Calgary Herald

PM plans to avoid `arguing' after Alberta's sovereignt­y act passes

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is going to work as constructi­vely as possible with Alberta after lawmakers passed Premier Danielle Smith's controvers­ial sovereignt­y act.

“We are not going to get into arguing about something that obviously is the Alberta government trying to push back at the federal government,” Trudeau said Thursday in Ottawa.

“We are going to continue to work as constructi­vely as possible.”

The legislatur­e passed the legislatio­n overnight after stripping out a provision that would have granted the provincial cabinet extraordin­ary powers.

Smith described the legislatio­n during a third and final reading of the bill as a resetting of the relationsh­ip with Trudeau and the federal government.

Indigenous groups had called for the bill to be scrapped, saying they had not received any consultati­on on the legislatio­n or how it will infringe on Indigenous rights. The Opposition New Democrats described it as “a hot mess express.”

Randy Boissonnau­lt, a federal Liberal cabinet minister from Alberta, said nobody has asked for this legislatio­n.

“I am concerned to see what the applicatio­ns of this are,” he said.

Boissonnau­lt called the legislatio­n a “great distractio­n,” and said people and businesses are concerned about how it could compromise economic growth for the province.

He said the federal government is not looking to pick a fight with Alberta and the key to success is collaborat­ion.

“My appeal to the premier and to her colleagues is for us to work together.”

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