The Walrus

Inside Wexit

Meet the Albertans who want to start their own country

- Photograph­y by Brett Gundlock

Meet the Albertans who want to start their own country by Brett Gundlock

Albertans are a fiery breed. For those of us who grew up in Alberta, it wasn’t uncommon for family get-togethers to climb a few decibels whenever the conversati­on turned to politics. But political discussion­s in the province today are angrier than I remember. With tens of thousands of people out of work and businesses closing, current debates around climate change, pipelines, and carbon taxes are being construed by many residents as attacks on their identity and way of life. Many also don’t trust the current federal government to represent them. After last year’s election, the nearest Liberal MP is almost 700 kilometres from Edmonton. Everyone I know seems to have a personal story about being affected by the shrinking economy. Is it any surprise that western separatist­s are back, blaming Canada and the so-called eastern elites for their economic difficulti­es? Albertans have talked about breaking up with the country before — separatist parties in the province date back to the 1980s — but it was more political stunt than manifesto. Now, there’s a new urgency to the idea and a new word for the mood: “Wexit.” Leaving Confederat­ion has become, almost overnight, a mainstream topic. I went back to Alberta over December and January to speak to members of the various separatist groups. It would be easy to fall back on stereotype­s of Albertans and vilify Wexiteers as resentful, oil-spoiled rednecks. Instead, I wanted to present their voices in an unbiased fashion, to let them air their grievances without judgment. The separatist­s often represent the extreme side of the issue, but their views don’t stray far from opinions you are likely to hear in many homes across the province.

—Brett Gundlock

Interviews have been edited for clarity and length.

Kathy Flett “I would love to see an amicable separation when Alberta leaves Confederat­ion — one where the rest of the country understand­s that this is what we have to do for us, for our kids, for future generation­s; where there isn’t animosity, there is no fight or pushback, and we are able to move forward, creating great working relations and great trade relations within that new structure. That’s what I would love to see. I don’t know if I will, but it’s definitely what we are going to work toward.”

Jake Eskesen “Let’s be honest: Wexit is, overall, pretty conservati­ve. But, in our group, I know we have people who voted NDP, people from the LGBT Q community, people from First Nations communitie­s, people who wouldn’t vote Conservati­ve but would possibly vote for Wexit because they see the things that are wrong with our country. I was talking to a guy the other day, and he showed me his bank account. He was $800 in the hole. He can’t get any work. And there are a lot of people like him, who are scared, who don’t know what they are going to do, and they’re considerin­g a lot of options that they wouldn’t consider in a normal state.”

Michael Wagner “Wexit strengthen­s Alberta’s position in the federation. Quebec never separated, but it has gotten a lot of benefits based on the fact that it has a party that advocates seceding from Canada. Having a stable and legitimate separatist movement here would deter some of the federal policies that anger Albertans.”

Darren Esayenko “There is just a complete cultural and ideologica­l divide between east and west. The only way they are going to heal that is if they radically decentrali­ze the federal system. Unless that happens, you are going to have a divided country. It is going to break up, guaranteed.”

Todd Brown “The first thing that we are going to do is not have anything to do with the federal Firearms Act. It is garbage, it is gone.

Our gun policy won’t outright ban anything, because we see firearms as private property. A lot of people, especially left-thinking people, say,

‘Guns are dangerous, they kill.’ Well, the vehicle that you drive is more likely to kill somebody than the gun that I own. If I want to pack a firearm around my land, I am well within my rights to do so.”

Sam Bell “When you take into account our lack of representa­tion, our over-taxation, and the repression of our resource-wealth generation capacity, some Albertans view separatism as a last hope for the province. If we don’t break away from what is holding us back, we might never be able to be great again. Sovereignt­y and the right to govern ourselves — I think that’s what it comes down to.”

Peter Downing “We are moving with momentum right now. We are capturing the hearts and minds of people across western Canada. We are speaking with Indigenous people. Great conversati­ons, great dialogue. Wexit isn’t a left-wing versus right-wing issue. That, I think, is the big thing for progressiv­e readers to understand: this is not an ideologica­l movement, despite the smears and fake stuff that is out there about me and our organizati­on. What we are doing is in the interest of all western Canadians, whether they’re Indigenous, non-indigenous, or immigrants.”

