Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board has a backlog of 180,000 illegal immigrants and asylum seekers asking to remain in Canada, officials disclosed at a Senate committee hearing. “Good God,” said one senator.
‘Drink Schnapps’ With Jews
Cabinet ministers have been “drinking wine and schnapps” with Jewish diplomats in Ottawa instead of condemning Israeli war crimes, New Democrat MP Charlie Angus (Timmins-James Bay, Ont.) told the Commons. Angus did not explain the reference to German liquor: “Mom called me last night.”
Finds Holes In Pharmacare
Cabinet’s pharmacare bill is “like a burlap sack,” the “lowest common denominator with holes in it,” says the 250,000-member Canadian Association of Retired Persons. Testifying at the Commons health committee, an Association director said retirees fear losing superior private prescription drug coverage: “What is being proposed now is more like a burlap sack.”
Commons To Pass Labour Bill
The Commons today is expected to pass a ban on federally regulated employers’ use of replacement workers in case of strike or lockout. The bill would then proceed to the Senate: “It sends a powerful message.”
Usury Rate Still “Exorbitant”
Cabinet’s lowering of usury rates from 48 to 35 percent annually is insufficient, says a Liberal-appointed senator. Payday lenders charging ten times the criminal interest rate remain exempt: “Do you find 35 percent not to be an exorbitant amount?”
A Sunday Poem: “Warsaw”
There’s a restaurant in Warsaw
where the ghetto used to be.
450,000 Jews.
Most died in Treblinka’s gas chambers.
Some of hunger.
Some of typhus.
Some shot in the street.
But
the espresso is superb,
waitresses flattered by their
short skirts,
and the cherry Pierogi
are a must.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

Review: Portrait Of An Underdog
Forty summers ago John Turner lost an election no Liberal leader could have won. Years later he told a friend, “I need your help rehabilitating my reputation.” To his death in 2020 Turner was a caricature who spent a pointless few weeks as prime minister.
“He felt enormous pressure to make something of himself, to be of service to his fellow man in some regard, and at the same time he doubted his ability to do it,” writes biographer Steve Paikin. “It was a contradiction that went to the core of his being. He enjoyed success and privilege, yet he was wracked with insecurity and a certain fragility.”
Paikin’s biography is poignant and funny, affectionate and candid. Hear Turner speaking to his wife in the 1970 October Crisis: “If I ever get kidnapped don’t let anyone pay the ransom.” See Turner giving an inspirational talk to ladies in the office: “You’re a f—king all star!” This is gold.
Paikin is a longtime journalist and tireless researcher. His subject emerges as human and needy. Turner “radiated a confident exterior” yet “frequently battled insecurity,” he writes. Running for the Liberal leadership in 1984 Turner whispered to his sister on the campaign bus: “Do you think I can do this?”
Electors like a scrappy underdog. Turner hit all the wrong marks. His stepfather was lieutenant-governor of British Columbia. Turner was a Rhodes Scholar who attended private school. His favourite lunch was sirloin steak. His favourite drink was Johnny Walker with Perrier. It was all cigars and tennis clubs.
“You are shallow,” one aide cautioned Turner. “You are glib,” said another. Paikin quotes a source: “You need a lot of steel to be prime minister. Did he have it? I’m not sure.”
Turner was the kind of man who wore a jacket and tie to have supper with his children. “If he asked his kids whether they had all washed their hands before dinner and he suspected someone was fibbing, he was all over that,” writes Paikin. “‘Which washroom did you go to?’ he’d ask, before marching down the hall to check to see whether the soap or sink were still dry.”
How could Turner know his moment of glory would appear the one and only time he played the role of scrappy underdog? Paikin suspects he might have appreciated the irony. “God’s will,” he quotes Turner. “That’s what happens in life. Sometimes you’re lucky and you win, sometimes you’re unlucky and you lose.”
His glory was as the articulate opponent of free trade who fought the tide of globalism in the 1980s. Turner did not stand alone – 57 percent of voters opposed free trade in a 1988 general election – but he gave eloquence and dignity to Canadians’ unease. “We built a country east and west and north,” he said. “We built it on an infrastructure that deliberately resisted the continental pressure of the United States. For 120 years we’ve done that.”
The postscript: Canada lost 495,000 manufacturing jobs. The Department of Employment in a 2013 memo warned “the Canadian dream is a myth” for “a middle class that isn’t growing.” And Turner became a caricature. John Turner is an engaging tribute.
By Tom Korski
John Turner, by Steve Paikin; Sutherland House; 300 pages; ISBN 9781-9895-55835; $36.95

Campuses Lead In ‘Jew Hate’
Universities are now a leading source of vulgar anti-Semitism, professors yesterday testified at the Commons justice committee. MPs were told campuses “began convulsing with anti-Semitic activity” following the Hamas killing and kidnapping of Jews in Israel last October 7: “Is this all disintegrating?”
Promises Drug Plans Are Safe
No Canadian should lose workplace drug coverage under a national pharmacare plan, Health Minister Mark Holland said yesterday. His remarks contradicted insurers’ claims that Bill C-64 An Act Respecting Pharmacare may disrupt coverage for millions: “No company would do that.”
Senator Protests Registry Act
A Liberal law mandating disclosure of corporate ownership is a privacy breach that exposes investors to “ambulance chasers,” a Liberal-appointed senator said yesterday. Senator Toni Varone (Ont.), a former contractor, said names of shareholders are none of the public’s business: “How do you maintain privacy?”
Animal Rights Clause OK 9-3
A Senate committee yesterday by a 9-3 vote agreed to grant cabinet broad powers to criminalize possession of wild animals in Canada. The Fur Institute of Canada called it “deeply concerning.”
Firms Must Show They Care
Federally registered corporations would have to report annually on how they are benefiting society under a private Senate bill introduced yesterday. Senator Julie Miville-Dechêne (Que.) sponsored the unprecedented measure: ‘Minimize any harm the corporation causes to wider society.’
Bill Targets Zoos & Fur Farms
Liberal-appointed senators yesterday proposed legislation to grant cabinet federal powers to criminalize possession of all wild animal species in Canada. Members of the Senate legal and constitutional affairs committee expressed astonishment at the scope of the bill: ‘So this would allow the government to ban fur farming?’
Aid 6,000 Homeless At $561M
Federal aid worth more than a half billion annually reduced the “point-in-time count of homeless persons by about 6,000 people,” the Budget Office said yesterday. The homeless population overall had grown since 2018 despite the spending, wrote analysts: “It costs half a billion dollars for the Prime Minister to drive up homelessness.”
Learn How To Shop, Say Feds
Canadians aren’t getting internet bargains because they won’t shop around, says the Department of Industry. The remark followed senators’ complaints that prices charged consumers do not appear to match cabinet claims of large savings: “My bill didn’t go down 26 percent, what are you talking about?”



