Election Finances and Contributions Disclosure Act
Primary Alberta campaign-finance and contributions-disclosure statute baseline.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
Source statusAlberta King’s Printer source record checked 2026-05-05
Review trailSource usage is tied to public topics and claim records in the repository.
Source typeofficial
Topics using source1
Claims referenced4
Why this source matters
Baseline source for What would happen to election laws, political parties, and campaign finance? This record currently supports 1 topic and 4 claims in the public repository.
Evidence details
This source row records the publisher, source type, reliability label, access date, original URL, and any archive copy available to this project.
Used by topics
001Who would set election laws, political-party rules, and campaign-finance limits?Election administration, parties, candidate rules, and campaign finance currently exist under separate federal and Alberta legal systems; independence would require clear rules for continuity, voter eligibility, party registration, spending limits, third-party advertising, enforcement, and transition elections.
Referenced claims
001elections-law-political-parties-campaign-financeCurrent sources show separate federal and Alberta baselines for election administration, party/candidate regulation, and campaign finance; they do not settle what rules would govern transition elections, party continuity, spending limits, enforcement, or eligibility after independence.002elections-law-political-parties-campaign-financeAlberta could write a democratic framework suited to its own institutions, preserve Elections Alberta capacity, and design campaign-finance and party rules that voters can judge directly during a transition.003elections-law-political-parties-campaign-financeElection-law transitions are legitimacy-critical; if rules for parties, spending, advertising, boundaries, eligibility, enforcement, or transition elections are unclear or perceived as self-serving, independence could deepen distrust rather than resolve it.004elections-law-political-parties-campaign-financeThis topic remains high-uncertainty because transition legislation, constitutional design, electoral boundaries, voter eligibility, party registration, campaign-finance limits, third-party advertising, enforcement independence, court review, and public legitimacy are not settled by the current source pack.