Rising interest rates and falling home prices pose a threat not seen in decades, the Superintendent of Financial Institutions said yesterday. “Financial institutions need to ensure they are prepared,” Peter Routledge wrote in an Information Sheet for lenders: "This type of situation has not been observed in Canada for decades."
Pledge 2023 Payment Reform
Cabinet next spring will begin enforcement of a federal law mandating prompt payment to subcontractors on public works. Parliament passed the measure in 2019: "It is difficult for those working in virtually any other industry to fathom not getting paid for completed work."
Contractor ‘Won The Lottery’
A longtime Liberal Party donor “won the lottery” with federal contracts near a Québec border crossing, the Commons ethics committee was told yesterday. Federal agencies spent $136.6 million accommodating illegal immigrants including millions paid for contracts and leases to Party donor Pierre Guay, a local businessman: "He names his price and the government pays it."
Convoy Agreed To Withdraw
Freedom Convoy organizers were complying with a city agreement to move trucks the very day cabinet declared a national emergency, a public inquiry was told yesterday. Ottawa City Manager Steve Kanellakos testified he had no warning cabinet would invoke the Emergencies Act: "Were there incidents? There always are. Was there any extreme violence or anybody seriously injured? No."
New Gun Reg Rated Pointless
Most Canadians consider a federal freeze on handgun sales to be pointless and ineffective, says in-house Privy Council Office research. People questioned how the freeze would counter contraband guns: "Several felt such a law would have little to no effect on the prevalence of firearms-related crimes."
Black Market Pot Flourishing
Black market drug dealers are flourishing despite Parliament’s legalization of cannabis on a promise of market regulation, says a federal report. It warned banks to be on the lookout for suspicious cash transfers involving proceeds of cannabis crime: "There still exists a flourishing and illegal cannabis market in Canada."
Election Claims Contradicted
A federal report contradicts Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault’s claim of major threats at 2021 Covid election polls. Only a tiny fraction of poll workers reported trouble with voters who declined to follow public health orders: "The level of satisfaction with the way the federal election went was unchanged from 2019."
Feds Seal Kabul Flight Record
Internal records on the flight of Canada’s last ambassador to Afghanistan will not be disclosed to the public, says the Department of Foreign Affairs. Staff cited the “sensitive nature” of evidence detailing why Ambassador Reid Sirrs fled Kabul aboard a half empty plane, leaving behind thousands of Canadian citizens and Afghan allies: "We were the first embassy to depart."
Convoy “Scared” Police Chief
A witness at the Freedom Convoy inquiry testified she heard Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly tell a business group he was scared of the truckers. Sloly later compared the protest outside Parliament to the violent 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol that injured 138 police: "There was a sense that maybe our leaders were a little shaken."
Convoy “Terror” Was Unseen
An Ottawa New Democrat councillor who petitioned cabinet to take steps against the Freedom Convoy testified she was terrified of truckers but acknowledged seeing no acts of violence. “I wrote to the Prime Minister begging for resources,” said Catherine McKenney, a mayoralty candidate: "I didn’t personally witness any acts of violence. I was told about them.'
Bootleg Market Share Is 32%
Bootleg tobacco now accounts for a third of the Canadian market, says one of the nation’s largest cigarette makers. Imperial Tobacco Canada Inc. in a submission to the Senate legal and constitutional affairs committee put tax losses in the billions: 'It's arguably the most lucrative criminal enterprise in Canada today.'
Sanitary Mandate Costs $12M
A new labour department mandate requiring federally regulated private employers to provide workers with free sanitary napkins would cost about $11.6 million a year, by official estimate. Cabinet called it a basic right for Canadian women: "Government intervention is necessary."
Ottawa Lost: Patronage Place
It was one of Ottawa’s greatest architectural losses, the original Customs House. It stood 62 years and even launched the career of a national leader, Mackenzie Bowell, whose primary achievement was growing the finest beard of any prime minister.
Review: Another Kind Of Inflation
When political fixer Jean Pelletier was fired as chair of VIA Rail in 2004 the National Post reported with a straight face he was denied “due process.” Pelletier was cast not as a target of Liberal score-settling but a victim denied his fundamental right to a porkbarrel appointment.
Sociologist Dominique Clément would call this a case of “rights inflation.” Like real inflation, it cheapens the currency. Pat references to human rights now run the gamut from Tibetan genocide to accessible washrooms. Forgotten are the nuances of the English language that draw proportional distinction between atrocities and grievances.
“There is a danger in framing any and all grievances as rights violations,” writes Professor Clément of the University of Alberta’s Department of Sociology. “This raises questions about the widespread use of rights talk. These days, almost every grievance is framed as a human right.”
Freeland Inflated Losses: Data
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland grossly inflated estimates of the Freedom Convoy impact on the economy, internal documents show. Freeland cited figures described in one Department of Transport memo as an “extreme case” that did not reflect actual data: "I have many figures in my head."



