David Livingstone: Premier Eby is fuelling Alberta separatism

4 hours ago 9
ebyPremier David Eby makes an announcement about suspending sections of DRIPA on Thursday, April 2, 2026 at the B.C. Legislature. Alec Lazenby photo

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Last month, B.C. Premier David Eby criticized host Danielle Smith for encouraging Alberta separatists at a western premiers meeting. While the agenda included lowering provincial trade barriers and other forms of cooperation, Eby said, “These topics seem at best confusing, if not totally awkward in light of the referendum question that Premier Smith has put forward.” Yet, Eby failed to mention the role he’s played in exacerbating Albertan frustrations with Confederation.

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Hovering in the background is the cascade of recent British Columbia court decisions that are throwing private property rights into doubt. According to the B.C. Supreme Court ‘s Cowichan Tribes ruling last August, where Aboriginal title is found it is “a prior and senior right to land” vis-à-vis fee simple title (the most common form of private property ownership in Canada). What was once indefeasible title in B.C. is suddenly defeasible.

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Some argue that the worry over property rights is overblown. After all, the Cowichan First Nation asserted they were not interested in taking anyone’s private property. But as Indigenous law expert Thomas Isaac, notes, such assurances are meaningless. The court declared that where Aboriginal title is found the province’s land tenure act is “defective and invalid.” The judge in the Cowichan ruling suggests that Aboriginal title and fee simple title can “coexist,” but she doesn’t state how that is possible.

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The entire province is subject to future land claims. Left unchanged, the ruling potentially undermines property title across British Columbia. This is occurring just when Canada is struggling to maintain its sovereignty and resiliency in the face of U.S. threats and tariffs. The net effect is massive uncertainty.

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Adding to the mess is the Declaration of the Rights of Aboriginal Peoples Act (DRIPA). Two years after the B.C. legislature passed this aspirational document in 2019, then-attorney general David Eby amended section 8.1 of the Interpretation Act. The B.C. Court of Appeal declared in the 2025 Gitxaala decision that “the government must take all measures necessary to ensure that the laws of British Columbia are consistent with UNDRIP,” and that preparing and carrying out an action plan to address UNDRIP objectives should be a process that takes place “in consultation and cooperation with the Indigenous peoples in British Columbia.”

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Back in December, Premier Eby told reporters at a news conference in Surrey, B.C., that the courts “seem to have some confusion” about “what was clearly intended when we introduced this legislation,” suggesting that the courts were not supposed to read it so strictly and it wasn’t supposed to bind the hands of the government. But in light of the Interpretation Act’s unambiguous language, it’s hard to imagine he believes that.

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Thanks to Eby’s amendment of the Interpretation Act, the court has determined that every law and regulation in B.C. must now conform to DRIPA It’s far from clear that this is even possible. Thomas Isaac asserts, “it is impossible to read every statute in British Columbia consistent with all 70 paragraphs of the non-binding UN declaration. You wouldn’t have a government or province if you were to do that.”

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