Paperwork Vanished: Audit

Auditors are faulting Foreign Minister Anita Anand’s department for sloppy accounting by diplomats abroad including disappearing paperwork on spending. The latest report follows a 2020 disclosure that one Embassy misappropriated $145,000 for a party pavilion and lied to cover the expense: “It was nearly impossible to determine.”

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Seeks Property Rights Probe

Parliament must convene hearings on property rights after a British Columbia judge granted Aboriginal title to 1,846 acres near Richmond, B.C. including private lots purchased by ratepayers, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. “This is a federal issue,” he told reporters: “You need property rights protection to have a thriving, property-owning democracy.”

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MP Got Managers’ Attention

Canada Border Services Agency executives hurriedly convened strategy sessions after an Opposition MP publicly disclosed whistleblower complaints of workplace harassment, Access To Information records show. Conservative MP Rhonda Kirkland (Oshawa, Ont.) persuaded the Commons public safety committee to investigate the Agency’s “toxic workplace culture.”

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Looked At Electrifying Buses

Federal executives in 2025 discussed a national campaign to electrify school buses, according to an Access To Information memo. Rebates for the purchase of new vehicles to replace Canada’s current fleet of 65,000 school buses would cost a billion: “We are generally aligned with the direction.”

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Question $194M Fed Subsidy

There is insufficient evidence to determine if a costly grocery subsidy for Northerners is lowering the price of food, says a federal report. The Nutrition North program cost $194.3 million last year: “Is the subsidy being fully passed on to consumers?”

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Biggest Defection Since 1917

Floor-crossing by a fifth opposition MP to the Liberal caucus yesterday marked the largest mass defection to a federal governing party in the Commons in 109 years. MP Marilyn Gladu (Sarnia-Lambton, Ont.), former Conservative Party leadership candidate, said she hoped to gain more federal funding for her riding as a Liberal: “I thought, should I quit?”

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Bloc Vows To Hold The Line

Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet yesterday appealed to voters to hold the line on a close Liberal majority in a Montréal-area byelection. A Bloc win in Terrebonne, Que. would limit cabinet to a thin but working majority in the Commons: “‘Who the hell speaks for me?”

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Hired Friend From The Gym

The Prime Minister’s Office yesterday had no comment after a senior executive was censured for cronyism. Christiane Fox, now-Deputy Minister of National Defence, breached an Act of Parliament in finding an $80,000-a year government job for a school friend whose experience consisted of working as manager at a Good Life gym: “Giving someone preferential treatment is in itself improper.”

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Gov’t Skipped Daycare Target

Cabinet’s $30 billion promise to create a quarter million new daycare spaces by March 31 was not met, says a federal document. Then-Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland in 2021 promised billions in five-year subsidies on a promise of $10-a day fees and “250,000 new high quality child care spaces by 2026.”

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“We Got The Train Through”

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne boasted to senators he was personally involved in details of construction for regional high speed rail in Québec, records show. It contradicts Champagne’s claim he recused himself under the Conflict Of Interest Act after his wife was hired by the railway: “We got the train through Trois-Rivières.”

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PM Praises Cabinet Spouses

It’s a “good situation” when cabinet ministers’ spouses can enjoy their own careers, Prime Minister Mark Carney said yesterday. He dismissed questions regarding the finance minister’s personal involvement in promoting a regional rail corporation that hired his wife as vice-president: “It’s important that we have a system that those individuals can continue to pursue their career.”

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Feds Dispute Housing Crisis

The housing crisis only affects people who don’t own houses, says a federal briefing note. The Department of Housing in an Access To Information note to Minister Gregor Robertson said it found affordability was no problem for homeowners who bought property 25 years ago: “In other words, if you consider all Canadians there does not appear to be an affordability crisis.”

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Holds Fed-Regulated Shares

A Toronto banker appointed to oversee defence contracting owns shares in dozens of publicly-traded firms including federally regulated companies, according to ethics filings. Doug Guzman, a former Royal Bank executive, earlier acknowledged he had no military experience: “You would have to ask others why I was picked for the job.”

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Silence Over Whistleblowers

Cabinet yesterday said it would not commit to new funding to clear a backlog of hundreds of whistleblower complaints alleging corrupt practices and misconduct. A federal commissioner has said three times as many lawyers currently on staff are required to investigate tips of government wrongdoing: “There may be allegations that do not see the light of day.”

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