“We have to keep powering and diversifying our amazing economy, and I want to tell every business owner and investor listening tonight — whether doing business inside or outside of Alberta — we are throwing our doors wide open for businesses, large and small,” Smith said during her victory speech.

The victory threatens to complicate Trudeau’s quest to fulfill Canada’s climate commitments. Smith has opposed a plan to make the nation’s electricity grids net zero by 2035, and she has promised to fight efforts to slash emissions from the province’s oil sands.
Trudeau’s government has pledged to limit emissions in the energy sector to meet Canada’s climate targets. His government published a plan last year that modeled a 42% cut in oil and gas sector emissions by 2030, which oil executives have said isn’t possible without slashing output.
Beyond energy, Smith has floated the ideas of pulling Alberta out of Canada’s main pension plan and replacing the Royal Canadian Mounted Police with a provincial force.
The government’s first priority will be to pass a law that requires approval by referendum for any increase to personal or business taxes, Smith said.
The UCP’s 11-seat margin of victory made it the closest provincial election since Alberta became a Canadian province in 1905.
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COMMENTARY: Taxes and Regulations Will Increase the Cost of Producing New Energy In Alberta, Making it Less Competitive Than the US – Jack Mintz