Budget Protest Gets A Shrug

Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon yesterday dismissed a surprise Commons vote that shamed cabinet for concealing federal finances. All Opposition parties approved the Conservative measure critical of cabinet’s delay of its 2025 budget: "You don’t care about that?"

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Feds Won’t Count Deportees

Cabinet yesterday denied it lost track of millions of illegal immigrants but would not divulge its own figures. The comments followed one MP’s request for a comprehensive deportation plan: "How is the government to ensure they will leave?"

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RCMP Would Enforce Bylaws

The RCMP and Crown prosecutors would enforce First Nations bylaws under private bills introduced yesterday in the Senate. It follows a Department of Justice report that noted “First Nations justice systems are distinct from one nation to another.”

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Petitions For Security Checks

All candidates for high office in Canada would undergo mandatory background security checks under a Commons petition sponsored by Liberal MP Robert Morrissey (Egmont, P.E.I.). The proposal follows the ejection of four ex-Liberal MPs in the past five months: "Recent events have raised legitimate concerns about foreign influence and potential security risk."

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Year Passes Without Registry

Cabinet yesterday would not explain its failure to enforce a bill passed by Parliament a year ago to unmask foreign agents. The Department of Public Safety had promised a foreign registry would be in place this month: "Where is it?"

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Found Pharmacare Suspicions

The Department of Health in pre-election focus groups found Canadians skeptical of a promised pharmacare program. People typically assumed they either didn't qualify or that promised free medication came with strings attached: "Who is eligible? Who is covered? What are eligibility requirements?"

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MPs Question Irregularities

Elections Canada must face parliamentary scrutiny for balloting irregularities including random poll closures, Bloc Québécois MPs said yesterday. Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault has apologized but failed to explain why voters in one riding were left standing outside polling stations: "Elections Canada investigates itself. They need outside scrutiny."

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Beware Full Communism: MP

Covid mandates were "full Communism," Conservative MP Dr. Matt Strauss (Kitchener South-Hespeler, Ont.), yesterday told the Commons in his maiden speech. Strauss, an emergency care doctor, was an outspoken critic of pandemic controls: "I refuse to be a cog in their broken machine."

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Says Gaza Like WWII Murder

The New Democrats' foreign affairs critic in a podcast Friday compared Jews’ military action in Gaza to the murder of innocent civilians in World War II. MP Heather McPherson (Edmonton Strathcona) was silent as her interviewer likened the killing of Palestinians to the Holocaust: "We are 19 months into this genocide."

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Big Shift In Vax Views: Study

The pandemic prompted a “large shift” in parents’ views on vaccination, says a Public Health Agency report. Fears of unknown side effects are now common, wrote researchers: "The Covid-19 pandemic yielded a large shift in Canadians’ knowledge, attitudes and beliefs towards vaccinations."

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Calls UFOs A Security Threat

UFOs are a national security issue though federal agencies decades ago deemed they were no threat, says the office of cabinet’s Chief Science Advisor. Dr. Mona Nemer's office in an Access To Information memo said Canadians should guard against “undetected intrusions” from space: "Motivation: national security."

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Most TV Viewers Are Over 65

Typical television viewers are senior citizens, says new CRTC research. The demographic profile of the TV audience follows repeated warnings that television is in steep decline: "In fact the likelihood of subscribing to a TV service increases with age."

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Silence On Fire Preparedness

Cabinet won’t say what if any new steps on fire prevention have been taken by Parks Canada following a disastrous 2024 blaze in Jasper, Alta. One Alberta MP told the Commons the consequences of poor forest management were obvious: "We learned."

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Recalling The House Tavern

Parliament ran its own tavern for 49 years. Sober and sadder are today’s holidays on Parliament Hill. Old-timers recalled the tavern fondly. Here the Fathers of Confederation took a bracer or entertained visitors. It was a “very natural” place, John A. Macdonald enthused.

Book Review: Art And Catastrophe

Catastrophes inspire art. Many an 18th century painter documented the Great Fire of London and eruption of Mount Vesuvius. Artists similarly tried to chronicle Canada’s one true catastrophe as described by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The results have been jarring. Arts of Engagement spreads the canvas.

From 1867 some 150,000 Indigenous children were forced through the Indian Residential School system. The Commission appointed to examine the historical record was the product of a class action lawsuit, designed by liability lawyers. The outcome satisfied almost no one.

“Truth-telling was not to include the naming of individuals and institutions associated with wrongdoing ‘unless such findings or information has already been established through legal proceedings,’” writes Professor David Garneau of the University of Regina. “Truths were to be accounts of subjective experience, feelings and perceptions rather than the relating of facts.”