26 Senators Dispute Cabinet

A quarter of the Senate, 26 Liberal appointees, yesterday signed a petition accusing cabinet of exporting lethal military shipments to Israel. Cabinet has repeatedly denied approving any arms shipments to Israel: "We haven’t exported arms to Israel in 30 years."

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Won’t Discuss Bridge Subsidy

Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday announced lower tolls on Prince Edward Island’s Confederation Bridge without disclosing how many millions in new subsidies will be paid to compensate the operator. Foreign Minister Anita Anand’s husband is managing director of an investors’ group that held a 34 percent share in Strait Crossing Development Inc., one of the most profitable toll bridge operators in the country: "It's big money."

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Say Gov’t Soaks Middle Class

Most Canadians say they pay too much federal tax under a system that punishes the middle class, says in-house Canada Revenue Agency research. Almost two thirds of people surveyed agreed that “rich people have an easier time tax cheating than middle class Canadians.”

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Canadian Jews Angry: Judge

A shawarma shopkeeper who spoke casually of bombing synagogues to “kill as many Jews as possible” yesterday was sentenced to 60 days’ house arrest. Justice Edward Prutschi, the sentencing judge in Ontario Provincial Court, said Jews are fearful and angry: "Many Canadian Jews live in a state of perpetual heightened anxiety."

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U.S. Contractors Get $1.3B/yr

The federal government spends more than a billion a year with American suppliers though actual benefits to U.S. contractors have not been calculated, says the Department of Public Works. A figure of $1.3 billion a year is quoted in a briefing note written at the same time cabinet announced U.S. President Donald Trump was trying to “destroy the Canadian economy.”

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Mexico No. 1 In Crime, Death

Mexico last year was the top foreign destination for crime and sudden death involving Canadian travelers, says the Department of Foreign Affairs. Consular cases in Mexico outnumbered those in America though the U.S.A. drew more than 10 times the number of Canadian visitors: "Sometimes things don’t go as planned for Canadians."

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Audit Finds Preferential Hires

The National Research Council at least a dozen times in two years approved sweetheart appointments of “top-ranked talent” without posting job vacancies, says an internal audit. The Research Council previously confirmed it specifically recruited foreigners because it was “not possible to find qualified Canadians” to work at its labs: "It could undermine the perceived fairness of hiring practices at the Research Council."

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Suspensions Were Symbolic

The Department of Foreign Affairs says last year it suspended 34 permits to ship military goods to Israel. Reminded of its repeated statements that Canada never exported “lethal items" to Israel, a department spokesperson confirmed the suspensions were largely symbolic: "We haven’t exported arms to Israel in 30 years."

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B.C. Election Chief Ridiculed

Federal elections managers privately circulated an unsigned commentary ridiculing Anton Boegman, British Columbia’s Chief Electoral Officer, for a “comedy of errors” in a 2024 provincial vote. The Commissioner of Canada Elections released the critical seven-page document through Access To Information: "No one at Elections BC has apologized or assumed responsibility for the embarrassing failures of leadership and management."

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Call Feds’ Case Far-Reaching

A federal Competition Act investigation marks an “unprecedented and legally unsubstantiated” attempt to ban service fee pricing in Canada, say lawyers for California-based Door Dash Inc. The delivery firm in a Tribunal filing said the outcome would impact all fee pricing nationwide: "This matter raises novel issues."

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Lose 6th TV Station In Six Yrs

The CRTC has approved the abrupt closure of another local TV station, the sixth in six years. Revocation of a federal license for CHAT-TV of Medicine Hat, Alta., on the air since 1957, followed warnings from broadcasters that local television is in crisis: "The future of an entire Canadian industry is hanging in the balance."

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Review: A Blue-Eyed Bolshevik

Manitoba Premier Howard Pawley’s Conservative opponent Sterling Lyon liked to call him a Bolshevik. Even the Soviets had abandoned the phrase in the 1950s, but Pawley had that effect on some people. His leftist credentials were impeccable. Pawley once played a juror in a theatrical production of Twelve Angry Men, Henry Fonda’s denunciation of anti-Latino bigotry. In 1962 he served as president of Winnipeg’s Fair Play for Cuba Committee. It was a popular quip in Manitoba that Pawley’s cabinet dare not meet at the International Peace Garden for fear of arrest by North Dakota marshals. Pawley’s northern affairs minister was a Vietnam draft evader, his attorney general was an ex-Communist organizer. Yet Pawley never looked like a bomb-throwing Marxist. His campaign slogan was “Great People, Great Land.”

Agency Monitored 44M Trips

Federal agents last year tracked more than 44 million trips by Canadians driving back and forth across the border, says a Canada Border Services Agency report. Drivers were monitored under a little-known surveillance program approved by cabinet six years ago: "Do you feel comfortable?"

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$704M Graves Fund Requests

A federal fund for exhumation of suspected graves at Indian Residential Schools is heavily oversubscribed, says a report. First Nations have applied for more than $700 million in funding, triple the original budget: "The actual number of individuals buried, or cemetery sites associated with Residential Schools, is unknown."

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