The Senate is hiring a climate change consultant to help lower its emissions. Senators log 5,000,000 kilometres a year in air travel, by official estimate: "Our house is on fire and something urgently needs to be done."
Furniture Trade Investigated
The Competition Bureau since 2019 has been investigating sales practices by one of the country’s biggest furniture dealers, Federal Court records disclose. Allegations target The Dufresne Group Inc. of Winnipeg: "The Commissioner has reason to believe the respondents engaged in deceptive marketing practices."
Pension Reforms Clear Panel
The Commons finance committee has cleared a private Conservative bill to save company pensions in cases of bankruptcy. MPs have tried and failed to pass similar amendments to bankruptcy law since 1975: "We know the history of all the companies – Eaton’s, Sears, Nortel."
Lost Ottawa: Russian Spy HQ
Atop a hill overlooking the Rideau River on Ottawa’s Charlotte Street stood a mansion that had its share of drama. It saw a sensational spy scandal and a suspicious fire. One prime minister called it “a place of intrigue.” It took KGB defections and the collapse of the Soviet Union to reveal the extent of Soviet skullduggery at 285 Charlotte.
Book Review: An Eleventh Province
The idea of provincehood for the Territories is like a magnitude 8 earthquake in the St. Lawrence River Valley. It’s inevitable and slightly terrifying for the unprepared. Mere thought of a fifth Western province at the table upsets every place setting contrived since 1867. Author Tony Penikett recalls when the Northwest Territories was pressured to comply with the Official Languages Act, the legislature sanctioned French, English – and nine aboriginal languages.
“Nowadays nobody believes that provincial status is on the horizon for Yukon, the Northwest Territories or Nunavut,” writes Penikett, former two-term Yukon premier. “For the foreseeable future, devolution of legislative jurisdiction over lands and resources may be all the northern territories can hope to get.”
Losing $2.4B On Covid Loans
Taxpayers stand to lose $2.4 billion under a pandemic loan relief program, records show. The multi-billion loss was projected though cabinet extended a payment holiday for business borrowers to December 31, 2023: "We’ve had your back from day one."
Count Tire Irons As Weapons
The Ottawa Police Service last night said its claim the Freedom Convoy had weapons referred not to firearms but tire irons and work tools. Patricia Ferguson, acting deputy chief of police, acknowledged officers did not find any guns in convoy vehicles: "We don’t know if there really were guns."
Raised $25M In Thirty Days
The Freedom Convoy was among the most successful private fundraisers in Canadian history raising nearly $25 million in a month, data show. Figures yesterday released by a judicial inquiry confirmed most contributions, 59 percent, were Canadian: "I believe they just wanted to support the cause."
Claim China Meddled In Vote
Chinese Communists ran a propaganda campaign to steer votes from Conservative candidates in the last election, the House affairs committee was told yesterday. It was difficult to gauge the impact, witnesses testified: "It’s incredibly hard to measure the impact of these sorts of operations on election outcomes."
Confirm Christmas Recession
A Christmas recession is likely, the Department of Finance yesterday confirmed in a Fall Economic Statement. “Times feel tough,” said Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland: "We cannot support every single Canadian in the way we did."
OK ArriveCan Audit 173-149
The Commons yesterday by a vote of 173 to 149 ordered a detailed audit of the ArriveCan app. The $54 million program intended to check cross-border travelers’ vaccine status was suspiciously expensive, MPs were told: "There is obviously something fishy going on."
Note From Our Shareholders
Blacklock’s shareholders yesterday issued the following statement regarding threats of punitive sanctions by subsidized competitors on the Parliamentary Press Gallery executive: “We will fight these people. We are retaining counsel. We will vigorously enforce our lawful rights and the Gallery’s obligations under the Canada Corporations Act. We will seek costs and damages. We will hold directors personally liable for their misconduct. We will compel disclosure of confidential Gallery correspondence and cross-examine executive members under oath. We will name names.”
Bought Genocide-Made Pins
The Department of Canadian Heritage bought maple leaf flag pins from China even as the Commons voted to condemn the People’s Republic for crimes against humanity, records show. Federal contracts for patriotic paraphernalia were worth hundreds of thousands: "This is our national symbol. This is our country."
Spent $1.3M On Dubai Junket
A junket to Dubai by Governor General Mary Simon and 45 invitees cost taxpayers $1.3 million, according to accounts disclosed yesterday by the Commons government operations committee. Federal agencies have yet to surrender actual menus from the trip that were equivalent to $218 per plate for breakfast, lunch and supper: "Oh my God, this is an astronomically high price."
Spaghetti Up 26%: StatsCan
The price of spaghetti is up 26 percent nationwide on average, Statistics Canada reported yesterday. New grocery inflation figures came ahead of a Fall Economic Statement that will provide some inflation relief, said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: "Yes there continue to be pressures."



