Fight Feds “Tooth And Nail”

All future cabinets are on notice against misusing the Emergencies Act to quash peaceful protest, civil rights lawyers yesterday told reporters. Asked for comment on cabinet’s appeal of a critical Federal Court ruling, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association replied: “We will fight them tooth and nail.”

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Mexicans Lead In Claimants

Opposition MPs yesterday asked cabinet to reinstate visa requirements for Mexican visitors. Records show Mexico accounts for a larger number of refugee claimants in Canada than any other country: “We are always very much aware of potential criminality.”

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2024 Weak With High Interest

Canadians should expect a weak economy and high interest rates through much of 2024, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. “We are not forecasting a deep recession,” he said: “Growth has stalled. It stalled around the middle of last year. We expect growth to continue to be close to zero.”

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Transit Ridership Way Down

Transit use is in long term decline nationwide likely due to office telework, Statistics Canada said yesterday. New figures follow a Department of Infrastructure report warning taxpayers alone cannot carry the cost of system deficits: “The increase in work from home has reduced public transit use.”

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Judge Was Liberal Appointee

Richard Mosley, 74, the Liberal-appointed federal judge who ruled the Freedom Convoy crackdown was unconstitutional, yesterday said civil rights lawyers changed his mind about the case. Ottawa officialdom including the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court had condemned protesters as anarchists: “I was leaning to the view the decision to invoke the Emergencies Act was reasonable.”

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Feds Stung By Convoy Ruling

Ex-cabinet members who advocated a 2022 Freedom Convoy crackdown yesterday had no comment after the Federal Court ruled their actions were unlawful. Using the Emergencies Act against peaceful protesters was unconstitutional, ruled the Court: “It captured people who simply wanted to join in the protest by standing on Parliament Hill carrying a placard.”

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Found 17,921 Doctors, Nurses

A federal incentive program dating from 2012 has drawn nearly 18,000 doctors and nurses to rural Canada, says a Department of Employment report. Auditors rated Canada Student Loan forgiveness a success though many medical and nursing students never heard of it: ‘They found out about it from family or friends.’

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$11M For Vax Deaths, Injuries

More than $11 million has been paid to families of Canadians who suffered death or injury as a result of Covid vaccines, say managers of a federal compensation fund. The new figures follow Health Minister Mark Holland’s boast that Canada was a world leader in pandemic lifesaving: “Thanks to vaccines and to other measures we saved literally hundreds of thousands of lives.”

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Seeks Unmarked Grave Probe

Parliament must fund a full investigation into longstanding claims of unmarked Indian Residential School graves in Kamloops, B.C., Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. Cabinet three years ago budgeted millions for a final search that was never undertaken: “Canadians deserve to know the truth.”

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Gov’t To Name Shareholders

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne yesterday ordered all federally registered companies to disclose names and addresses of major shareholders. A publicly accessible database of beneficial owners is still a year away, he added: “We had some bad actors who used Canadian corporations in the way that I think Canadians would find very disturbing.”

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Resigned To Mediocre Service

Canadians are resigned to unhappy experiences with their internet service provider, says in-house CRTC research. Relatively few switched companies since they considered all services to be equally mediocre, wrote researchers: “Some simply said the alternatives all cost about the same.”

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Cutback On Foreign Students

Immigration Minister Marc Miller yesterday outlined cutbacks on the number of foreign students in Canada currently estimated at 807,000. Miller didn’t release the legal text of any regulation but said it “will be approximately a 50 percent reduction” in some provinces: “The net intake will show that decrease.”

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$150M Excuse Was A Lie: MP

The Commons health committee by a 6 to 5 vote has rejected public disclosure of a contract to a failed Québec vaccine supplier. Conservative MP Rick Perkins (South Shore-St. Margarets, N.S.) said piecemeal records show cabinet lied about why it paid $150 million to a factory in the Minister of Public Work’s riding: “It is voting for a cover-up.”

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