πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ Canadian Politics

May 25th, 2026

Today's top 5 stories, curated by Daily Direct.

Globe and Mail

Alberta separation vote a β€˜dangerous bluff,’ Carney warns

Alberta's push for a separation referendum is a miscalculation that would backfire at the negotiating table, Prime Minister Mark Carney warned this week. Rather than strengthening the province's leverage, a "yes" vote would undermine it, he argued. The remarks signal Ottawa's intention to hold firm rather than treat the threat as political pressure worth accommodating.

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CBC Politics

Feds lease 10 new firefighting aircraft as wildfire season gets underway

The federal government has secured 10 additional firefighting aircraft ahead of the 2026 wildfire season, expanding Canada's aerial capacity to combat blazes from the outset. The move signals a proactive push to bolster resources after recent years of historically destructive fire seasons. Having more aircraft in place early could prove critical as warming conditions continue to drive larger and more frequent wildfires across the country.

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CBC Politics

Alberta separation referendum, pipeline tensions loom over western premiers' meeting

Western premiers are convening in Kananaskis this week against a charged backdrop, with Alberta's separatist sentiment casting a long shadow over the proceedings. The meeting comes as pipeline disputes and federal tensions continue to strain relations between western provinces and Ottawa. With Alberta openly wrestling with its place in Confederation, the stakes for regional unity have rarely felt higher.

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Globe and Mail

Ottawa-Alberta carbon price, pipeline deal will have $1.2-billion liability cap critics say is too low

Alberta's landmark carbon pricing and pipeline deal with Ottawa will include a $1.2-billion liability cap, raising concerns among critics that the ceiling is insufficient to protect against policy reversals by future governments. The contracts are designed to give energy companies confidence that long-term investments won't be undermined by shifting political winds. Skeptics argue the cap falls well short of what would be needed to make such guarantees meaningful.

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Globe and Mail

Google warns lawful-access bill could create major cybersecurity risks

Google is sounding the alarm over proposed lawful-access legislation, warning that forcing tech companies to provide government access to user data could introduce serious vulnerabilities into their systems. The company argues that building backdoors for law enforcement inevitably weakens the same encryption that protects users from malicious actors. The warning reignites a long-running tension between national security demands and the integrity of digital privacy infrastructure.

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