Did Alberta Separatists Really Collect 300,000 Signatures? |
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Did Alberta Separatists Really Collect 300,000 Signatures?
The movement’s most explosive talking point remains unverified
The Alberta separatist movement has claimed many victories to this point. None bigger than creating the perception that it already commands mass support without objective proof. The oft-repeated claim that organizers gathered roughly 300,000 signatures on a separation petition rests entirely on statements made by one individual: Mitch Sylvestre. There has been no independent verification, no public audit, and no transparent accounting of the signatures themselves.
That uncertainty alone should encourage caution. Yet Mitch’s number has dominated public discourse as an accepted fact rather than the unverified political assertion that it is.
Political movements frequently rely on demonstrations of momentum to expand the range of ideas considered politically plausible. This is called shifting the Overton Window, and it’s something far-right populists throughout the world have excelled at over the past decade. Claims of large crowds, surging memberships, or overwhelming public backing can reshape perceptions even when those claims are unsubstantiated.
Indeed, the more outlandish the claim, the less likely it may be challenged. Some assume that the assertion must be true (who would lie about something that big?), others fear amplifying the claim by challenging it (why give it more credibility?), while others fear being labelled conspiracy theorists by questioning its veracity (what evidence do we have, either way?).
By exploiting these tendencies, the separatists’ 300,000 narrative functions less as evidence of support than as a tactic for normalizing separatism within Alberta politics. And it’s working. Some top journalists repeat the........