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Gary Harmata's avatar

The western provinces are not monolithic. Edmonton does not follow the mold of “alienated Alberta”. Calgary is behaving more and more like a large urban centre (liberal). In BC, the interior is more like Alberta in their political leanings but they are buried by the large urban population of Vancouver area. The idea of western alienation is nonsense. A more useful descriptor would be urban vs rural. Rural regions are economically tied to the land. The economies of these areas are dominated by agriculture, resource extraction (fossil fuels as well as mining.) Their politics are conservative. When you divide the nation up on rural vs urban, Western Ontario, the farm belt of the Great Lakes lowlands, the farmlands of Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan line up well with the hinterlands of BC.

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Doug's avatar

The fossil fuel industry owns the public discourse space in Alberchewan in a way that is unique to those provinces.

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