Jon Mihalich “Alberta sits on enough resources that, if managed properly, they could pay for our health care, our new government, police, education, everything, and we’d have a surplus left over. But our oil industry is desecrated. Nothing is left. Tens of thousands of people are losing everything as we speak. We need to do something. We are in trouble for a reason — we need to fix that. And it is not you and I we got to worry about, it is our kids we got to worry about. It is our neighbours’ kids we got to worry about.”

C. W. Alexander “Our focus is to demonstrat­e and show Albertans that an independen­t Alberta could be massively prosperous. The risks of leaving, we believe, are less than the risks of staying. And, when you actually get down to brass tacks, there are huge benefits. Alberta would literally become a little Dubai in North America.”

 ??  ?? Kathy Flett, former interim leader of
Wexit Alberta, recently joined the Freedom Conservati­ve Party of Alberta. She is pictured in Red Deer.
Kathy Flett, former interim leader of Wexit Alberta, recently joined the Freedom Conservati­ve Party of Alberta. She is pictured in Red Deer.
 ??  ?? Jake Eskesen is one of the organizers of Unify the West, whose primary goal is to unite separatist groups. He created a private chat platform to help nearly 2,500 members exchange ideas and coordinate strategy. He is pictured in Calgary.
Jake Eskesen is one of the organizers of Unify the West, whose primary goal is to unite separatist groups. He created a private chat platform to help nearly 2,500 members exchange ideas and coordinate strategy. He is pictured in Calgary.
 ??  ?? Michael Wagner, author of Alberta: Separatism Then and
Now, at his Edmonton home. Wagner is one of the most wellknown historians of the province’s secessioni­st movement.
Michael Wagner, author of Alberta: Separatism Then and Now, at his Edmonton home. Wagner is one of the most wellknown historians of the province’s secessioni­st movement.
 ??  ?? At a Wexit rally in
Red Deer, Darren Esayenko holds a flag designed for the Western Independen­ce Party in the 1980s. He says he has been a western sovereigni­st since he was in his teens.
At a Wexit rally in Red Deer, Darren Esayenko holds a flag designed for the Western Independen­ce Party in the 1980s. He says he has been a western sovereigni­st since he was in his teens.
 ??  ?? Todd Brown, who has written or influenced gun policy for various political parties, is writing Wexit’s legislatio­n on firearms. He is pictured on his ranch in Winfield.
Todd Brown, who has written or influenced gun policy for various political parties, is writing Wexit’s legislatio­n on firearms. He is pictured on his ranch in Winfield.
 ??  ?? Sam Bell, administra­tor of a Make Alberta Great Again Facebook page, poses in downtown Edmonton following a Wexit rally at the provincial legislatur­e. He says the Hawaiian shirt expresses “tongue-in-cheek support for global warming during coldweathe­r snaps.”
Sam Bell, administra­tor of a Make Alberta Great Again Facebook page, poses in downtown Edmonton following a Wexit rally at the provincial legislatur­e. He says the Hawaiian shirt expresses “tongue-in-cheek support for global warming during coldweathe­r snaps.”
 ??  ?? Peter Downing (right), leader of Wexit Canada, photograph­ed at a Wexit event in
Red Deer.
Peter Downing (right), leader of Wexit Canada, photograph­ed at a Wexit event in Red Deer.
 ??  ?? Jon Mihalich, pictured at the Sands Inn and Suites in Edmonton. Mihalich is a member of The Myth Is Canada, a group that believes Canada’s constituti­on is invalid.
Jon Mihalich, pictured at the Sands Inn and Suites in Edmonton. Mihalich is a member of The Myth Is Canada, a group that believes Canada’s constituti­on is invalid.
 ??  ?? C. W. Alexander, Alberta Independen­ce Party board member, in his Calgary home.
C. W. Alexander, Alberta Independen­ce Party board member, in his Calgary home.

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