There is not much “left of the leadership of Mr. Trudeau,” Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet yesterday told reporters. Blanchet said his caucus will press cabinet for passage of favoured bills but had no interest in keeping Liberals in office any longer than necessary: “Let there be no ambiguity here.”
Monthly Archives: September 2024
Wildfire Risk Was “Political”
Internal emails show Parks Canada executives feared “public and political perception” in managing fire hazards at Jasper, Alta. Access To Information records yesterday released by Conservative MP Dan Mazier (Dauphin-Swan River, Man.) are dated only months before wildfire destroyed a third of the town: “Very disturbing.”
Freeland Opposes Film Grant
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday said public funding should be pulled from a Canadian-produced film Russians At War. The documentary promoted by the Toronto International Film Festival depicts Russian soldiers on the Ukrainian front as war-weary conscripts: “It’s not right for Canadian public money to be supporting the screening and production of a film like this.”
CBC Garbled Opinion v. Fact
CBC’s Ombudsman yesterday faulted radio host Ian Hanomansing for a 2023 broadcast in which he said people “want more immigrants to come to Canada.” The episode of Cross Country Checkup strayed from balanced treatment of a contentious issue to a “value judgment,” said the Ombudsman: “CBC can do better.”
Fight Hate With Trademarks
Canada’s largest book retailer is attempting to use the federal Trademarks Act to counter anti-Semitic protesters. Indigo Books & Music Inc. in a Federal Court application asks that a judge block a copycat website claiming the bookseller is “aiding in the slaughter of Palestinians.”
First Breach In Gov’t Caucus
The Commons’ assistant deputy speaker yesterday became the first Liberal MP to publicly demand Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation. MP Alexandra Mendès (Brossard-St. Lambert, Que.) said Trudeau should not lead the Party into a fourth campaign: “He is no longer the right leader.”
Military Spending’s A Secret
Defence Minister Bill Blair’s department will not disclose figures to substantiate its claim Canada will meet NATO spending targets. The Department of National Defence invoked cabinet secrecy in refusing to divulge the information to the Budget Office: “This information remains under cabinet confidence and is expected to take some time to finalize.”
Export Claim Is False, Again
Cabinet is again assuring parliamentarians Canada has not exported arms to Israel. The latest statement, in a report to the Senate defence committee, follows repeated false allegations that Canadians are complicit in “genocide.”
Appeals For Bill C-64 Passage
Health Minister Mark Holland yesterday said the Senate must pass a pharmacare bill. Holland’s appeal followed mounting criticism of Bill C-64 An Act Respecting Pharmacare as vague and incomplete: “Pharmacare legislation needs to pass.”
Greens Like Nationalized Rail
Green Party leader Elizabeth May yesterday proposed that Parliament nationalize the country’s two largest railways for the sake of “ensuring the future of sustainable public transportation.” Parliament privatized Canadian National Railway 29 years ago and never owned Canadian Pacific: “The Party’s vision is to return these vital transportation networks to their original purpose.”
MPs Probe VIA Service Again
The Commons transport committee has ordered hearings into poor VIA Rail service for the second time in two years. It follows disruptions on one of VIA’s busiest lines that turned a routine four-hour holiday trip into a 14-hour odyssey that left passengers in tears: “There were passengers who were crying, who called 911.”
Write-Offs Eclipse $45,000,000
Write-offs under a taxpayer-backed loan program for “future entrepreneurs” have cost over $45 million, says a Department of Industry audit. Best-known borrowers under the Futurpreneur Canada program include Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly’s husband: “She has recused herself from all discussions.”
25% Hike Follows Warning
Canada Post’s proposal for the steepest stamp rate hike in its history follows a warning from Public Works Minister Jean-Yves Duclos to cut costs. The 25 percent hike proposed to take effect next January 13 follows a separate eight percent hike just four months ago: “Decrease costs by working with unions.”
Adler Closer to $178,100 Post
Winnipeg broadcaster Charles Adler on Saturday came a step closer to taking a $178,100-a year seat in the Senate. Cabinet served the required legal notice that Adler, 70, should represent his province despite describing Indigenous Manitobans as lazy “boneheads.”
Soccer Tops National Pastime
More Canadians now play soccer than hockey, says Department of Canadian Heritage research. No reason was given, though the figures follow Commons investigations of recreational hockey as a leading cause of sports-related brain injury: “This is a topic of discussion in almost every community where there are sports played.”



