McKinsey & Company was never considered for federal blacklisting as an unethical supplier even after facing legal troubles abroad, records show. The Department of Public Works said court settlements and corruption charges “had no impact” on its work with the company: “I wake up every day knowing it’s an ethical company.”
‘Vast’ Lottery Heist Disclosed
Court of King’s Bench in Manitoba has documented the “vast” theft of lottery tickets by a clerk at a village gas station, one of the biggest hauls of its kind. The Court imposed what it called an economic “life sentence,” full repayment of nearly a half million worth of stolen tickets: ‘The numbers were not adding up.’
I’ll Name Names, Says Ex-Spy
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has 30 years’ worth of records on federal ridings that are “hunting grounds” for Chinese Communist agents, says a former chief analyst. The retired spy told the Commons ethics committee he was prepared to name names: “We have evidence, names, circumstances when all this happened.”
‘Committed’ To Web Censors
Cabinet in a letter to MPs said it is “committed” to appointing an internet censor board called a Digital Safety Commission to police legal content, but set no deadline for legislation. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau earlier described uncensored speech as “destabilizing.”
Minister’s Claim Is Ridiculed
Cabinet will legislate lower internet fees if telecom companies don’t cut prices, says Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne. MPs ridiculed the claim after Champagne approved a $26 billion takeover of Shaw Communications of Calgary by its larger Toronto rival Rogers: “If we don’t see a drop in prices – ”
Only Immigrants Trust Them
Recent immigrants are more likely to trust media than people who were born here or spent any time in Canada, says new federal data. Even among immigrants, confidence in media generally declined the longer they lived here: “Trust in Canada’s media has never been lower.”
Legion Files Trademark Suit
The Royal Canadian Legion Dominion Command has filed a $50,000 trademark lawsuit against a Québec theatre company over commercial use of copycat Remembrance Day poppies. It disrespects war dead, lawyers wrote Federal Court: ‘The Legion reminds Canadians of the debt owed to those men and women who died.’
A Poem: “First Past The Post”
The votes are in
for a class trip.
Toronto gets 40%,
Montreal 35%,
Kingston 25%.
“Destination Toronto!” declares the teacher.
But some claim it’s a false majority.
The class shouldn’t be traveling to a city
that 60% voted against.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

Found Spies On Gov’t Payroll
Federal departments and agencies since 2017 have fired three employees as foreign agents, records show. Their identities and the governments they were spying for were not disclosed: ‘It typically follows receipt of new information from the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service.’
Demands Secret Subsidy Cost
The Department of Industry confirms it did approve secret subsidies to Volkswagen to build a battery plant in Ontario. Managers under questioning by Conservative MP Brad Vis (Mission-Matsqui, B.C.) promised to divulge the figure to the Commons industry committee: “The number of $15 billion was being thrown around.”
Fed Tax Claim Rated Untrue
The Parliamentary Budget Office yesterday confirmed the carbon tax represents a “net loss” for most Canadians even after federal rebates. The report is the second to contradict cabinet claims that taxpayers receive more in rebates called Climate Action Incentive payments than they pay in tax: “Claims that Canadians get more back in rebates for the failed carbon tax have been proven false.”
Would Monitor Teleworkers
Federal employees working from home should expect electronic monitoring, the Senate internal economy committee was told yesterday. “Hours of work, all those kinds of things, will be on the table,” said Senator Scott Tannas (Alta.): “The employee needs to understand down the road there may be very sophisticated productivity analytics they may be subject to.”
We Want More Taiwan: MPs
MPs yesterday recommended cabinet resume official visits to Taiwan for the first time in 25 years. A Commons committee report praised Taiwan as “innovative,” “progressive” and “a vibrant democracy.”
Hiding Loss In Minister’s City
Cabinet is refusing to say how much it lost on a failed $200 million venture to build a vaccine factory in Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos’ Québec City riding. A factory executive earlier told MPs the company “spent all those monies” it received: “Wow. That’s great.”
Drafting Bill’s Been “Messy”
Drafting a federal ban on replacement workers has been “messy” but will result in a bill to be introduced this fall, Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan said yesterday. The bill is a condition of New Democrat support for cabinet in the minority 44th Parliament: “This is one of the most monumental changes to collective bargaining in Canadian labour history.”



