March 9, 2026
Ms Smith: I think that we are acting in the true spirit of economic reconciliation.
Mr. Nenshi: Yet for the first time in history the Assembly of Treaty Chiefs has declared nonconfidence in a provincial government.

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March 9, 2026
Ms Smith: I think that we are acting in the true spirit of economic reconciliation.
Mr. Nenshi: Yet for the first time in history the Assembly of Treaty Chiefs has declared nonconfidence in a provincial government.
April 14, 2026
Mr. Nenshi: You know, when I was a teacher, Mr. Speaker, I hated it when students called on their own behaviour said, “But Johnny was worse,” and that’s all we ever hear from this Premier. She desperately wants to be the Leader of the Opposition instead of actually running the province. I hope Albertans give her her wish.
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Ms Smith: To be clear, Mr. Speaker, I’m not saying that Johnny was worse. I’m saying that the NDP was worse.
February 24, 2026
Mr. Nenshi: Why is the Premier having so much trouble? Can she just say those two sentences, that she’s proud to be Canadian and she opposes separatism?
Ms Smith: I am proud to be Canadian, and I want every Albertan to feel exactly the same way. Sadly, after 10 years of damaging policy by his buddy Justin Trudeau, supported by their federal leader in the NDP, they crushed our economy with terrible policies that drove investment out of our province, drove people out of our province, and ensured that we were not going to get oil and gas production increased. We are now in the process of repairing that relationship with the federal government with a memorandum of understanding, and I’m looking forward to giving Albertans hope again.
Mr. Nenshi: Yet more meaningless word salad. Thankfully, it’s Ramadan, and I don’t gotta eat it.
April 21, 2026
Mr. Nenshi: Let’s go back to Susan Samson. She tells a story of how the UCP commissioners completely did a one-eighty. They completely flipped, changed their minds long after the public hearings were done, and came up with these maps. Within two or three weeks, she says, they can produce an entire set of maps for the entire province. You tell me where that came from. Premier, where did it come from?
Ms Smith: Mr. Speaker, the members opposite should take our AI academy because then they’d learn how to use the marvels of modern technology as well so that they can develop their own maps. There is no complexity in using technology to develop maps.
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Mr. Nenshi: I think the Premier just admitted that staff in her office used AI to try and gerrymander the maps.
May 7, 2026
Mr. Amery: The Leader of the Opposition sat on it, kept it under his hat, and waited to record Instagram videos rather than letting the public know about this serious breach.
Mr. Nixon: You hid it
Mr. Nenshi: Calling the cops is hiding it?
Mr. Amery: It’s highly inappropriate. Putting Albertans at risk is unacceptable.
Mr. Nenshi: What about when the cops are called on you for all the things you’ve done?
Mr. Schow: Point of order.
The Speaker: A point of order is noted at 10:35.
Mr. Schow: That’s low, even for you.
Mr. Nenshi: So is shooting horses.
The Speaker: Order. Order. On both sides. Stop.
April 2, 2026
Mr. Nenshi: If you’re teaching about Stalin or Pol Pot or the Rwandan genocide or residential schools or slavery, how exactly is a teacher expected to stay neutral? What is the other side of these issues the Premier wants teachers to teach?
Ms Smith: We saw exactly what we do not want in our schools at the NDP convention last weekend, people showing their equity cards so that they could determine what intersectional definition they have to be able to bump the line so they could bump somebody else and misnaming on pronouns. That is what has been obsessing the schools for the last 10 years. Parents want to get back to the basics. They want their kids to read. They want their kids to be able to do math. They want them to be able to do coding. They want them to be able to do critical thinking, not critical theory, which is what they’ve been advocating for the last 10 years.
November 19, 2025
Mr. Nenshi: If a parent is in the examination room with their child and the physician says: “This is the best treatment. This is the scientific treatment. We’ve gone through all the tests. This is what we think you should have, but I’m sorry to tell you that the government will not allow you to have that treatment,” it’s not giving parents rights; it’s taking them away. It’s inserting the Premier and the ministers of health, all four of them, into the diagnostic room with the patient, the parents, and their physician. How could that possibly be construed as giving parents more rights? If the minister truly believed, as he said, that the parents are the most important caregiver, why would he strip away these rights from parents? Because that’s not what this is about.
April 1, 2026
Mr. Nenshi: This government simply wants the ability for the cabinet – and notice they didn’t say: the judicial appointments committee. They didn’t say: experts. They didn’t say anyone else. They said, “the Lieutenant Governor in Council,” which means the cabinet, by the way, which means the cabinet will actually make that distinction. There’s nothing else in this motion that says any different, so how do we read this other than . . .
An Hon. Member: Your time is up.
Mr. Nenshi: No. I’m the Leader of the Opposition. I can go on for 90 minutes. Settle in. If you’re uncomfortable, go get a drink.