Does the truth still matter in Alberta politics?

As the first UCP leadership debate inches closer, people are asking whether Albertans are being too easily fooled by misinformation spread by some of the candidates.

Some of the misinformation shared by UCP leadership candidates:

“There is a clear pattern in how [Danielle Smith] is running her campaign,” said Mount Royal University political scientist Duane Bratt.

“She is getting a high degree of enthusiasm, she is appealing to conspiracy theorists — and I would also add there are conspiracy theories around cancer, there are people convinced that there is a cure for cancer but it’s being hidden by the medical establishments for ‘reasons’, so I think she is tapping into those people as well.”

Chaldeans Mensah, a political scientist with MacEwan University, agrees with Bratt.

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He explains that candidates like Jean and Smith are trying to win over the far-right voters with radical misinformation about things like the COVID vaccine.

“It’s a high stakes game, and the purveyors of misinformation are using this as a means to solidify their support,” Mensah said.

“I think to some extent, some of these issues that are happening around the contest in terms of information flow and miscommunication, I think it’s simply designed to shore up support.”

However, in Smith’s case, we’ve seen many Albertans call her out — not just politicians, but people who seem to be unaffiliated with political parties.

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The first UCP leadership debate is set for Wednesday at 5 p.m. (MT).

In total, there are seven candidates, the three which were previously mentioned — Smith, Jean, and Toews — along with Rajan Sawhney, Rebecca Schulz, Leela Aheer, and Todd Loewen.

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