The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Should Alberta Secede from Canada? || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: June 3, 2026Enough signatures have been gathered to force an independence referendum and vote in Alberta. Just a reminder that secession is legally possible in Canada following a successful referendum. Join the ...Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihan Full Newsletter: https://bit.ly/4uzWuhT
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Everybody, Peter Zine here.
Come to you from Rocco Calcio, which was in, oh no, wind.
Which was a ladyhockey, which if you haven't seen, you're going to push through here.
The news today is that we are going to have a referendum on independence in Alberta.
The people who are in favor of independence got the 10% of the providential citizenry to sign the petition.
So later this year, probably at the end of the summer, we're going to have the vote, the premier,
that's kind of the governor of Alberta has already signed off on it and away we are for the races.
I'm not going to predict how it's going to go.
That is up to the people of Alberta and no one else, but I want to outline three things.
Number one, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled decades ago in the case of Quebec that if there is a
plebiscite and they vote for referendum, you've got to let them go.
So this is legal by Canadian law.
Technically something like this would not be legal in the case of the United States.
Constitution forbids secession. We fought a little war over it. But Canada's different. So that's
piece one. Piece two. The economic argument for independence is basically the idea that Canada is
aging very, very rapidly. And Alberta is not. And Alberta has a dynamic energy sector that has
been growing for some time. And as the rest of Canada gets older and Alberta does not,
the financial transfers from Alberta to Canada have begun bigger and bigger.
and bigger and bigger, and the Canadians don't really give the Albertans much say in how that money is
gets spent. So, you know, you can see why they're a little aggrode. I want to point out a couple
things that have changed in the relationship, though. Over the last 20 years, Canada has really
brought in a surge of migrants that have partially addressed some of the demographic issues.
So the financial transfer issue is not as horrible in relative terms as it used to be. In fact,
at this moment, Alberta is actually in decent position financially versus the rest of the
Canada. It's still by far a net provider. It's the richest province by far. But the imbalance is not as bad
as it looked like it was going to be when I first started talking about this issue 15 years ago.
And then finally, should this pass and Alberta become independent, it would be screwed.
Alberta is landlocked and their primary exparts are oil and grain and those are US dollar
denominated commodities. And so if you have an independent Alberta exporting
for hard currency, you have a very inflationary environment very, very, very quickly.
It would be difficult to survive in a country that now has a very, very limited labor pool.
So the cost of an independent Alberta would be immense, which means that independent Alberta
would need to do one of two things. Number one, negotiate some sort of extensive free trade
pact with Canada that would be worse for Alberta than provincehood is right now.
It's kind of like the situation that Brits are dealing with as they talk about going back on Brexit and re-entering the EU.
Or number two, apply for U.S. statehood and join the United States, in which case, Alberta is still the richest province, would still be a net donor to the national budget, but it wouldn't be nearly the same.
The stretch, the delta between Alberta state and the United States would not be nearly as large.
Anyway, these are the decisions in front of them, how they play out, that's entirely up to them, the campaign that's the state.
summer is going to be wild.
