When it comes to Trudeau’s dictatorship, Albertans have always been on the fence. They’ve always hoped to get away with his autocratic dictatorship. And now, they’ve finally figured out how to get around it. The solution is to establish a “provincial police service.”
Goodbye RCMP! Yes, the Albertans want to bid adieu to you now. Be it the climate agenda, anti-Covid policies or fundamental rights of free speech and peaceful protests, Trudeau’s policies are looked askance upon by almost every conservative province in Canada. And now, it looks like Alberta’s patience has run out with every “Trudeau thing” now.
Albertans to bid adieu to RCMP
So, the Albertans have now decided to get rid of the RCMP and have outlined a blueprint to form their own police service instead. This must have put the Trudeau administration in a bad mood. And the RCMP, as its officials say, has been completely demoralised by the decision.
The chief of the RCMP in Alberta claims that the provincial government’s plan to establish its own police force has been detrimental to its members and a distraction.
The impending move, according to Deputy Commissioner Curtis Zablocki, has been looming over the organization for almost two years and is having an effect.
Quite frankly, it’s been very disruptive and distracting for all our employees.” “Our staff are concerned about their futures and the futures of their partners and their families,” Zablocki said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
“I’ll say it’s impacted the morale of the Alberta RCMP as well, and it has also impacted the trust and confidence that we see from our communities in those relationships, which is very critical.”
Read More: Alberta says NO to Trudeau’s dictatorship
But, it’s high time to not say ‘No’ to you, Trudeau. Albertans have had enough of you now.
You see, the made-in-Alberta police would provide better policing for all regions, including faster response times through the utilisation of small detachments and larger hubs.
The Alberta administration of the United Conservative Party recently detailed its plan to increase the number of police in rural areas. The 42 smallest detachments would receive 275 additional front-line police officers under the proposed scheme.
According to Justice Minister Tyler Shandro, there is currently no requirement for a minimum number of officers at RCMP detachments. He asserted that an all-Alberta police force would deliver superior law enforcement across the province, including quicker response times through the utilisation of neighbourhood detachments and larger hubs.
Albertans have now started to lose their hopes in the RCMP and started looking for viable options instead.
A long-standing organization like the RCMP, according to Richard Fadden, a former head of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the prime minister’s national security adviser, cannot deliver the complete spectrum of police services that Canadians will require in the future.
He said the key problem is that, although the provinces are responsible for policing, the RCMP gets its orders from Ottawa.
“I think the example of what’s happening in Nova Scotia with regard to the inquiry regarding the mass shooting there is a good example of that,” Fadden said, referring to the probe into the 13-hour shooting rampage in April 2020 that resulted in 22 murders.
The RCMP has surely lost its accountability to provincial oversight provisions, and thus Alberta-run provincial forces are all set to replace the RCMP in rural areas and some smaller cities.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9r77OHDyCg