Cabinet commissioned in-house research on banning federal funding to any Canadian organization "unaccepting of LGBTQ individuals,” records show. A Privy Council report also discussed preferential funding for Pride communities like LGBTQ scholarships: 'They questioned why the process to normalize and protect LGBTQ communities was not moving faster.'
Conflicted Twitter Source OK
Reporters may conceal conflicts of interest involving analysts they quote in stories under a ruling by a national press ombudsman. The decision came in the case of a Twitter source quoted by Anja Karadeglija, a National Post reporter and journalism ethics instructor: “Journalists are free to choose the sources they deem credible.”
Beware China Dupes: Memo
Friends of China may be spreading pro-Beijing propaganda to “pollute the general media” in Canada, warns a Department of Public Safety briefing note. Cabinet is reviewing a proposal to mandate public disclosure of advocates acting on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party: "Information could be disseminated by Canadians who may not be fully aware."
Funding Vax Passport to 2026
Cabinet budgeted millions for a vaccine passport program to 2026 though the World Health Organization has declared the pandemic is over. A Department of Health memo said funding was needed to support federal measures “as needed going forward.”
Kids’ Pot Poisonings Up: Data
Accidental marijuana poisoning of kindergartners has worsened under legalization, according to records. The Department of Health acknowledged “the rise in pediatric cannabis poisonings” since Parliament legalized marijuana in 2018: "This is largely driven by children younger than five."
A Sunday Poem: “Why”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Lack the standing to blame God for the killings in Vietnam, the famine in Biafra, the genocide in Rwanda, the ethnic cleansing in Myanmar…”
‘Almost All’ Upset With Feds
Canadians questioned in Privy Council research “almost all had a negative opinion” of cabinet’s management of the economy, says an in-house report. Disclosure of cabinet polling follows Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s complaints of “gloom and doom and the talking down of Canada.”
PM To Union: Back To Work
Cabinet will not allow disruptions to continue at West Coast ports, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said yesterday. On-and-off strike action since July 1 by the International Longshore & Warehouse Union was unacceptable, said Trudeau: "This strike could not continue."
No Comment On Interference
A federal report yesterday protested “political pressure” in electoral redistricting by an unidentified Edmonton MP. The New Democratic Party and MP Blake Desjarlais (Edmonton Griesbach) did not respond to questions: 'It appeared to be the result of a calculated effort led by a particular MP to maintain their stronghold.'
It’s Official: Toronto Loses MP
Toronto will lose an MP in the next election under the final report of a federal commission tabled yesterday. Hundreds of petitioners objected to the redistricting: "Acceding to the request would have significant consequences to the rest of the province."
Feds Poll Chinese-Canadians
Cabinet hired pollsters to survey Vancouver’s Chinese-Canadian community on its “current relationship with China” but made no mention of alleged election fraud by foreign agents. The in-house research by the Privy Council Office was disclosed yesterday: "Many believed there needed to be greater representation of Chinese-Canadians at the federal level."
O’Regan Demands Strike End
Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan today will detail federal action to end a British Columbia port strike. The dispute in its 14th day is the longest at Western ports since a 21-day shutdown that ended with back-to-work legislation in 1972: "We have been patient."
Want Fed Ban On ‘Denialism’
A Senate committee yesterday recommended federal action to ban “Residential School denialism.” Senators did not define the term. Hate speech has been a Criminal Code offence in Canada since 1970: "Some individuals deny the negative effects on generations of Indigenous peoples."
Vax Firing Over Text Message
Pandemic mandates saw the tattletale firing of a public employee for questioning how to fake her vaccination status, according to evidence at a labour hearing. An Alberta clerk with a spotless 14-year record was fired after texting a co-worker: “We are looking for a nurse close to retirement that would be willing to sign off on the vax for us.”
Feds Survey Air Conditioning
Most Canadians have home air conditioners, Statistics Canada said yesterday in the first national survey of its kind. The research was prompted by worries over climate change, wrote analysts: "This study is the first to quantify air conditioning prevalence in Canada at the personal level."



