CBC television advertising revenues fell another ten percent last year even as the network claimed housebound Canadians watched more TV than ever. Management had no explanation in an Annual Report tabled in Parliament: "You have to buy this dog over here that nobody wants."
“We Are Afraid,” Says Duclos
Cabinet yesterday ruled out any assistance for Canadians who leave the country in breach of a pandemic travel advisory. “Like it or not, we must therefore adjust to this new reality,” Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos told reporters: "We are afraid for what could happen."
Thousands Of Migrants Hired
Tens of thousands of migrant labourers were granted work permits to enter Canada at the height of the pandemic even as unemployment hit a postwar high, records show. The Department of Employment also reimbursed employers’ fees for workers unable to enter the country due to the Quarantine Act: 'We are requiring employers to provide credible evidence they tried to hire Canadians.'
Carbon Taxers Breached Act
An environmental group that sponsored partisan campaign advertising for the carbon tax breached the Canada Elections Act, regulators said yesterday. Canadians for Clean Prosperity of Toronto in 2019 sponsored website posts, Facebook ads and YouTube videos questioning opponents' integrity: "They contained messages that opposed the Conservative Party and the Bloc."
No Favours For MPs’ Friends
Favouritism for friends should be forbidden under a Conflict Of Interest Code For MPs, Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion said yesterday. The current Code prohibits influence on behalf of family members but not longtime pals: "That is something I am concerned about."
Omicron Fear Grips Cabinet
Cabinet yesterday asked that MPs clear the House of Commons due to fear of Omicron infection despite parliamentarians' full vaccination and mandatory masks. Omicron infections to date have resulted in mild symptoms or none at all, according to the Public Health Agency: "I wouldn’t go to any large gatherings."
Freeland: ‘I’ll Cut Spending’
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday proposed to cut the federal deficit by more than $180 billion next year. Actual results may vary, Freeland added: "The government remains committed to unwinding Covid-19 related deficits."
Voters Polled On High Court
Cabinet organized a pre-election poll on whether the Supreme Court’s carbon tax ruling was popular with voters. The unusual research commissioned by the Privy Council Office came weeks before the Prime Minister dissolved Parliament: "Several participants felt the decision set a dangerous precedent."
6-5 Vote Bans Dividend Grant
The Commons finance committee by a 6-5 vote has prohibited wage subsidies for publicly-traded companies that pay shareholder dividends. The late reform comes after the program already paid almost $98 billion in corporate aid: "The challenge is with someone gaming the system."
Gov’t Warned On Censorship
Canadians distrust federal regulation of the internet, says in-house research by the Privy Council Office. Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez yesterday said regulation remains a priority for cabinet: "Who would make the decisions as to what is or is not allowed?"
Got ‘Help’ From Lib Lobbyist
A Liberal lobbyist, Susan Smith, received secret copies of federal audits months before they were tabled in Parliament to “help us carry out our work,” the Auditor General said yesterday. MPs on the Commons finance committee questioned the arrangement: "This Liberal lobbyist got access to your federal audits before Members of Parliament."
“Do Your Job,” Auditor Told
Auditors will not examine billions in payouts under the now-disbanded Canada Emergency Response Benefit program until 2023 at the earliest, Auditor General Karen Hogan said yesterday. MPs on the Commons finance committee challenged Hogan to “do your job” and find where the money went: "We now know some of it went to criminals, scammers, people not living in Canada."
Panel Rejects Lobbyists’ Probe
The Commons ethics committee yesterday by a 6-4 vote rejected an investigation of Covid contracts for lobbyists. “It would just be stirring the pot,” said Liberal MP Greg Fergus (Hull-Aylmer, Que.), parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister: "I think we should move on to something else."
$40B And “We’re Not Done”
Settling claims over systemic underfunding of First Nations child welfare programs will cost taxpayers $40 billion and counting, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller yesterday told reporters. “Again, we’re not done,” said Miller: "This is 30 years of the cost of failure and that cost is high."
Feds May Rewrite Labour Bill
Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan last night said he welcomed Senate amendments to his own bill on paid sick days. Members of the Senate social affairs committee complained terms of the bill were too restrictive: "Yes I would say we are looking at ways to making the bill better."



