A bill to ban junk food advertising to children will cost industry at least $956 million, according to lobbyists’ submissions to Health Canada obtained through Access To Information. The bill is one Senate vote away from becoming law: “A blunt instrument is being applied here.”
Interns Win An 8-Hour Day
Banks, radio stations and other federally-regulated employers cannot work unpaid student interns more than 40 hours a week under proposed Canada Labour Code regulations. The rules mirror a 2015 New Democrat bill prompted by student deaths: “It’s something they have been asking for, for a very long time.”
Claim Lobbyists Rewrote Bill
Senate amendments to an oil and gas bill appear ghostwritten by lobbyists, say Liberal MPs. The Commons will reject revisions that fail to restore “trust in the process”, officials said: “Some of those amendments in the package come directly from oil lobbyists.”
Tight Eco Regs On Shippers
Transport Canada proposes the strictest regulations yet on oceangoing vessels to curb the spread of invasive water species. Zebra mussels, sea lampreys and other pests have cost millions, said the department: “They were the ones who created the loopholes in the first place.”
A Poem: “The View Within”
Premier Ford
may be immortalized
with a monument
built of flexible, six-feet long tube,
bearing a tiny camera
at its tip.
In memory of his willingness
to stop funding sedation
during colonoscopy.
At the base,
high-definition LED monitors
would transmit live streams
from area hospitals
as the invasive probes
push their way
up and away.
Visitors would enjoy a snapshot
into the mind of a leader
who could see a little further.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Fake News Manhunt Detailed
Elections Canada investigators have waged a four-month manhunt for sponsors of a fake news item targeting New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh. Access To Information records indicate the hoax was traced to a company registered in Israel.
“The identity of the purchaser of the electoral advertising is unknown,” wrote Nicholas Alexander, lead investigator for the Commissioner of Elections: “I believe it is necessary to determine the identity of the purchaser.”
Singh was campaigning in a February 25 byelection in Burnaby South, B.C. when the online Vancouver Courier published a February 4 website ad depicting the NDP leader alongside a $5.5 million home. “Jagmeet Singh shows off his new mansion”, read the caption.
Singh does not own a mansion. The falsehood also appeared in ad banners at The History Channel and other websites.
The content was removed February 6 after it was exposed by The Tyee. New Democrats filed a federal complaint citing a breach of the Elections Act section 91 that states: “No person shall with the intention of affecting the results of an election, knowingly make or publish false statements of fact in relation to the personal conduct of a candidate or prospective candidate.”
Investigator Alexander in a report said he sought a judicial order to compel release of records from an ad broker that would identify the source. “I determined section 91 does not apply to the circumstances, given the image and accompanying caption does not constitute a false statement of fact in relation to the personal character or conduct of Mr. Singh,” wrote Alexander, former staff sergeant with the RCMP commercial crimes unit. “However, other sections of the Act pertaining to election advertising did apply.”
Alexander wrote the fake news item appeared to breach section 319 that requires disclosure of sponsors of campaign ads under federal spending limits. “I believe the advertisement featuring an image of Jagmeet Singh constitutes election advertising, specifically because (it) depicts an image of Jagmeet Singh and states he possesses a mansion; (it) depicts another image of Jagmeet Singh beside two images of a large mansion, with a headline insinuating that he owns a $5.5 million mansion; the NDP policy book at paragraph three states the NDP believes in ‘implementing a national strategy to ensure secure, adequate, accessible and affordable housing for Canadians,’” wrote Alexander.
The report continued: “The advertisement implies that Jagmeet Singh owns a $5.5 million mansion which conflicts with stated policy of the NDP with respect to accessible, affordable housing. The advertisement clearly opposes his candidature as it calls into question his bona fides as leader of the NDP. It implies his lifestyle is not conducive to the stated policy provisions of the NDP with respect to affordable housing.”
First Fake News Probe
The ad was posted through a broker, Taboola Canada Inc. of Toronto, that was cleared of any wrongdoing. Taboola told the Commissioner of Elections it “did not produce any of the content”, but could not identify who did without a court order.
Investigator Alexander obtained the order March 27. Evidence suggested the ad was purchased through a firm listed in the Israeli corporate registry, according to Access To Information records.
