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Strategies & Market Trends : Dino's Bar & Grill -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Goose94 who wrote (42716)4/18/2018 6:44:28 AM
From: Goose94Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 203353
 
Western Canada Civil War: The temperature is going up another couple degrees on Canada’s nastiest pipeline fight. The latest developments:

-Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe stuck to his guns when BNN's Andrew Bell caught up with him last night, underscoring his threat to hold back Saskatchewan oil from British Columbia as that province locks horns with Alberta over the Trans Mountain expansion. “We won’t be there to fill up those tanks,” he said. “British Columbia is out of step with the constitution.” Moe said his warning is driven by a desire to play a role in chipping away at the discount on Western Canadian Select (currently hovering around US$16.60/barrel), which he said costs Saskatchewan $2.6 billion per year. Watch for that interview today on BNN and BNN.ca

-British Columbia Attorney General David Eby is calling out Alberta. “Clearly, the legislation is a bluff,” he told CTV. Watch for a report from one of our CTV News colleagues.

-A new Angus Reid Institute survey shows a clear majority of British Columbians say they will bow to the courts on the Trans Mountain expansion dispute. Sixty-nine per cent of B.C. respondents to the poll, which was conducted on Monday and Tuesday, say their province should give in and allow the pipeline to be built if the courts decide B.C. can’t block its construction. As for the risk of this emerging as a ballot box issue next year: 46 per cent of respondents said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is doing a poor job on the file.

BNN.ca