CBC News has acknowledged the latest in a string of errors under the guise of fact checking. Management in a formal correction admitted a CBC producer got her facts wrong in purporting to correct others’ comments on election results in Carleton, Ont.: "We need the public to feel safe, that we are a beacon for that truth."
Religious Freedoms Breached
A federal agency that disregarded employees’ appeals for religious exemptions from vaccine mandates breached the Charter Of Rights, a labour board has ruled. The National Research Council was cited for twice dismissing pleas from Christian staff who objected to the source of cells used in production of Covid shots: "The state is in no position to be, nor should it become, the arbiter of religious dogma."
A Happy May Long Weekend
Blacklock's pauses for the Victoria Day observance with warmest wishes to friends and subscribers. We're back tomorrow -- The Editor.
A Poem — “Bill 101 Quebec”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Translated into French my short poems aren’t so short after all…”
Review — Rights Versus Grievances
In 2010 lawyers at the Department of Justice claimed a constitutional right to weekend golf getaways. They work a 37.5-hour week and spend the odd weekend on call, unpaid unless they actually attend court on Saturday. Attorneys complained that meant they couldn’t leave town or drink or host a dinner party when on call, in breach of their Charter right to life and liberty.
It took six years, two trials and two labour board rulings before a federal judge threw out the complaint as thin. Everybody has basic human rights, wrote Justice Yves De Montigny, “but not the right to do as you please in all circumstances.”
In Canada the cry of human rights is now applied to humdrum complaints. “Human rights is the language we use to frame the most profound – and the most commonplace – grievances,” writes Dominique Clément, association professor of sociology at the University of Alberta; “Human rights are not immutable. They are continually adapting as times change.”
Had To Dump Stock Portfolio
Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith (Beaches-East York, Ont.) hurriedly sold his stock portfolio in anticipation he’d remain in cabinet, according to a May 1 ethics filing made public yesterday. Erskine-Smith, a former corporate lawyer, did not detail which shares he sold days before being dropped as housing minister: "It’s impossible not to feel disrespected."
Says Disclosure Cannot Wait
Taxpayers should not have to wait as late as December to see a federal budget, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. Cabinet is postponing disclosure of federal accounts until it finalizes a Fall Economic Statement similar to a document tabled last year on December 16: "It means spending is out of control."
House Could Hang On 1 Vote
Ballot errors in a single riding threaten the legitimacy of any close votes in the 45th Parliament, Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet said yesterday. The Party is contesting its loss of the Terrebonne riding to Liberals by a single vote on judicial recount after Elections Canada confirmed a Bloc ballot was improperly rejected: "It might make a difference in a very important vote."
‘All Canada Was My Patient’
Dr. Theresa Tam, the nation’s $324,000-a year chief public health officer, considered “all Canadians as my patients” during the pandemic and resented public criticism that strayed into mockery of her accent and ethnicity. Tam’s views are detailed in Access To Information notes disclosed by the Public Health Agency: "Overnight I went from being relatively unknown to being broadcast to the public eye."
Bill OKs Palestine Statehood
Legislation drafted by the National Council of Canadian Muslims would see Parliament recognize a state of Palestine. MPs who have advocated for recognition include a current member of cabinet: 'It is model legislation.'
Budget Is Delayed Six Months
There will be no federal budget until the fall, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said yesterday. Cabinet in the meantime will table a Ways And Means Motion proposing a multi-billion dollar income tax cut once Parliament resumes May 26, he said: "I could not be clearer than that."
Davies Cursed Floor Crossers
Cabinet yesterday said it welcomed any opposition MP who wants to vote with the Liberal caucus in the minority 45th Parliament. New Democrat leader Don Davies earlier expressed outrage over floor crossing and sponsored a private bill to ban the practice: "The only people who have the right to determine which party represents them in the House of Commons are the voters themselves."
Words Don’t Hurt Me: Fraser
Attorney General Sean Fraser yesterday dismissed questions regarding his competence. Opposition MPs depicted Fraser as a serial bungler who mismanaged two previous portfolios, housing and immigration: "It really doesn’t bother me too much."
Housing Minister Number 5
Solving the nation’s housing crisis will be slow and complex, Housing Minister Gregor Robertson said yesterday. The former Vancouver mayor, the fifth federal housing minister in six years, told reporters he was uniquely qualified: "I am here to leverage my history."
OK For Saturday Morning TV
Rough sports are suitable for Saturday morning TV providing there’s a viewer advisory, national broadcast regulators ruled yesterday. The decision followed complaints Sportsnet Central broadcast a bloody mixed martial arts match at 9:30 in the morning: "As a formal sport, mixed martial arts may appear to an uninitiated watcher to be something of a free for all."



