Dr. Mona Nemer, cabinet’s $393,000-a year science advisor, spent tens of thousands on questionnaires asking Canadians if they’d ever seen a UFO. Records indicate Nemer, a biochemist, expressed a personal interest in the subject though her survey showed most Canadians considered it pointless: “Unidentified aerial phenomenon is not an issue of high concern.”
Monthly Archives: January 2025
MPs Won’t Dump U.S. Stocks
New Democrats yesterday proposed a Buy Canadian program to “produce things we need in our own country” with union labour, said leader Jagmeet Singh. The Party did not comment when asked if its MPs would be compelled to sell shares privately held in U.S. corporations including non-union Amazon: ‘We need to change the rules to favour companies with unionized workers.’
Reneges On Campaign Pledge
New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh yesterday reneged on his Christmas pledge to “bring this government down” and allow a winter election campaign. Singh said New Democrats instead will support any cabinet bill tabled in response to U.S. tariffs: “Your position has been moving on this issue.”
Convict Can’t Keep Gov’t Job
Convicted felons cannot remain on the government payroll while in federal prison. The labour board finding came in the case of a Parks Canada employee fired after he was sent to the penitentiary: “Integrity is a legitimate concern.”
Big Cities Choke On Housing
Even a small increase in urban home prices can have a negative long term impact on city life, CMHC said yesterday. The federal insurer’s Deputy Chief Economist in a commentary warned costly housing “undermines the long term vibrancy of our leading cities.”
Tariff Threat Rattles Cabinet
Public Safety Minister David McGuinty today is in Washington, D.C. in an 11th hour bid to avert a tariff war. McGuinty’s hurried mission followed testimony at a U.S. Senate hearing in which a star witness blamed Canadian drug labs for killing Americans: “We take it seriously.”
Trade War Would Be Painful
A trade war with America will “badly hurt” Canadian jobs, investment and growth, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. Mackem told reporters the Bank was powerless to help: “We have little experience with tariffs of the magnitude being proposed.”
Feds Vague On Graves Shrine
The Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday would not comment on funding for a proposed national shrine to 215 children purportedly buried at a former Indian Residential School in Kamloops, B.C. No remains have been found despite millions paid for “remains excavation,” records show.
Feds Set Odd Climate Target
Cabinet in a first-ever report on yearly climate targets predicts all federal offices will use “100 percent clean electricity” this year. Researchers did not explain how they would keep lights on in thousands of federal offices from Iqaluit to Halifax where power grids run on diesel, coal or natural gas: “Sorry, we’ll do it better next time.”
Prisons Under Drone Attack
The Correctional Service of Canada has documented hundreds of drone flights over federal prisons after spending more than a million dollars to intercept contraband by air. Details of penitentiary drone drops are itemized in censored Access To Information memos: “It’s a challenge.”
Bill Blair “Dropped The Ball”
Defence Minister Bill Blair “dropped the ball” in a police investigation of Chinese contacts with the Liberal Party, the Commission on Foreign Interference said yesterday. A report cited legitimate suspicions over unusual inactivity in Blair’s office as public safety minister in 2021: “Concerns are legitimate and understandable.”
China May Have Elected MPs
The Commission on Foreign Interference yesterday said Chinese Communist Party operatives may have helped elect a handful of MPs in the last two national campaigns. While misconduct would not have skewed the overall results, “we must remain vigilant because the threat of foreign interference is real,” said Justice Marie-Josée Hogue.
No Evidence Backs PM Claim
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s claim of “explosive” top secret evidence linking the Conservative Party to foreign agents was dismissed yesterday by the Commission on Foreign Interference. The Commission made a scant, two-paragraph reference to the claim in its 860-page report: “The Prime Minister spoke.”
Must Show Up For The Bonus
A $177,000-a year executive at the Canada Revenue Agency has lost a claim for bonus pay while she was off work. A federal labour board dismissed the complaint under a lucrative “performance pay” program that rewards the vast majority of executives government-wide: “It is unfair.”
CBC Ombudsman Calls Bias
The CBC engaged in a “blatant lack of balance” in covering a dispute between Catholics and LGBTQ advocates, a network ombudsman said yesterday. The censure for breach of the CBC’s own code of conduct followed a 2023 story that “could reasonably lead one to perceive some degree of bias.”



