can count on that security with Rachel Notley and the Alberta NDP.

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#alberta

We will make sure the one million Albertans who need a family doctor, get a family doctor. #ableg #abpoli #abndp #abvote #abelxn23 #aBetterFuture

We will make sure the one million Albertans who need a family doctor, get a family doctor.

Today, bad UCP decisions have chased doctors out of Alberta, with no doctors taking new patients in Lethbridge, Red Deer, and the Bow Valley. Recent data shows that more than 650,000 Albertans have no family doctor, and that number is rising.

Physicians and health professionals are counting on Alberta’s leaders to reimagine family health care, so doctors spend less time doing paperwork and more time caring for you.

We are standing with family doctors to put forward a new plan to transform family medicine in this province. With Rachel Notley as Premier, we will bring forward an innovative plan for primary care that we call Family Health Teams.

Family Health Teams mean you have access to a doctor who works closely with other professionals like nurse practitioners, Registered and Licensed Practical Nurses, mental health therapists, pharmacists, social workers, dietitians, community paramedics, community health navigators, physiotherapists, midwives, speech language therapists, and more.

This will include expanding current clinics and establishing new clinics in high-demand areas so more Albertans have access to modern, innovative primary care.

Our commitment to integrated team-based care delivered in Family Health Clinics will mean that within ten years, up to one million more Albertans will have access to a doctor within a day or two as part of family health clinics.

The Alberta NDP Family Care Teams Plan will ensure:

  • Better care and health outcomes for Albertans.
  • Care closer to home.
  • Access to a family doctor within a day or two.
  • Great places to work and care for patients.
  • Doctors who have time to focus more on medical care and less on administration.
  • Decreased pressure on Emergency Rooms, EMS, and hospitals and lower costs for the acute care system over time.

For Albertans, our Family Health Teams plan means less waiting, less time running around for referrals, and less repeating your story to one new person after another.

It means ONE location to get all your family health concerns looked after.

Now, not later.

While Danielle Smith and the UCP find new ways to make you pay to see your doctor, our team is focused on what really matters:

More doctors and better health care, where and when it’s needed.

For you. Your parents. And your kids.

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#abhealth #ableg #cdnpoli

As physicians with expertise in the field of contraception, we commend the commitment of the NDP to provide free prescription birth control to all Albertans, and call on the UCP to make the same commitment

On Feb. 28, 2023, British Columbia was the first province to announce it would fund free prescription contraception for its residents. The changes will take effect on April 1, and are projected to save women who use the birth control pill as much as $10,000 over the course of their lifetime

In response to the B.C. initiative, the Alberta NDP committed to offering free access to prescription contraception to all Albertans if elected in the next provincial election. So far, the UCP has declined to make the same commitment.

As physicians who work in the field of obstetrics and gynecology, we are in a unique position to attest to the financial barriers that prevent some Albertans from accessing the form of birth control that is right for them. Not all forms of contraception are equivalent, and choosing a type of birth control is a decision that has to be tailored to each patient’s goals, circumstances, and medical history.

For example, estrogen-containing birth control pills are contraindicated in patients with certain medical conditions. Some contraceptives might interact with medications used to treat chronic health conditions. Patients cannot simply settle for the cheapest option available to them; it would be both impractical and medically inadvisable to do so.

Some of the most effective forms of contraception, such as the hormonal IUD and the contraceptive implant, are also the most expensive to purchase up front. The hormonal IUD can cost more than $400 without drug coverage. Studies have shown that, when offered all types of contraception for free, women prefer the IUD and contraceptive implant. In reality, a minority of women end up choosing these forms of contraception, at least partly because of cost. Albertans should be able to access the most effective form of birth control, not just the one that they can afford.

Opponents to government-funded contraception often argue that tax dollars should not be spent on contraception, and should instead remain the financial responsibility of each individual, due to the associated costs of a large-scale program. This argument is nearsighted, as it fails to recognize the financial impacts of unplanned pregnancy on society, as well as the various health benefits associated with contraception.

From a purely economical perspective, the cost of admission to hospital for labour, delivery, and the postpartum period can be significant. According to a 2015 report from Alberta Health, a typical vaginal delivery costs approximately $5,000 to the public system, whereas costs associated with a caesarean section can reach up to $10,000.

Preventing several unplanned pregnancies in Alberta each year would save the system a considerable amount of money. Beyond hospital-associated costs, a 2010 report from B.C. group Options for Health found that every dollar spent on contraception could help save as much as $90 in public spending on social supports after an unplanned pregnancy.

