I think this is just outright UCP Ethical Fading when the government invites a recall process only to underfund Elections Alberta when it's applied to their own party members.
Where is the line drawn for when a political party basically disarms all rail guards for ethics and accountability so as to reduce, minimize, or deflect from the conduct of its members?
What's happening to the Auditor General is part of a larger pattern of behaviour that doesn't lead to anything remotely close to good governance.
This is not the first time the UCP has interfered with Elections Alberta. Back in 2020 when an investigation was done on the UCP leadership race, they did the same thing to Elections Alberta by preventing the elections officer from doing its job. Elections Alberta noted part of the problems included certain parties of interest who did not want to cooperate, and required multiple notices to appear before the commissioner, leading to a court order. But, the UCP, rather than granting additional time so as to prevent parties from essentially benefiting from bad behaviour or delay not caused by Elections Alberta, denied the request.
I get a sense that people aren't against easy to understand ads - as in, one company produces a concept, markets, publishes the ad, and delivers it to you on behalf of their client.
But people are not going to agree to reading that article, and consenting to 500 advertising partners to track you indefinitely to sell your data points.
All this technology, energy, and money that's behind the surveillance economy, is the cost of turning you into the product.
What we the privacy concerned public would like to say is go make real products to help the world instead.