Cabinet Admits Hunters’ Ban

Cabinet yesterday for the first time acknowledged its national ban on “military style assault weapons” includes hunting rifles. Enforcement of the ban proposed by Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair is now delayed 18 months amid Indigenous complaints and cost overruns: “To misguide and mislead Canadians is disingenuous.”

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Russian Traders Won Subsidy

The Department of Foreign Affairs yesterday would not explain a 2021 subsidy it gave to a pro-Russia business group whose directors included a former Canadian ambassador to Moscow. The five-figure subsidy was to “stimulate the engagement of Canadian industry” in Russia: “Is it done by well paid lobbyists? Who knows.”

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CBC-TV Libel Worth $1.95M

The CBC has been ordered to pay more than a quarter million in legal fees in what is now the costliest defamation case in Manitoba history. A Winnipeg judge earlier noted the Crown broadcaster failed in its duty to be fair, balanced and responsible: “The CBC took very strong positions during the course of the trial that were not supported by the facts.”

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Fed Compensation For Banks

Banks are eligible for taxpayers’ subsidies under a Freedom Convoy compensation fund for small business. The Commons finance committee has complained of poorly-designed aid programs that benefit publicly-traded corporations: “There were wide ranging consequences of this demonstration.”

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‘Imagine Siege In Vancouver’

Canadians should imagine Russia shelling the Ottawa airport or laying siege to the Port of Vancouver, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky yesterday told Parliament. Speaking in an 11-minute address by videoconference, Zelensky pleaded for direct military intervention to save his country: “Feel what we feel every day. We want to live.”

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Feds Close 2020 Farm Inquiry

Federal anti-trust lawyers yesterday closed without charges a two-year investigation of allegations farm chemical manufacturers targeted a start-up discounter, Farmers Business Network. The Competition Bureau said it found no evidence of unlawful activity but complained of emails between rivals discussing Farmers Business: “If anyone thinks socialism is going to feed the world just call Russia.”

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Warn MPs On Consequences

Cabinet use of the Emergencies Act against truckers sets a bad precedent “far and wide,” the Assembly of First Nations yesterday told the Commons finance committee. National Chief RoseAnne Archibald said she was given advance warning cabinet would designate the Freedom Convoy an illegal assembly: “I was concerned about the long term implications of this.”

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No Figures On Jobs Impacts

It is too early to calculate job impacts from a climate change pledge to cap oil and gas emissions, says Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. Witnesses at the Commons natural resources committee pressed for details of the pledge made at a conference in Scotland last November: “What is the projected loss of jobs?”

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Rare Convoy Inquiry Opened

A rare joint committee of Parliament yesterday opened an unprecedented inquiry into cabinet’s actions against the Freedom Convoy. The 11-member panel has one year to determine why cabinet invoked extraordinary police powers against truckers: “Responsibilities of this committee are very, very serious.”

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Quits Amid Financial Probe

Jerry Dias, 63, founding president of the nation’s largest private sector union, is under investigation over dealings in Unifor finances. The union’s national treasurer ordered an outside inquiry, officials said yesterday. Unifor’s constitution states: “The financial practices of the union shall at all times meet the highest available standard of accounting.”

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Fed Debt Clock Back On Tour

The federal debt clock is back on nationwide tour after clicking over to a trillion. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation yesterday said it will drive the clock from Victoria to the Atlantic shore “to show Canadians from coast to coast what it’s like to watch Canada’s trillion dollar debt go up in real time.”

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Lists Favourite Reporters For Tips On Campaign Coverage

Federal consultants compiled a list of 25 reliable journalists to be instructed on correct ways to cover general elections, according to Access To Information records. The consultants led by a former Toronto Star executive would not comment: “One way or another it falls to government to ensure the new media ecosystem does not operate in ways contrary to the Canadian principles of peace, order and good government.”

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‘We Prove Tax Is Affordable’

Canada has proven it can collect a carbon tax that “keeps life affordable,” says the Department of Environment. The federal tax rises again April 1 to the equivalent of 12¢ a litre on gasoline: “There is a clear cost from a changing climate so it can’t be free.”

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Plastic Ban Costly, Ineffectual

A costly federal ban on six types of single use plastics will do little to save the environment, say independent researchers. The most commonly discarded plastic is not covered by Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s ban, data show: “This ban fails to target litter categories that appear to make up most single use plastic litter found in Canada.”

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Admit “Gaps” On Pot Impact

The Department of Health almost four years after legalizing marijuana has identified “knowledge gaps” on health risks. The department on Saturday proposed to rewrite regulations to promote more cannabis research: “I worry about the discussion around legalization because it insinuates that this is a healthy thing to do.”

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