December 1, 2025
Mr. Hunter: The problem that can be fixed is through the private sector being able to drive the price down. As you know, Mr. Speaker, the private sector has been proven for a long time to be able to actually drive the price down.

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December 1, 2025
Mr. Hunter: The problem that can be fixed is through the private sector being able to drive the price down. As you know, Mr. Speaker, the private sector has been proven for a long time to be able to actually drive the price down.
November 25, 2025
Member Kayande: This is an act that allows hunting on elk farms. My God, hunting on elk farms.[interjections] My goodness. Lots of cheers on the other side for hunting on elk farms. I don’t know a single hunter who would be proud . . .
Mr. Hunter: Right here.
Member Kayande: . . . of bagging an elk on an elk farm. Oh, the Member for Taber-Warner is really fired up about that. He wants to walk into a fenced pen, shoot an elk, and take it home. I have limited time, so I’m not going to go into that.
May 6, 2025
Mr. Hunter: If the federal Liberals shut down our ability to be the economic engine of Canada, how will we maintain our Alberta advantage? We won’t, and perhaps that’s why the Liberals are doing it. There’s a term for that kind of behaviour. It’s called having a bad case of the Oedipus complex.
March 10, 2025
Mr. Hunter: Now, Madam Speaker, the reality is that they’re continually heckling . . .
Mr. Schmidt: Let’s cut your pay. You’re terrible at your job.
Speaker’s Ruling Insulting Language
The Deputy Speaker: Hon. member, what rule allows you to yell across the aisle at a member, saying, “You are terrible at your job”? I think this would be a great opportunity for you to apologize.
Mr. Schmidt: Well, thank you, Madam Speaker. I am very sorry that the minister is terrible at his job and that he’s getting paid what he is.
May 6, 2025
Mr. Hunter: Unfortunately, this is what we have come to expect from Ottawa. Maybe that’s why Albertans are so strong, why we are get-’er-done-type people, because we have to be. To my fellow Albertans: what is this about? It’s about calling out a broken and unfair relationship. Alberta has taken enough abuse from Ottawa in this dysfunctional relationship, and we are drawing a line.
It is bewildering that the Laurentian elites in eastern Canada are so bent on the destruction of Alberta’s economy.
May 5, 2025
Mr. Hunter: Given that there is a long and well-documented history of jealousy from eastern Canada towards Alberta’s success and given that this legacy of resentment has fuelled decades of political interference, policy sabotage, and media disdain and further given that Albertans are tired of being vilified for our prosperity, to the same minister: what constitutional tools will Alberta use to protect our resources and economy from Ottawa’s overreach?
March 10, 2025
Mr. Hunter: Madam Speaker, here’s the way that it works in the real world. Nobody wants to stay on minimum wage. Nobody that I talk to wants to stay on minimum wage. What they realize is that if they get more skills and more education, then that equals more pay. Let me talk to you about the socialist way: don’t worry about getting more education; don’t worry about getting more skills; we’ll just pay you anyways.
March 21, 2022
Mr. Hunter: I want to just finish with this, Mr. Speaker. The real reality that the NDP are looking for is that they’re looking for a universal income. They want to make sure that they actually bring forward as much as they can for everybody, and actually this is what they’re really looking for, a universal income.