Report Lists China Atrocities

Canada must acknowledge Taiwanese status in world affairs, Tibetans’ self-determination and the Chinese Communist Party’s torture and enslavement of minorities, say MPs. The recommendations are detailed in a report to Parliament, the strongest yet, by the Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations: “Much more needs to be done.”

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Vows Digital ID Is Voluntary

Any national digital ID program will be strictly voluntary, says cabinet. Records tabled in Parliament disclosed federal agencies have spent millions on a digital identification program since 2019: “The government is and has been engaged in research and exploration for quite some time.”

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Exec Lobbies For Ukraine Aid

A Canadian executive is privately bankrolling a million dollar publicity campaign to lobby Trump Administration appointees to “stand with Ukraine,” records show. James Temerty, founder of the Computerland chain and Northland Power Inc. of Toronto, yesterday did not comment: ‘It will assist in building relationships.’

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Downplays Decriminalization

Cabinet is not “preoccupied” with decriminalizing narcotics, Addictions Minister Ya’ara Saks said yesterday. Testifying at the Commons health committee, Saks would not say if she considered a short-lived experiment with decriminalization in British Columbia to be a failure: “The only party that is preoccupied with decriminalization is really the Opposition.”

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Debt Costs Surpass Medicare

National debt charges this year eclipsed federal funding for medicare, new figures show. MPs expressed astonishment at data that deficit spending is 55 percent higher than projected last April: “Everything they touch turns to mud. It’s the opposite of King Midas.”

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Questions Who Signed Letter

A Canadian graphologist yesterday questioned who signed ex-Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s resignation letter. Even a person under emotional strain would not completely alter their signature, said the handwriting expert: “Even under duress you sign your name using the same formations.”

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MPs Predicting More Quitters

Housing Minister Sean Fraser yesterday said he will not seek re-election and wanted to go home. Fraser’s abrupt announcement came amid Commons speculation more cabinet members will retire: “Rumours are there are two more cabinet ministers to resign. I wonder who.”

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Sudds’ Wine Video Ridiculed

MPs yesterday ridiculed a promotional video by Social Development Minister Jenna Sudds celebrating the temporary repeal of a 75¢ GST charge on a bottle of wine. Millions of Canadians this Christmas “will be lucky if they get tap water,” said Conservative MP Larry Brock (Brantford-Brant, Ont.): “I was really shocked.”

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NDP “Reflecting” On Labour

A New Democrat MP said “we are reflecting on what we did” after cabinet forced an end to legal picketing in a Canada Labour Code dispute for the fifth time in four months, a postwar record. Party leader Jagmeet Singh had no comment on the unprecedented use of executive orders: “That’s wrong.”

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Want More Millions For CBC

Parliament must increase funding for the CBC in addition to its current $1.4 billon annual grant, says a Commons heritage committee report. The CBC said it could use another half billion a year: “We need in the $400 million to $500 million range.”

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Feds Debunk Russia Bot Story

Growth in “alternative and far right ‘news sources’” reflects Canadians’ growing distrust of old media and not foreign interference, says a Department of Foreign Affairs memo. Analysts debunked stories by “far left media” suggesting Russian bots were amplifying dissent: “The move away from traditional news sources may indicate a decrease in trust among traditional outlets.”

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