“Shoot Them” Draws Protests

A reporter for the Canadian Bar Association National Magazine faces a Commons review after posting a Twitter comment about shooting a Conservative MP. Protests yesterday coincided with a parliamentary report that complained of online abuse targeting public office holders: “This is not normal political discourse.”

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Too Late To Avert Pot Losses

A statutory review of marijuana legalization comes too late to save dozens of federally licensed wholesalers and retailers that have filed for bankruptcy, a cannabis trade group said yesterday. A total 34 marijuana corporations have become insolvent since 2020: ‘We cannot wait for changes.’

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Lobbyists Got RCMP Blacklist

A police blacklist of bank account holders named as Freedom Convoy sympathizers was emailed to lobbyists, records disclose. The RCMP distributed names, birth dates, phone numbers and other personal information by unencrypted email, contradicting public claims by cabinet: “Haphazard would be an understatement.”

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Gov’t Admits $3 Billion Error

Nearly $3 billion in pandemic relief was paid to undeserving claimants, records show. Less than a billion has been recovered to date, cabinet disclosed in an Inquiry Of Ministry tabled in the Commons: “The intended total recovery amount cannot be predicted with accuracy.”

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Took Years At Passport Office

The passport office took more than two years to restore in-person staffing levels despite warnings of increased demand for travel documents. Newly-disclosed records also confirmed as late as this past summer more than a tenth of staff continued to work from home: “We are doing everything we can.”

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Sorry For Misguided Dealers

Criminal law should not punish misguided drug dealers who just want to “put bread on the table,” Attorney General David Lametti said yesterday. Lametti made the comment in defending a cabinet bill to repeal mandatory minimum sentences for cocaine traffickers: “Did you talk to victims’ groups?”

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Expect Two More Years: Bank

Inflation and interest rates will remain above pre-pandemic rates for about two years, a deputy governor of the Bank of Canada said yesterday. Paul Beaudry told University of Waterloo students it was “too early” to say if interest rate hikes will choke the economy into recession: “You get worried.”

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Court Okays Curb On Rights

Pandemic restrictions on the size of outdoor gatherings were justified, Saskatchewan Court of King’s Bench ruled yesterday. The decision came in the case of protesters fined $2,800 apiece for breaching a public health order limiting outdoor gatherings to ten people: “We can all see things which we would wish had been done differently or not at all.”

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Only Two Pockets To Pick

Electricity ratepayers or taxpayers or both must pay for greening of the power grid, a utilities’ lobbyist yesterday testified at the Commons environment committee. “There is no third pocket,” MPs were told: “It’s the ratepayer, the taxpayer, who’s paying for it. It’s not clear where all of these costs are ultimately going to fall.”

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$938M For Kids’ Dental Care

A free children’s dental care program for uninsured households earning less than $70,000 will cost almost a billion a year, cabinet said yesterday. Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said grants will be paid on the honour system subject to audit: “It is not a national dental program.”

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Cabinet Studies Rent Controls

Cabinet commissioned confidential research on federal rent controls, records show. In-house polling by the Privy Council Office found most Canadians said Parliament must do something on housing affordability: “No participants were of the opinion that housing and rental prices should be solely left up to the free market.”

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Face Questions On Expenses

Aides to Governor General Mary Simon face questioning on their return from the Queen’s funeral. The Commons government operations committee on Thursday will cross-examine witnesses over exorbitant catering bills at Rideau Hall: “The question is who’s responsible for this?”

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Tested Tax Filers’ Personality

The typical small business operator trusts the private sector over government while 25 percent prize “individualism” and “work ethic,” according to behavioural research by the Canada Revenue Agency. Management divided business owners into six personality profiles in a bid to boost tax compliance: “Tax administrations around the world have started using behavioural insights.”

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