Not without a subscription. lol
It bounces to "The Star".
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Trump officials met group pushing Alberta independence from Canada (https://www.ft.com/content/11dc2140-6a5d-4536-b766-52c920affcc7)
The Trump administration has held covert meetings with fringe separatists from Canada’s oil-rich province of Alberta as a rift deepens between Washington and Ottawa.Leaders of the Alberta Prosperity Project, a group of far-right separatists who want the western province to become independent, met US state department officials in Washington three times since April last year, according to people familiar with the talks.They are seeking another meeting next month with state and Treasury officials to ask for a $500bn credit facility to help bankroll the province if an independence referendum — yet to be called — is passed.“The US is extremely enthusiastic about a free and independent Alberta,” Jeff Rath, APP legal counsel, who attended the meetings, told the FT.He claimed he had a “much stronger relationship” with the Trump administration than Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.A state department spokesperson said: “The department regularly meets with civil society types. As is typical in routine meetings such as these, no commitments were made.”
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Trump officials met group pushing Alberta independence from Canada (https://www.ft.com/content/11dc2140-6a5d-4536-b766-52c920affcc7)
A White House official said: “Administration officials meet with a number of civil society groups. No such support, or any other commitments, was conveyed.”A person familiar with Treasury secretary Scott Bessent’s thinking said neither he nor any other Treasury officials were aware of any credit facility proposal and did not intend to engage on the issue. The person added that no senior Treasury department official had received a request for a meeting.Spokespeople for the US Treasury and Carney’s office declined to comment.The contacts coincide with a deterioration in relations between the US and Canada. President Donald Trump and Carney clashed last week after the Canadian premier suggested Washington was creating a “rupture” in the world order.The US was unlikely to provide any material support to the fringe separatist movement, according to people familiar with the American position. But the conversations underline the tensions between Washington and Carney’s federal government in Ottawa.
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Trump officials met group pushing Alberta independence from Canada (https://www.ft.com/content/11dc2140-6a5d-4536-b766-52c920affcc7)
Carlo Dade, director of international policy at the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, described the separatist leaders as “attention seekers”. He added: “The Americans are more than happy to continue to play Canadians off each other.”British Columbia premier David Eby described the FT’s report of the meeting as alarming because Trump is “not particularly respectful to Canada’s sovereignty”.“To go to a foreign country and to ask for assistance in breaking up Canada, there’s an old-fashioned word for that. And that word is treason,” he told reporters in Ottawa on Thursday.