Buffalo Declaration
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| Author | Michelle Rempel, Blake Richards, Glen Motz, Arnold Viersen |
|---|---|
| Published | February 20, 2020 |
| Pages | 13 |
| Preceded by | Alberta Agenda |
| Website | https://buffalodeclaration.com/ |
The Buffalo Declaration is a Canadian political manifesto published on February 20, 2020. The publication was written by four Albertan Conservative MPs: Michelle Rempel Garner, Blake Richards, Glen Motz and Arnold Viersen. They denounce the underappreciated place that Alberta holds within the Canadian confederation as well as the lack of consideration with regard to its policies, its economy and its culture. The authors declared that it was a "final attempt to make [Alberta] an equal partner in Confederation," and the alternative will be that "a referendum on Alberta’s independence is an inevitability."[1]
When the declaration was released, Rempel declared that "Alberta is not, and never has been, an equal partner in Confederation. The people of my province are suffering and need real, structural change. A line in the sand must be drawn."[2] The declaration faced mixed reaction.
Following the 2019 Canadian federal election, the Liberal Party led by Justin Trudeau was locked out of Western Canada, with the party not winning a single seat in Alberta or Saskatchewan. On social media, #WEXIT trended #1 on Twitter, and pro-independence Facebook groups rapidly grew in size.[3] Many commentators would tie the election results to a growing sense of western alienation under the Trudeau government.[4][5]
In the start of 2020, rail blockades led to a shutdown of passenger rail service and rail freight operations in much of Canada.