Not All Trade For NY Consul

New York Consul Tom Clark billed thousands in expenses unrelated to promotion of Canadian trade including junkets to examine “high school culture” in Bermuda and an $1,800 luncheon on Indigenous art, records show. Clark in Commons committee testimony said he was tirelessly focused on promoting “partnerships with American business.”

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Vow Anti-Semite Crackdown

Any future Conservative cabinet would enact strict new penalties for anti-Semitic crimes, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. Protests targeting Jews marked a “breakdown in our society,” he said: “I can assure you they will be penalties that are so massive there will never again be some punk thinking even once of throwing a Molotov cocktail into a Jewish business.”

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No Interest In Nuclear Option

No major national party is interested in developing a nuclear weapons program, according to a Ukrainian Canadian Congress election survey yesterday. Parties were polled on a Congress proposal to build Canadian warheads: “Do you support Canada developing an independent nuclear deterrent?”

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Trudeaus Out At Foundation

The Trudeau Foundation has passed a 15-month federal audit but cut all ties with the Trudeau family. Alexandre Trudeau, the former prime minister’s brother, was replaced as executive director after endorsing a six-figure donation from friends of the Chinese Communist Party: “These changes mark a significant step forward.”

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Taxpayers Footed The Bar Bill

New York Consul Tom Clark charged taxpayers his liquor bill while drinking with former media colleagues purportedly on official business, records show. Billing bar tabs is forbidden without specific authority, said the Treasury Board: “Luncheon with the journalist was aimed to assess the political climate.”

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Last Post For WWII Veterans

The Department of Veterans Affairs says it is planning a suitable national tribute for the last Canadian survivor of the Second World War. Ranks of veterans that once numbered more than a million have dwindled to fewer than 1,600: “Many splendid deeds were done.”

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$40B Will Keep The Lights On

Cabinet in a rare but not unprecedented move confirmed Saturday it spent $40.3 billion, about eight percent of its annual budget, by special warrant. The alternative would have seen federal functions cease at the start of a new budget year including payment of Old Age Security and salaries for police and prison guards: ‘It is urgently required for the public good.’

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Don’t Count NDP Out: Singh

New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh urged electors to “know their vote does matter” after reporters dismissed his campaign as a lost cause. Party support has averaged in the three million vote range for the past decade: “Have you learned any lessons from stumbling out of the gate?’

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A Sunday Poem: “The Pact”

 

The Pact.

Freedom isn’t the same as Liberty.

But Liberty treads the path,

To enlightenment.

 

Both are imposters,

Tickled into the ears,

Of people with long memories.

 

Those in charge,

In the high places,

Will make their sacrifices.

 

And it’s evident,

Those in charge will always be,

Those in charge.

 

The best we can expect,

Rightfully, our only demand,

Is fair dealing.

 

The best they,

Can hope for,

Is to keep their heads.

 

But a reminder may be needed,

Of the year of our Lord,

Twelve Fifteen.

 

By: W.N. Branson

Book Review: Just Plain John

John Diefenbaker was a folk hero whose very commonness was heroic. Historian Bob Plamondon captures this beautifully. Diefenbaker first held public office as a town councillor in Wakaw, Sask. His favourite pastime was fishing. Making small talk with Pope John XXIII, Diefenbaker asked: “How does it feel to be Pope anyhow?”

“He held the highest office in the land yet he instinctively mistrusted authority, the rich, the powerful, and even some members of his cabinet,” writes Plamondon. As Prime Minister he insisted on sending rent cheques to the treasury, $5,000 a year, for the privilege of living at 24 Sussex Drive.

Diefenbaker was a man of the Prairies, the most egalitarian society on Earth. There was no aristocracy in Wakaw or Oyen or Crystal City.  He ranked 7th of 39 candidates on the 1919 Saskatchewan bar exam. “He had no blue chip clients in his roster,” notes Plamondon.

Freedom Fighter is pure Canadiana, smartly written and evocative. Plamondon recounts the Diefenbaker story, big and small. As Prime Minister in 1959 he reversed a departmental order to cull 250 ponies on Sable Island. What harm did the ponies ever do?

“Diefenbaker was a charismatic leader with a deep connection to ordinary Canadians,” writes Plamondon. “He said he never campaigned; rather, he continuously visited the people.”

He was a folk hero to Senator Hugh Segal, a poor boy from Montréal who was mesmerized when Diefenbaker spoke at his school. “The family table we call Canada is the finest table in the world,” said Diefenbaker. “There is space and food for all.”

He was a folk hero to Harry Narine Singh, the Trinidadian plaintiff in a landmark 1955 Supreme Court case against race-based immigration quotas. Narine Singh to the end of his days recalled a chance meeting with the man: “He shook my hand. He said, ‘My name is John Diefenbaker.’ I said, ‘Yes, sir, I know your name.’ He said, ‘Do you know I have argued your case in Parliament? Trust me.’”

All Diefenbaker’s instincts were heroic. The fact Black immigrants qualify for Canadian citizenship, and Indigenous Canadians have the vote, and Jews can serve as Bank of Canada governor, are not gifts that fell from the sky. Diefenbaker did that. “Diefenbaker was sensitive to discrimination in any form,” writes Plamondon.

Of course the story has a beginning, a middle and an end. Waging his last campaign as Prime Minister in 1963, “Diefenbaker lost the most seats in the big cities and affluent neighbourhoods, winning only 1 of 39 seats in Montréal and Toronto,” notes Plamondon.

When he died at 83 they carried him home by funeral train. There are Prairie residents who still recall the farmers and townspeople who clustered along the fence lines to watch the locomotive pass.

Jean Chretien first met Diefenbaker in 1963 and writes in a forward to Freedom Fighter: “We were both small town lawyers with a deep connection to ordinary Canadians. That may be why we were often underestimated.”

Yes, that’s it exactly.

By Holly Doan

Freedom Fighter: John Diefenbaker’s Battle For Canadian Liberties And Independence, by Bob Plamondon; Aristotle Foundation for Public Policy; 350 pages; ISBN 9781-06925-4504; $30

Will Censor Web “Pollution”

Liberals if re-elected will make a third attempt at regulating the internet, Prime Minister Mark Carney suggested last evening. Carney made the remark after being heckled at a rally in Hamilton, Ont.: ‘Pollution that’s online washes over our virtual borders from the United States.’

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Beverly Hills Junket Cost $7K

New York Consul Tom Clark billed taxpayers thousands for a winter junket to Marilyn Monroe’s favourite Beverly Hills hotel, Access To Information records show. The Department of Foreign Affairs approved the California holiday despite cabinet’s pledge to cut spending on unnecessary travel: “The exercise is extremely important.”

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‘Never Heard Of This Group’

Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday said Canadians “can’t believe everything you read” about his contacts with friends of China. Carney denied meeting members of a pro-People’s Republic business group despite photographic evidence: “I certainly never had a set-up meeting.”

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Wants Builders’ Fees Rollback

Parliament must regulate municipal fees blamed for slowing construction of new homes, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. Any future Conservative cabinet would take up to $50,000 off purchase prices by rolling back development charges, he said: “For the first time in our history an entire generation of young people can’t imagine buying their own house.”

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