A Parks Canada manager yesterday had no comment after issuing an internal email confirming a “new purchasing program” with Amazon Business. Tamara McNulty, senior director of procurement, announced the initiative 48 hours after the Prime Minister urged the public to buy Canadian: 'When did Jeff Bezos take out Canadian citizenship?'
Cash Recovery’s Slow: Memo
About half the money improperly billed by a handful of federal subcontractors identified in a 2024 investigation has now been repaid, says a Department of Public Works briefing note. Managers said seven suppliers referred to the RCMP agreed to pay the balance but would not say when: "How concerned are you this could be a widespread problem?"
Cop Cited As Covid Scofflaw
A Québec constable who announced on Facebook he would not ticket people under the province’s Covid curfew has been banned from policing for a year. A provincial Police Ethics Tribunal noted thousands of Facebook friends shared the protest message: "He wanted to help and support these people, not ‘destroy’ them."
PM Climbs Down On Tariffs
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau only 36 hours after pledging to lead a Team Canada fight against American tariffs yesterday offered numerous concessions in exchange for a 30-day reprieve from U.S. President Donald Trump. No legal text of an agreement was detailed: "We work together."
Get Gun Smugglers: Poilievre
Parliament must deploy the Army and Customs agents to intercept U.S. gun runners at the border, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. “Let’s stop the gangsters and gun smugglers,” he told reporters. “I want to protect Canadians from criminals.”
‘Round The Globe For Science
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Chief Science Advisor spent more than $300,000 on travel from Tokyo to Oslo, records show. “Science can be everywhere,” Dr. Mona Nemer earlier told MPs: "I believe in science diplomacy."
Gov’t Sued For Nazi Blacklist
Federal archivists face a Federal Court challenge from B’nai Brith over their concealment of a decades-old blacklist of Nazi fugitives let into Canada after the Second World War. “History still needs to be fully told,” the group wrote a federal judge.
Vow No Digital ID Mandate
Cabinet in a briefing note says plans to introduce digital ID for Canadians in contact with federal agencies would be strictly optional. A program to have pensioners, Employment Insurance claimants and tax filers use digital identification has been under development for six years at a cost of more than $6.4 million: 'It would be offered on an optional basis.'
44% Of Pension Fund In USA
Managers of the Canada Pension Plan, largest in the nation, yesterday would not comment on whether they'll follow Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s directive to buy Canadian. Almost half the fund’s $675.1 billion is invested in the United States, from shares in American fast food chains to ownership of Dallas apartment buildings, San Diego shopping malls and industrial parks in Florida: "Now is the time to choose Canada."
PM Won’t Recall Parliament
Parliament will not be recalled to manage a multi-billion dollar U.S. trade war, says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Commons trade committee members including Liberal MPs had rated parliamentary hearings a priority in a 2019 tariff dispute: "It is insane that in this great crisis, Parliament is shut down."
Gov’t Payroll Up To $85B/yr
The cost of the federal payroll is nearly $85 billion a year including police and military, says the Treasury Board. The agency in a briefing note calculated 1,700,000 current and former public employees are now enrolled in the federal Public Service Health Care Plan: "Yes, it is worrisome."
“We Have To Win”: Carney
Cabinet must repeal its signature climate program, the consumer carbon tax, says former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney. Campaigning for the March 9 Liberal Party leadership, Carney said the tax was not working: "We have to win this election."
Protests C.R.A. Enforcement
Parliament must curb the Canada Revenue Agency’s practice of enforcing tax measures never passed into law, says the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. The appeal follows the Agency's collection of tax, interest and penalties on capital gains amendments that Parliament never approved: "This experience highlights the need for Canada to introduce rules."
Sign Pledge, Says MP Angus
Labour and cultural groups are asking that Canadians sign a public pledge to “reduce our dependence on the United States.” New Democrat MP Charlie Angus (Timmins-James Bay, Ont.), the only Commons member to sign the Pledge For Canada to date, called it a “plan of resistance.”
A Poem: “Higher Ground”
Poet W.N. Branson writes: “Cracks were there at the beginning, parged and buttressed, for centuries. But the edifice held…”



