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Prime Minister Mark Carney takes part in a press conference ahead of an Inuit-Crown Partnership Committee meeting in Kuujjuaq, Nunavik, Que., on Tuesday, June 30, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

Prime Minister Mark Carney says he’ll be in Alberta for Canada Day

Jun 30, 2026 | 9:48 AM

KUUJJUAQ — Prime Minister Mark Carney will make a rare Canada Day appearance in Alberta, just a day ahead of an expected announcement by the province related to its push for a new pipeline.

Carney’s visit also comes as Albertans face down a fall referendum on whether the province should hold a second vote on leaving the federation.

Speaking with reporters in Kuujjuaq, Que., on Tuesday, Carney said he will be in Alberta in the evening of July 1, and that he has been in close contact with Premier Danielle Smith.

The province has a July 1 deadline to make a proposal to the federal government’s new major projects office to fast-track approval of a new pipeline project.

“That’s tracking well, from their perspective,” Carney said, adding he is up to speed on the proposal but will wait until it is announced to comment further.

Smith’s office said Tuesday there will be a “major announcement” on July 2 about the province’s submission to the federal major projects office.

Carney said it will still take months for the federal government to decide whether to send Alberta’s submission to the new major projects office.

Many questions remain about the prospects for such a pipeline, since a route has yet to be identified and no private sector proponent has come forward.

Duane Bratt, a political-science professor at Calgary’s Mount Royal University, said that while it’s normal for a prime minister to travel west for the Calgary Stampede, visiting the province for Canada Day just months before the October referendum is about symbolism.

“This is going to be a very different Canada Day we’ve had in this province than ever before,” Bratt said.

“There’s been a surge in Canadian flag purchases and people waving Canadian flags. And what’s funny about that is, it wasn’t that long ago that people were waving the Canadian flag as opponents to the (federal) government as part of the Ottawa convoy, where some of the demonstrations stayed in place for months if not years.”

Carney has opposed the separation push and described the fall vote as a “real referendum” and a “dangerous bluff.” He has compared it to Brexit in the U.K., adding that “leave” campaigns make unrealistic promises and refuse to acknowledge the pitfalls of separation.

In a video message his office published on Tuesday, Carney also addressed some of the provinces’ long-standing grievances head-on and discussed why he departed from former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s climate agenda.

Carney said he remembers when he was a teenager living in Edmonton how Albertans felt hurt when the National Energy Program was introduced, as if their resources “weren’t our own.”

“More recently, we were made to feel like our energy contributions were running against the tides of history,” Carney said. “What should have brought us together began to divide us, contributing to a half-century of politics that have too often pulled us apart.”

Carney said Trudeau’s climate plan was “well-intentioned” but “not sustainable over the long term” — and admitted that emissions will go up as a result of policy decisions his government has made.

“It would have let down our partners who need new sources of energy, and do so right at the time when we need them to help us become more independent of the United States. And it would have been too divisive for our country,” Carney said.

“In the current environment, the old plan was an open opportunity for those people who wish to pull Canada apart, both at home and from abroad.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 30, 2026.

— With files from Kyle Duggan in Ottawa, Nick Murray in Kuujjuaq, Que., and Lauren Krugel in Calgary

Canadian Press Staff, The Canadian Press