This Time, Alberta Leads.
Brock Crocker for Battle River–Crowfoot
Fighting for Identity. Grounded in Alberta. Proudly Canadian.
Brock Crocker for Battle River–Crowfoot
Fighting for Identity. Grounded in Alberta. Proudly Canadian.
Our flag should unite us — not divide us. I will fight to restore pride in our national symbols and defend their meaning from those who seek to rewrite our history or downplay Canada’s heritage. The Maple Leaf must represent all Canadians, including those who built, defended, and sacrificed for this country.
Ottawa must respect Alberta. I will fight against federal overreach and push for reforms that empower provinces, defend our industries, and let Albertans shape their own future — not be dictated to by Central Canada.
Canada must never answer to foreign bureaucracies, unelected bodies, or globalist priorities. I will stand firm on border security, domestic production, and policies made by and for Canadians.
I’ve worked for the CFIB and run my own business — I know what entrepreneurs face. I’ll push to cut red tape, lower taxes, and get government out of the way of people trying to build something.
Ottawa’s debt addiction is robbing our children’s future. I’ll support a full audit of government programs, serious spending cuts, and a plan to get back to balanced budgets.
I will unapologetically support our oil, gas, and agricultural industries. These sectors built our region and power our economy — they deserve better than being vilified and taxed into decline.
Your rights don’t come from government — they belong to you. I’ll defend free speech, religious liberty, and lawful gun ownership from ideologues who seek to erode them.
Please reach us at truewestvoice@gmail.com if you cannot find an answer to your question.
Because I believe Canada has lost its footing. We need to fix the foundation before we build anything else — and that starts with our identity. The flag isn’t just a symbol — it’s what we stand for. I’m running to reopen the conversation, restore pride, and remind Ottawa who we are.
Because the flag debate was never just about fabric — it was about identity, history, and unity. We were promised a symbol that represented all of Canada, but what we got instead was division and abstraction. I believe it’s time to revisit what that flag truly means — and who it leaves behind.
It means taking a serious look at the cracks in our national story — whether it’s a flag that erased heritage, or institutions that no longer serve the people. Before we talk about new programs or policies, we need to know who we are. This campaign is about asking the hard questions most politicians won’t.
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