In addition, some forms of birth control have health benefits beyond their contraceptive effect. For example, both the birth control pill and hormonal IUD can be used to treat painful and heavy periods, which could otherwise lead to absenteeism and frequent ER visits. Some forms of contraception can also be used for ovarian and uterine cancer prevention. In short, free contraception is not only good medical care; it is also sound economic policy.

As physicians with expertise in the field of contraception, we commend the commitment of the NDP to provide free prescription birth control to all Albertans, and call on the UCP to make the same commitment. We encourage all individuals to publicly express their support for free contraception, even if they do not plan on directly accessing birth control in the future.

After all, when contraception is free and accessible, our whole society benefits.

Dr. Ariane Litalien is a resident physician training in obstetrics and gynecology in Edmonton. Dr. Ashley Demsky and Dr. Rebecca Rich are obstetrician-gynecologists practising in Edmonton.

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#ableg #ucp

DON BRAID: “Her video call with pastor Artur Pawlowski, released Wednesday by the CBC and the NDP, steps over so many other boundaries that the initial uproar seems almost quaint.”

What on earth is the premier of Alberta doing engaging in a long conversation with a man facing serious charges, during which the accused pressures her to get his charges dropped?

It no longer matters so much whether Premier Danielle Smith directly tried to influence Crown prosecutors over COVID protest charges.

Her video call with pastor Artur Pawlowski, released Wednesday by the CBC and the NDP, steps over so many other boundaries that the initial uproar seems almost quaint.

What on earth is the premier of Alberta doing engaging in a long conversation with a man facing serious charges, during which the accused pressures her to get his charges dropped?

We knew the conversation happened earlier this year. Smith has acknowledged as much. But it’s one thing to be aware that they spoke, and quite another to hear what they said.

It makes for a breathtaking 11 minutes. Pawlowski even hints at annoyance with the premier for not getting him off the hook for his activities at the Coutts border crossing.

One issue is Smith’s extreme favouritism toward people who were facing charges brought by her own prosecution service. Others accused all over the province would be thrilled by such consideration from their premier.

Smith said she’s “frustrated” because she can’t drop charges. As a leadership candidate she promised amnesty. But, gosh darn, when she became premier she found out that’s an American thing, not Canadian.

“I thought we probably had the same power of clemency that they did in the U.S. . . . I’m not a lawyer by training,” Smith said.

You don’t have to be a lawyer to understand this. Nearly everybody in political life knows it. When did a premier ever pardon anybody?

This promise was either utter cluelessness or a cynical leadership promise she knew she wouldn’t be able to keep. Neither option is attractive.

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#ableg #cdnpoli #abjustice

EDMONTON JOURNAL: “She added that her office’s executive director, Rob Anderson, was leading correspondence with the Justice Ministry, “pushing this along.”

Despite a recording showing Alberta Premier Danielle Smith told a street pastor facing charges related to last year’s border blockade she speaks with Crown prosecutors about COVID-related cases “almost weekly,” Smith’s office is once again saying she didn’t mean to say that.

In the conversation, shared in a video posted to the Artur Pawlowski TV YouTube account as an unlisted post, later made private, the premier promised to discuss his case internally and claimed she spoke regularly with prosecutors about such cases.

During the call, Smith said she was frustrated with COVID-related charges. “It was a political decision that initiated this, but it can’t be a political decision to end it,” she said.

She added that her office’s executive director, Rob Anderson, was leading correspondence with the Justice Ministry, “pushing this along.”

Another instance of ‘imprecise language’: premier’s office

In a subsequent statement to Postmedia Wednesday, the premier’s press secretary Becca Polak said “there is absolutely no new information contained in the video,” but did not directly answer questions posed by Postmedia.

While Smith has publicly stated she asked Crown prosecutors “on a regular basis” about COVID-related court cases, she has subsequently walked that back, saying she used “imprecise language,” and had instead spoken with Justice Minister Tyler Shandro and his deputy attorney general.

Polak said Wednesday the same explanation applies to her comments made to Pawlowski.

The video comes after Smith confirmed in February she spoke with Pawlowski, saying at the time she had talked to everyone who had concerns about pandemic public health restriction enforcement orders.

Before CBC News first reported on the contents of the video Wednesday, Smith took aim at the public broadcaster in a statement, calling its story part of a “campaign of defamatory attacks” against her and her office staff. She has previously said that she has been advised by the Justice Ministry not to pursue granting legal amnesty to those charged with non-violent COVID-related charges.

“I have followed that advice. At no time have I spoken with anyone from the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service, nor to my knowledge have any of my office’s staff. Allegations to the contrary are defamatory and will be dealt with accordingly,” Smith said.