The Commissioner of Elections yesterday would not comment on the ongoing probe. “The duration of these investigations can vary greatly,” said Michelle Laliberté, spokesperson for the Commissioner. The Singh mansion hoax is the first to fall under federal investigation since cabinet on January 30 announced a $7 million program to monitor online news coverage in the October 21 general election campaign.
“Ultimately it’s not our job to tell Canadians what is good or bad information, but to provide them the tools and the resources to, when something comes to them, to make a choice on their own and to say where this information is coming from, who is behind it, and what their objective is,” Minister of Democratic Institutions Karina Gould earlier told reporters.
“When you open up a newspaper, you have a sense this is coming from a journalist who’s professional, who has done their research, who has worked at it, and whose information is coming from a reliable source,” said Gould. “Of course, depending on which newspaper that is, you have a sense of where that information is coming from. When you go onto a social media platform and you see a meme or you see a story, if it’s being shared by a friend or a cousin or someone trusted, you may implicitly share that information because it’s coming from a trusted source.”
New Democrats expressed frustration with the pace and scope of the investigation. “It spread through Twitter and Facebook who themselves have no responsibilities,” MP Nathan Cullen (Skeena-Bulkley Valley, B.C.) told a February 7 hearing of the House affairs committee. “What happens then?”
“It’s a completely made up story to try to discredit the NDP leader in the byelection,” said Cullen. “It is utterly untrue.”
“What we have now is fake news which is akin to a match,” said Cullen: “Social media is like the wind. These lies can be weaponized now unlike ever before, and weaponized in that they’re targeting particular voters on their motivated issues. Is that a fair analogy in terms of what the threat is?”
“Certainly that is a significant threat,” replied Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault.
By Staff 
Pay Equity Win Took 27 Yrs
The nation’s postmasters yesterday said they reached final settlement in a 27-year pay equity dispute with Canada Post. A federal judge in 2016 called the delay proof of a failed pay equity system: “It has been a struggle to have their rights recognized.”
Senate Passes Fisheries Act
The Senate by an 86 to 3 vote yesterday passed a bill to rewrite the Fisheries Act. Senators approved amendments sought by industry lobbyists to narrow the definition of protected habitat: “I know there continues to be some questions over the need for higher standards.”
Tweet Prompts Senate Pause
A tweet by a Manitoba senator yesterday prompted members of the Senate budget committee to propose a review of social media practices. All senators’ Twitter accounts should be examined, the committee was told: “Senators must be held to a higher standard.”
Slim Chance Of Audit Funds
MPs on the Commons public accounts committee yesterday said there is little chance cabinet will increase funding for the Auditor General’s office. Auditors will abandon audits of cybersecurity, employee travel and other issues after they were denied an extra $10.8 million: “We have money for everything, except this.”
‘Politics Is Rough’, Says MP
Former labour minister Kellie Leitch in a farewell speech to the Commons said “not all Canadians are tolerant”, and urged MPs to confront controversial issues. Leitch complained she was targeted with hurtful incidents dating from the 2015 general election: “I was subjected to the worst type of threats online.”
Press Bailout May Top $595M
A $595 million bailout for federally-approved news media may cost more than budgeted, the Department of Finance yesterday told the Senate national finance committee. Costs may “not be proved entirely accurate”, said Assistant Deputy Finance Minister Brian Ernewein.
Lavalin Joined Ethics Review
SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. was the only company invited to participate in a Department of Public Works review of its Government-Wide Integrity Regime, the Commons government operations committee was told yesterday. The invitation came as the company prepared for a pending trial on fraud and bribery charges: “Why was SNC-Lavalin brought in?”
A Third Oppose Carbon Tax
A third or more of Canadians in four provinces oppose the carbon tax, according to in-house polling by the Privy Council Office. Pre-election research obtained through Access To Information shows opposition runs as high as 44 percent on the Prairies: ‘Opponents felt it was a new form of taxation that mostly hurt the little guy.”
Vote Now, Details Later
Members of the Senate social affairs committee yesterday expressed frustration with vague terms of a $1.25 billion homebuyers program. Senators complained they are expected to pass the bill without knowing the true cost to taxpayers, or viability of the program: “We don’t have a lot of time to understand what is a major piece of legislation.”



