Complain and passive aggressively bitch at each other under a thick veneer of politeness until one side gives up.
Likely Ottawa would bog the whole thing down in paperwork and the provinces would politely accept, and the "secession" would take 20 years, and lose all the features that made it appealing in the first place, and leave the province still shackled to Canada the way Great Britain is to the EU.
Though... Keep an eye on Quebec, the PQ is looking to take another run at it next election, and if the liberals fuck up the country enough (it's not a question of if, only degree and speed) they might beat Alberta to the punch.
They would freeze and seize the banks of any major proponents of the action and then try to muzzle them using trumped up charges, while ostensibly saying "it's entirely your choice... Also, just in case your choice isn't made up yet, just letting you know we've given several-year prison sentences with no charges to a few more people who've made the wrong choice."
Beyond that, I don't think Canada has any systems in place for secession, despite Quebec's constant threat of it: It's like a teenager threatening to run away from home, they acknowledge the statement and never set up any systems.
The Canadian government said that they would negociate only after a ''clear majority'' vote in a secession referendum.
The government of Québec insists that their referendum law is ''50%+1'' is the criteria.
The 1995 referendum was lost by a margin smaller than the number of expeditious extra citizenship the government of Canada rushed in the months prior to the referendum ( and 90%+ of immigrants in Québec vote against independance ).
It was the only time in Canadian history that more new citizenships were granted in Québec than Ontario. And it never happened again ( untill the next referendum if one ever happens ).
Québec independance grows ever more unlikely with the progression of the genocide-by-mass-migration.
what is Canada's policy on secession? the US made it clear that secession means war and death.
Complain and passive aggressively bitch at each other under a thick veneer of politeness until one side gives up.
Likely Ottawa would bog the whole thing down in paperwork and the provinces would politely accept, and the "secession" would take 20 years, and lose all the features that made it appealing in the first place, and leave the province still shackled to Canada the way Great Britain is to the EU.
Though... Keep an eye on Quebec, the PQ is looking to take another run at it next election, and if the liberals fuck up the country enough (it's not a question of if, only degree and speed) they might beat Alberta to the punch.
They would freeze and seize the banks of any major proponents of the action and then try to muzzle them using trumped up charges, while ostensibly saying "it's entirely your choice... Also, just in case your choice isn't made up yet, just letting you know we've given several-year prison sentences with no charges to a few more people who've made the wrong choice."
Beyond that, I don't think Canada has any systems in place for secession, despite Quebec's constant threat of it: It's like a teenager threatening to run away from home, they acknowledge the statement and never set up any systems.
The Canadian government said that they would negociate only after a ''clear majority'' vote in a secession referendum.
The government of Québec insists that their referendum law is ''50%+1'' is the criteria.
The 1995 referendum was lost by a margin smaller than the number of expeditious extra citizenship the government of Canada rushed in the months prior to the referendum ( and 90%+ of immigrants in Québec vote against independance ).
It was the only time in Canadian history that more new citizenships were granted in Québec than Ontario. And it never happened again ( untill the next referendum if one ever happens ).
Québec independance grows ever more unlikely with the progression of the genocide-by-mass-migration.
There's a law allowing secession, the clarity act. It's just written really poorly and is obviously unknown territory legally.
Same as EU.
Takes decades, gets overridden several times to thwart the will of the people, ultimately get drowned in jeets anyway.
Quebec has been using threats of secession for decades to strong arm the fed into doing what it wants
For Quebec? It was 50% +1 vote and they're out.
Modern Liberals will never allow the only "pay-in" Province to leave, this is their cash cow!