Alberta needs a clear long-term vision for a strong, resilient, free future. One that looks at least 25 years ahead. A generation-long vision allows today's young Albertans to help build their future and experience its success within their lifetime adults can be part of the achievement in their lifetime. The vision should be reviewed every five years to ensure it remains relevant while preserving its long-term direction.
The vision must be grounded in six cornerstone Interests that define a strong and prosperous state. These six interests represent Alberta's enduring priorities and should guide every decision made on behalf of Albertans. Together they establish a practical framework for principled leadership, responsible government and meaningful accountability by defining what government exists to protect, strengthen, and build for current and future generations.
These interests are enduring principles—not political positions. Governments, policies, and institutions will change over time, but Alberta’s long-term interests remain constant. Every law, policy, institution, and public investment should be measured against whether it advances one or more of these interests and leaves Alberta stronger, more resilient, and more prosperous for future generations.

A strong Alberta is united by shared values, ethics, and beliefs—not identical opinions.
Albertans should be committed to building a future based on our proud history and evolution. Alberta values and come from a firm belief in the rule of law, democracy, individual rights and freedoms, civic responsibility, mutual respect, personal responsibility, and meaningful participation in shaping Alberta's future.

A strong Alberta protects its people, institutions, and ability to govern itself.
A secure Alberta requires a firm understanding of geopolitics, evolving threats to our society, safe communities, effective emergency management, secure infrastructure, resilient institutions, responsible immigration, reliable public services, and the capacity to protect Alberta's constitutional jurisdiction.

A strong Alberta is governed competently, transparently, and accountably.
Government must serve the people—not itself. Citizens should have confidence that government acts fairly, efficiently, and in Alberta’s long-term interests through trusted institutions, transparent elections, accountable elected officials, a professional public service, an independent justice system, a transparent legislative process and an independent media.

A strong Alberta protects individual liberty while upholding the rule of law.
Individual liberty and responsibility are the foundation of a free society. Government must protect freedom of expression, conscience, religion, peaceful assembly, association, property, due process, equality before the law, and democratic participation while ensuring all public power is exercised according to the rule of law.

A strong Alberta creates the conditions for individuals, families, businesses, and communities to thrive not just survive.
Alberta should foster a predominately vibrant private sector, entrepreneurship, investment, innovation, responsible resource development, protection of private property, competitive taxation, resilient free markets, self-sufficiency in essential resources where practical, skilled labour, strong infrastructure, and long-term economic growth.

A strong Alberta is ultimately measured by the well-being of its people and communities.
A healthy Alberta promotes individual responsibility, strong families, healthy communities, quality education, accessible healthcare, safe neighbourhoods, meaningful employment, support for those who cannot care for themselves, civic engagement, and opportunities for every Albertan to contribute and thrive are the foundation of Alberta's long-term success.

These six interests are not political positions. They are enduring principles that should guide every government, regardless of political party.
Policies will change. Governments will change. Alberta's long-term interests should not.
Public office is a position of trust. Every elected official should be able to demonstrate how the decisions they make strengthen one or more of these interests and contribute to a freer, safer, more prosperous, and more resilient Alberta for future generations.
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