Deputy Owns Casino Shares

Deputy Finance Minister Michael Sabia owns shares in one of the country’s largest casino operators. Sabia yesterday did not comment on his investments or cabinet’s endorsement of a bill to legalize bookmaking in Canada for the first time since 1892: "I will not participate in any discussions."

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Covid Room, Board Cost $8K

Health Minister Patricia Hajdu’s department yesterday did not comment on disclosures it spent the equivalent of more than $8,000 per traveler given free hotel stays, meals and medical care at public expense. Cabinet halted the free room and board quarantine program February 22: "They have stepped up."

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Gov’t Conceals Kenya Losses

A federal agency misrepresented claims of profitability in a Kenyan cellphone company that received millions in taxpayers’ funding. Canadians were told M-Kopa Holdings Ltd., a money-losing Nairobi sales firm, would “break even” in 2020. It didn’t: "It's creating good quality jobs in East Africa."

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Fears 2021 Campaign Racists

Unnamed groups may attempt to disrupt an expected 2021 federal election by agitating for “racism and hatred,” Privy Council President Dominic LeBlanc said yesterday. LeBlanc said cabinet will revive a $7 million program to watch for fake news operatives, though investigators found none in the 2019 campaign: "I think we should just assume."

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Feds Count 800,000 ID Thefts

The Canada Revenue Agency has locked 800,000 online accounts suspected of being breached by identity thieves. The Agency offered free credit protection to taxpayers victimized by thieves who stole ID to claim pandemic relief cheques: "Where we are focused is organized crime."

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Audit Contracts Questioned

The Commons public accounts committee yesterday questioned the Auditor General’s Office over favouritism in contracting to a Liberal lobbyist, Susan Smith of Bluesky Strategy Group Inc. MPs did not comment after the committee spent more than an hour behind closed doors questioning Auditor General Karen Hogan: "I would recommend the Bluesky contract be put in place for as long as it can."

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Spent $182K On Super Bowl

The Department of Public Works spent more than $180,000 advertising on the Super Bowl, the equivalent of $1,347 per second of TV time. The ads were billed as Covid public service announcements: "Do you think this is a fair use of taxpayers’ money to advertise about something that every single person in the entire world knows is going on right now?"

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Warn On Corruption In China

Canadians doing business in China should beware of Communist Party fronts, extortion, bid-rigging and other corrupt practices, says the Trade Commissioner Service. A federal guide for Canadian investors also warns of “bribery required to get things done.”

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Must Rescue French, Says Joly

First-ever legislation requiring federally-regulated private employers to promote French will be introduced, Languages Minister Mélanie Joly said yesterday. Joly blamed the internet for overwhelming French in an “ocean” of English: "We know there is a decline of French in Québec and in Canada."

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Air Canada Gets $5.9B Bailout

Cabinet last night put taxpayers back in the airline business for the first time since 1988. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland approved the purchase of $500 million in Air Canada shares after Parliament privatized the carrier 33 years ago: "We wanted a good deal, not just any deal."

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Didn’t Know PLA Was Here

Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan last night said he was unaware the People’s Liberation Army attended winter training exercises in eastern Ontario three years ago. Sajjan said he personally put a stop to the practice following the detention of two Canadian businessmen in Beijing: "I wasn’t aware it was actually taking place."

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Execs Protest Plastic Blacklist

The plastics industry yesterday protested a cabinet proposal to list their product as toxic under federal law. Executives said the listing under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act unfairly stigmatizes household goods from food containers to intravenous tubes: "Industry has been lobbying hard against this approach."

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Arctic Sea Ice Up 27%: Report

Arctic sea ice grew 27 percent last year, the Department of Environment reported yesterday. The figures contradicted claims by then-Environment Minister Catherine McKenna that the Arctic “is literally melting": "Is that what we want?"

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Money Laundering At $113B

Criminal money laundering in Canada is worth up to $113 billion a year, says a federal report. The mafia is mainly active in three cities while motorcycle gangs operate nationwide: "The Covid-19 pandemic has created ripples throughout the criminal marketplace affecting the operations of different organized crime groups."

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Warns On Climate ‘Activism’

Superintendent of Financial Institutions Jeremy Rudin is warning of climate activism in the courts. “Governments in Canada have already seen the launch of some litigation related to climate change,” said Rudin: "We are seeing an increase in activism using the courts."

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