Anderson, in a series of tweets Wednesday, also called CBC’s reporting defamatory, and said he had not contacted the Crown prosecution service on the matter, nor did he recall speaking with anyone charged with ongoing COVID-related offences.

Chuck Thompson, head of public affairs for CBC, sent Postmedia a statement in response.

“We reported factually on a conversation everyone can read about or listen to themselves on our site. Our journalism speaks for itself,” he wrote.

Smith has repeatedly said that neither she nor her staff have ever communicated with Crown prosecutors, and that she has only had discussions with the attorney general and deputy attorney general about outstanding COVID-related cases.

“They advised me the Crown prosecutors would independently make their decisions on whether or not to carry on with COVID-related cases based on their assessment of whether there was a reasonable chance of conviction and whether it was in the public interest,” said Smith in January.

“I respect that independent process.”

The Alberta Crown Prosecution Service has previously told Postmedia the Crown prosecutor involved in the Coutts files did not have any recollection of receiving any emails from the premier’s office.

Premier critiques ‘tactics’ of Crown prosecutors

During her UCP leadership campaign, Smith promised to have charges related to COVID-19 violations dropped, but since taking office said she has learned she doesn’t have that clemency power.

At one point during the phone call, Pawlowski raised concerns that the Crown prosecutor in his case had dumped more than 1,000 pages of documents and hundreds of hours of testimony, forcing Pawlowski to hire an expensive legal team to comb through it all. Smith dismissed Pawlowski’s suggestion Shandro was behind the move.

“But, I have also raised it with the deputy minister, and let him know my dissatisfaction with the tactics. So, can you just leave this with me and I will make that request one more time?”

‘Deeply inappropriate’

At a news conference Wednesday, NDP Opposition justice critic Irfan Sabir said the recorded conversation raises further questions about interference in the justice system by the premier or her office, and reiterated his party’s call for an independent investigation.

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#cdnpoli #ableg #ucp

DON BRAID: “Her video call with pastor Artur Pawlowski, released Wednesday by the CBC and the NDP, steps over so many other boundaries that the initial uproar seems almost quaint.”

What on earth is the premier of Alberta doing engaging in a long conversation with a man facing serious charges, during which the accused pressures her to get his charges dropped?

It no longer matters so much whether Premier Danielle Smith directly tried to influence Crown prosecutors over COVID protest charges.

It no longer matters so much whether Premier Danielle Smith directly tried to influence Crown prosecutors over COVID protest charges.

What on earth is the premier of Alberta doing engaging in a long conversation with a man facing serious charges, during which the accused pressures her to get his charges dropped?

We knew the conversation happened earlier this year. Smith has acknowledged as much. But it’s one thing to be aware that they spoke, and quite another to hear what they said.

It makes for a breathtaking 11 minutes. Pawlowski even hints at annoyance with the premier for not getting him off the hook for his activities at the Coutts border crossing.

One issue is Smith’s extreme favouritism toward people who were facing charges brought by her own prosecution service. Others accused all over the province would be thrilled by such consideration from their premier.

Smith said she’s “frustrated” because she can’t drop charges. As a leadership candidate she promised amnesty. But, gosh darn, when she became premier she found out that’s an American thing, not Canadian.

“I thought we probably had the same power of clemency that they did in the U.S. . . . I’m not a lawyer by training,” Smith said.

You don’t have to be a lawyer to understand this. Nearly everybody in political life knows it. When did a premier ever pardon anybody?

This promise was either utter cluelessness or a cynical leadership promise she knew she wouldn’t be able to keep. Neither option is attractive.

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Uncategorized

Online video between Danielle Smith and Artur Pawlowski raises questions over interference

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is heard speaking with outspoken Calgary pastor Artur Pawlowski in a newly-revealed video, creating questions about her influence on Alberta court cases.

On previous occasions, Smith has denied that she or a member of her staff made direct contact with Crown prosecutors in order to influence their decisions on cases involving COVID charges.

But that’s not what she said to Pawlowski. 

The video, recorded by Pawlowski – who faces charges of inciting the Coutts border dispute in early 2022 – involves a conversation between himself and the premier. Critics say it could be evidence that Smith has been interfering with the justice system — or at least involving herself more than she claimed to be.

The taped conversation starts with admiration on Smith’s part. 

“I’ve been watching your public advocacy for many years,” she said. “I’m sorry to hear what they’ve been putting you through.”

“As you are aware, I am still on house arrest, facing 10 and a half years imprisonment for my speech in Coutts,” Pawlowski responded, adding that he reached out to her “because of the promises that were never fulfilled.”

