Alberta
Alberta government names five new members to Preston Manning-led COVID review panel
By Dean Bennett in Edmonton
The Alberta government has named five members to a COVID-19 review panel led by former Reform Party leader Preston Manning, one of whom was recently fired along with the rest of the governing board of Alberta Health Services.
Jack Mintz joins Dr. Martha Fulford, Michel Kelly-Gagnon, Dr. Rob Tanguay and Jack Major on the Public Health Emergencies Governance Review panel.
āAlbertans can have confidence Albertaās pandemic response will be reviewed by these medical, policy, legal and economic experts so our province can better respond to the next public health emergency,ā Smith said in a statement Friday.
Mintz is the presidentās fellow at the University of Calgaryās School of Public Policy and advises and writes on tax, business and health policy.
He and the board were fired by Smith in November. She said they failed Albertans during the pandemic by failing to scale up hospital capacity as promised, forcing the government to impose what Smith has termed freedom-busting health restrictions.
The board members were replaced by an administrator. In an opinion piece published in the Financial Post in November, Mintz wrote that he was OK with the firing because the changes represent a necessary jump-start to achieve true reform in health-care delivery.
Major is a former Supreme Court judge and Kelly-Gagnon is president of the Montreal Economic Institute.
Tanguay is a psychiatrist and University of Calgary professor focusing on disability and rehabilitation.
Fulford is chief of medicine at McMaster University Medical Centre in Hamilton and focuses on infectious diseases. She challenged the efficacy of some health restrictions during the pandemic.
The panel is not only looking at government decision-making, but also its effects on jobs, children, mental health and protection of rights and freedoms. It is to report back by Nov. 15.
The bulk of the panel’s work will be reviewing legislation, regulations and ministerial orders, but it will also take feedback online.
The budget is $2 million. Manning, who was announced as chair a month ago, is to be paid $253,000.
Manning and Smith have been critical of government-imposed health restrictions such as masking, gathering rules and vaccine mandates during the pandemic.
Smith has questioned the efficacy of the methods and their long-term effects on household incomes, the economy and mental health. She has promised health restrictions and vaccine mandates would have no role in any future COVID-19 response in Alberta.
The Opposition New Democrats have labelled the panel a political sop to Smithās far-right supporters angry over COVID-19 restrictions, and have promised to cancel it should they win the May 29 provincial election.
āThis panel is a brutal waste of Alberta taxpayersā money,” said NDP health critic David Shepherd.
“Preston Manning has already reached his own conclusions, and based on the panellists, it looks like itās headed toward whatever outcome Danielle Smith and the UCP are looking for. An Alberta NDP government will put an end to this sham panel.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 17, 2023.
Alberta
Is Canada’s Federation Fair?

David Clinton
Contrasting the principle of equalization with the execution
Quebec – as an example – happens to be sitting on its own significant untapped oil and gas reserves. ThoseĀ potential opportunitiesĀ include the Utica Shale formation, the Anticosti Island basin, and the GaspĆ© Peninsula (along with some offshore potential in the Gulf of St. Lawrence).
So Quebec is effectively being paid billions of dollars a year toĀ notĀ exploit their natural resources. That places their ostensibly principled stand against energy resource exploitation in a very different light.
Youāll need to search long and hard to find a Canadian unwilling to help those less fortunate. And, so long as we identify as members of one nationĀ¹, that feeling stretches from coast to coast.
So the basic principle of Canadaās equalization payments – where poorer provinces receive billions of dollars in special federal payments – is easy to understand. But as you can imagine, itās not easy to apply the principle in a way thatās fair, and the current methodology has arguably lead to a very strange set of incentives.
According to Department of Finance Canada, eligibility for payments is determined based on your provinceāsĀ fiscal capacity. Fiscal capacity is a measure of the taxes (income, business, property, and consumption) that a provinceĀ couldĀ raise (based on national average rates) along with revenues from natural resources. The idea, I suppose, is that youāre creating a realistic proxy for a provinceās higher personal earnings and consumption and, with greater natural resources revenues, a reduced need to increase income tax rates.
But the devil is in the details, and I think there are some questions worth asking:
- Whichever way you measure fiscal capacity thereāll be both winners and losers, so who gets to decide?
