Plan In Case Of War: “Leave”

The Canadian Coast Guard has orders to avoid all military conflict though it’s now under military supervision, a senior officer yesterday told MPs. “If there were anything, we leave,” testified Deputy Commissioner Marc Mes.

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Call Security Bill Dangerous

Free speech advocates yesterday urged the Commons public safety committee to rewrite a cybersecurity bill. The measure would allow the industry minister to block any individual’s internet access by secret order: "That's dangerous."

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Immigration Figures Delayed

An updated Immigration Levels Plan due to be tabled in Parliament today will instead be delayed until budget day, Immigration Minister Lena Diab yesterday told MPs. It is the first plan to be tabled since the Prime Minister said the system was broken: "There are limits."

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Army Chief Sorry For Racism

Chief of Defence Staff General Jennie Carignan yesterday apologized for racism in the army, navy and air force. “We failed,” she said.

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Arab Canadians Near 800,000

The nation's Arab population numbers nearly 800,000 with the majority foreign born, Statistics Canada said yesterday. Montréal was home to the largest Arab community: "Over one quarter of Arabs in Canada, 27 percent, were children."

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“Surge” Of Misconduct Cases

The Public Sector Integrity Commissioner says she needs triple the number of staff lawyers to handle growing complaints of wrongdoing by federal managers. A “surge of submissions” left a backlog of hundreds of whistleblower complaints alleging misconduct and corrupt practices: "Cases are being delayed."

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Outlook Grim Says Macklem

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem yesterday reversed a year’s worth of forecasts in acknowledging a recession is possible and may already be underway. His comments followed a Monetary Policy Report that warned Canadians should anticipate a lower standard of living: "Our standard of living as a country, as Canadians, is going to be lower."

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China A ‘Partner, Not Rival’

A Liberal-appointed Senator last March attended meetings in China that “stressed the need to view each other as partners, not rivals,” according to a report tabled yesterday in the Senate. It came only days before Prime Minister Mark Carney called China the biggest threat to national security: "China, you say?"

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Group Opposes Swastika Ban

A proposed federal ban on public display of the swastika is needless over-reach, says the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. The group in a submission to the Commons justice committee said the proposal “significantly expands criminal law.”

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Can’t Wear That In Commons

Liberal MP Stephanie McLean (Esquimalt-Saanich, B.C.), secretary of state for seniors, yesterday was cited by the Commons Speaker for sloganeering by lapel button. House rules forbid “props of any kind.”

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Vote 170-164 For Ethics Probe

The Commons yesterday by a 170 to 164 vote ordered month-long hearings into Prime Minister Mark Carney’s stock dealings. Carney was traveling abroad and missed the vote: "The Prime Minister continues to be aware of how he can benefit from the decisions he takes."

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Call Post Office Cuts Historic

Postal employees yesterday urged MPs to permit public consultations on major cuts to mail service. Cuts announced by cabinet were historic and far-reaching, union executives told the Commons government operations committee: "Let Canadians decide."

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Anti-Semites Cost A Million

Protection from anti-Semites is costing one of Canada’s largest Orthodox synagogues a million a year, says a submission to the Senate human rights committee. “We could fund a school with that,” said Congregation Schara Tzedek of Vancouver, largest Orthodox synagogue in the West.

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Fed Auditor Invokes Secrecy

Auditor General Karen Hogan is invoking official secrecy in refusing to release questions drafted by her office to test the accuracy of Canada Revenue Agency call centres. The Agency disputed Hogan’s findings. Hogan’s predecessor published the text of a sample questions in an identical audit eight years ago: "Did anything surprise me?"

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‘Security’ Bill Not Censorship

The Department of Industry yesterday tried to assure the Commons public safety committee a cybersecurity bill will not be used to censor dissent on the internet. MPs questioned a provision for warrantless measures against “any threat.”

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