More than a third of election officers in the last federal campaign encountered voters whose names were missing from the National Register Of Electors. Data follow disclosures the voters’ list contained at least 312,000 names of ineligible electors including dead people and foreigners: ‘They were unable to be registered at the polling station.’
MP Had Lectured On Ethics
An ex-Liberal MP who left caucus over nepotism had been an outspoken critic of ethical lapses on Parliament Hill. “Canadians deserve better accountability,” MP Yasmin Ratansi (Don Valley East, Ont.) earlier told legislators.
Auditors Fail $103M Subsidy
Fewer than half of Northern families can afford a federally-recommended nutritious diet despite $103 million a year in grocers’ subsidies, say auditors. Investigators said the costly fly-in Nutrition North Program had little impact: “The subsidy focuses on the price of food and not the economic realities.”
China Envoy Wants Respect
Canadians have shown disrespect to the Communist Party and should use care in discussing the People’s Republic, says the Chinese ambassador to Canada. Cong Peiwu in an interview with an Ottawa periodical said he could not abide public criticism of his country: “Canadians do not respect the Chinese system.”
Pause For Remembrance Day
Blacklock’s Reporter today pauses for Remembrance Day observance with gratitude to all who honoured our country. Thank you for your service — The Editor.
Files On PM’s Fees Disappear
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s agent destroyed years’ worth of records sought by MPs, the Commons ethics committee learned yesterday. The committee since July 22 has sought details of more than $1.3 million in corporate sponsorship fees paid to Trudeau and his wife Sophie: “Interesting.”
Curb Propaganda, MPs Told
Parliament must enact laws to curb Communist Party propaganda in the Chinese-Canadian community, a former editor of the nation’s largest Chinese-language daily yesterday told MPs. Foreign agents have attempted to infiltrate Chinese-Canadian groups, he said: “The ultimate goal is to brainwash.”
Gov’t Criticism Is ‘Unethical’
A federal agency in a revised Code Of Ethics forbid employees from criticizing the government in the press. Cabinet in 2019 Ministerial Mandate letters described media engagement including public criticism as essential: ‘Do not demoralize or offend others through cynicism.’
Pot In Public Is No Offence
A Montréal judge has acquitted a suspected marijuana user found relaxing in a parked car in broad daylight. Public use of legalized cannabis is not an offence, ruled Municipal Court: “People smoking pot on the street, are we going to see that picture?”
Drug-Free Prison Act Failed
Drug overdoses in federal prisons have risen steadily since Parliament passed a Drug-Free Prisons Act, records show. Legislators had questioned the 2015 law as ineffective: “It is doubtful there is a prison in the world that is drug-free.”
Minister Too Busy To Testify
MPs have ordered Health Minister Patricia Hajdu to appear for lengthy questioning at the Commons health committee for the first time in eight months. Hajdu angered committee members by scheduling about 45 minutes to take questions on pandemic management and $25 billion in health spending, a sum equal to the entire national defence budget: “They should be ashamed.”
Honour War Dead, Say MPs
The Commons veterans affairs committee has summoned a billionaire Texas grocer to appear for questioning for failing to “show proper respect” for the nation’s war dead. John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods, was cited over a supermarket policy that ordered employees to remove Remembrance Day poppies: “It is so disrespectful.”
1983 Conviction Overturned
The Department of Justice has ordered a new trial for a Surrey, B.C. barber convicted 37 years ago of killing his two young sons. The Department last year opened a review of forty-seven cases of alleged wrongful conviction nationwide: “There is a reasonable basis to conclude a miscarriage of justice likely occurred.”
Bill To Extend Funeral Leave
All parties have expressed support for a Conservative bill to extend funeral leave for workers stricken with a death in the family. The Canada Labour Code and Employment Insurance Act require that employees, even those on compassionate care leave, promptly get back to work once a death occurs: “Pretty rough.”
Agency Fines Casino $147,015
A federal money-laundering watchdog has fined a Montréal casino $147,015 for breach of federal law. The penalty by the Financial Transactions & Reports Analysis Centre follows criticism of arbitrary fines by the agency: “They wanted to sacrifice me to set an example.”