- Should a province that effectively funds more than its āshareā get proportionately greater representation for national policyĀ²Ā – or at least not see its policy preferences consistently overruled by its beneficiary provinces?
The problem, of course, is that the decisions that defined equalization were – because of long-standing political conditions – dominated by the region that ended up receiving the most. Had the formula been the best one possible, there would have been little room to complain. But was it?
For example, attaching so much weight to natural resource revenues is just one of many possible approaches – and far from the most obvious. Consider how the profits from natural resources already mostly show up in higher income and corporate tax revenues (including income tax paid by provincial government workers employed by energy-related ministries)?
And who said that such calculationsĀ hadĀ to be population-based, which clearly benefits Quebec (nine million residents vs around $5 billion in resource income) over Newfoundland (545,000 people vs $1.6 billion) or Alberta (4.2 million people vs $19 billion). While AlbertaāsĀ average market incomeĀ is 20 percent or so higher than Quebecās, Quebecās is quite a bit higher than Newfoundlandās. So why should Newfoundland receive only minimal equalization payments?
To illustrate all that, hereās the most recent payment breakdown when measured per-capita:
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For clarification, the latest per-capita payments to poorer provinces ranged from $3,936 to PEI, $1,553 to Quebec, and $36 to Ontario. Only Saskatchewan, Alberta, and BC received nothing.
AndĀ hereās how the total equalization paymentsĀ (in millions of dollars) have played out over the past decade:
Is energy wealth the right differentiating factor because itās there through simple dumb luck, morally compelling the fortunate provinces to share their fortune? That would be a really difficult argument to make. For one thing because Quebec – as an example – happens to be sitting on its own significant untapped oil and gas reserves. ThoseĀ potential opportunitiesĀ include the Utica Shale formation, the Anticosti Island basin, and the GaspĆ© Peninsula (along with some offshore potential in the Gulf of St. Lawrence).
So Quebec is effectively being paid billions of dollars a year toĀ notĀ exploit their natural resources. That places their ostensibly principled stand against energy resource exploitation in a very different light. Perhaps that stand is correct or perhaps it isnāt. But itās a stand they probably couldnāt have afforded to take had the equalization calculation been different.
Of course, no formula could possibly please everyone, but punishing the losers with ongoing attacks on the very source of their contributions is guaranteed to inspire resentment. And that could lead to very dark places.
Note: I know this post sounds like it came from a grumpy Albertan. But I assure you that Iāve never even visited the province, instead spending most of my life in Ontario.
Which has admittedly been challenging since the former primer ministerĀ infamously described usĀ as a post-national state without an identity.
This isnāt nearly as crazy as it sounds. After all, there are already formal mechanisms through which Indigenous communities get more than a one-person-one-vote voice.
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Alberta
Big win for Alberta and Canada: Statement from Premier Smith

Premier Danielle Smith issued the following statement on the April 2, 2025 U.S. tariff announcement:
āToday was an important win for Canada and Alberta, as it appears the United States has decided to uphold the majority of the free trade agreement (CUSMA) between our two nations. It also appears this will continue to be the case until after the Canadian federal election has concluded and the newly elected Canadian government is able to renegotiate CUSMA with the U.S. administration.
āThis is precisely what I have been advocating for from the U.S. administration for months.
āIt means that the majority of goods sold into the United States from Canada will have no tariffs applied to them, including zero per cent tariffs on energy, minerals, agricultural products, uranium, seafood, potash and host of other Canadian goods.
āThere is still work to be done, of course. Unfortunately, tariffs previously announced by the United States on Canadian automobiles, steel and aluminum have not been removed. The efforts of premiers and the federal government should therefore shift towards removing or significantly reducing these remaining tariffs as we go forward and ensuring affected workers across Canada are generously supported until the situation is resolved.
āI again call on all involved in our national advocacy efforts to focus on diplomacy and persuasion while avoiding unnecessary escalation. Clearly, this strategy has been the most effective to this point.
āAs it appears the worst of this tariff dispute is behind us (though there is still work to be done), it is my sincere hope that we, as Canadians, can abandon the disastrous policies that have made Canada vulnerable to and overly dependent on the United States, fast-track national resource corridors, get out of the way of provincial resource development and turn our country into an independent economic juggernaut and energy superpower.ā
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