← NewsAll
Canada news is currently paused for latest updates. We'll resume retrieval when enough requests come in.
Albertans mostly say they would stay in Canada, poll suggests
Summary
An Angus Reid Institute online poll of 979 Albertans (Feb. 2–6) found 65% would vote or lean toward voting to stay in Canada, 29% would vote or lean toward leaving, and 5% were unsure.
Content
Petition signings and town halls have renewed public focus on Alberta separation, but a recent poll suggests most residents still prefer to remain in Canada. The Angus Reid Institute conducted an online survey of 979 Albertans from Feb. 2 to 6. The poll measured definite and leaning intentions in the event of a referendum on separation. The result is being discussed alongside active signature drives for an independence petition and a separate petition to keep Alberta in Canada.
Key poll findings:
- 65% of respondents said they would either vote to stay in Canada or lean toward voting to stay, while 29% said they would vote or lean toward voting to leave; 5% were unsure.
- Of those favouring staying, 57% said they would definitely vote to stay and 8% said they would lean that way; of those favouring leaving, 8% said they would definitely vote to leave and 21% said they would lean that way.
- Poll respondents who identify as Alberta NDP voters were reported as 93% in favour of remaining in Canada, while those who identify as United Conservative Party (UCP) voters showed more division.
- Among self-identified UCP voters, 16% said they would definitely vote to leave, 41% said they lean toward leaving, and 26% said they would definitely vote to stay.
- If Alberta were to leave Confederation, 74% of respondents said they would move to another Canadian province or territory, while 23% said they would stay in an independent Alberta.
- The Alberta Prosperity Project’s petition needs close to 177,000–178,000 verified signatures by May 2 to trigger a referendum; separate signature efforts to keep Alberta in Canada were previously verified with over 400,000 signatures.
Summary:
The poll indicates a clear majority of Albertans currently favour remaining in Canada, though a notable group that leans toward leaving could be decisive in a referendum. The independence petition organizer has said a referendum will be pursued if the signature threshold is met; the petition needs roughly 177,000–178,000 signatures by May 2 to trigger that process. Undetermined at this time whether the petition will reach the threshold.