Smith told him that she didn’t have the same power of clemency that the U.S. president or U.S. governors have, but said she could “ask prosecutors (if) there is a reasonable likelihood of conviction, and is it in the public interest?

“I assure you that I have asked them that, almost weekly, ever since I got started here,” Smith said in the recording.

“There have been a number of cases that have been abandoned as they have gone through that assessment and I’m very hopeful that will be the case for more cases but there really isn’t a mechanism for me to get them to drop cases.”

ARTICLE ‘NOT TRUE’

In January, Smith’s office responded to a CBC Calgary story that stated one of her staffers challenged prosecutors on several criminal cases that were connected to the Coutts border dispute.

CTV News hasn’t yet been able to independently confirm the allegations. 

Smith’s office says the article was not true.

“The CBC published a defamatory article containing baseless allegations that Premier’s Office staff had sent a series of emails to Alberta Crown prosecutors concerning charges related to the Coutts protest and other pandemic-related matters before the courts. The CBC admitted that it had not seen any of the emails,” Smith’s office said in a statement attributed to no one in particular.

Mount Royal University political scientist Duane Bratt said there’s a blurry line between asking questions and applying political pressure.

“Now her defenders may say she’s just asking questions,” Bratt said. “But if you ask the same question over and over again, is that pressure?”

Back in the video, Pawlowski is heard appealing to Smith about the charges, saying they could have been dealt with differently. 

“Instead of sitting down and solving the problem, we had to hire an entire legal team, which will cost over $150,000 extra to comb through this massive additional disclosure that we never had before,” he said.

Pawlowski accused Justice Minister Tyler Shandro “of playing a game” and Crown prosecutor Steven Johnson of “following directives.”

Smith continues by saying she would check on that, but said she didn’t think it had anything to do with Shandro.

“I think the issue is once the ball is rolling, these Crown prosecutors seem to be very independent and we can only ask them two questions as I mentioned to you,” she said.

“I don’t very much see this as driven by the minister, but I have also raised this with the deputy minister.”

ALBERTA NDP SURPRISED BY CALL

The Alberta NDP says it was shocked to hear about the call between the premier and a man accused by police of encouraging violent actions, including the “admiration” Smith had for Pawlowski.

“The fact that someone accused of encouraging violence against police can get the premier on the phone at all is extraordinary,” said Irfan Sabir, the NDP’s justice critic, in a statement.

“That she greets him with such admiration says a lot about who Danielle Smith is. It’s clear that interfering in Pawlowski’s case, and the cases of the other accused Coutts blockaders is a priority for Danielle Smith and the UCP.”

Sabir said he wrote to Shandro, asking for an independent investigation into the alleged interference, but has never received a response from him.

“Shandro is clearly aware of the premier’s actions, and he has failed in his duty to uphold the justice system,” Sabir said.

“Smith lied to Albertans when she said she had never contacted prosecutors, and when she said no one in her office had contacted prosecutors.”

Sabir says the solution is an independent investigation.

“One hundred per cent Albertans deserve to know what happened,” said Sabir. “And deserve to be reassured their justice system is independent of political interference. Conversations like this do put a big question mark on that independence.”

NEW STATEMENT FROM SMITH

On Wednesday morning, Smith’s office preemptively released a new statement, ahead of any new news articles. 

In it, she said the organization is continuing its “campaign of defamatory attacks” against her.

Smith said she had already addressed the Jan. 26 conversation she had with Pawlowski during a media availability on Feb. 9.

“This should come as no shock since I spent a lot of time before and during my leadership campaign talking to hundreds of Albertans about COVID-related public health orders and violations,” she stated.

Smith reaffirmed her statements that she was working with the justice minister’s office, not Crown prosecutors, on the cases.

Those discussions recommended “against pursuing amnesty” for individuals charged with non-violent, non-firearms COVID-related charges.

“At no time have I spoken with anyone from the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service, nor to my knowledge have any of my office’s staff.

“Allegations to the contrary are defamatory and will be dealt with accordingly.”

Experts point out the call wasn’t illegal, but if Smith wasn’t bluffing, it does raise questions.

“The Crown prosecutor’s office has denied that they’ve had any conversation with the premier’s office about this,” said MRU justice studies professor Doug King. “So somewhere, someone isn’t telling the truth.”

CTV News has reached out to Pawlowski for further information about his discussions with the premier.

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#alberta

To me, leadership is not about being the loudest in the room, but rather it’s about listening the most closely — and acting on what matters. It’s about looking beyond to see the possibilities and expectations of tomorrow. Friends, a better future is possible.