19% Fuel Tax Hike Not Likely

Cabinet will attempt to cancel a 19 percent hike in the carbon tax due April 1, says Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. It was unclear whether Parliament must be recalled to pass legislation, he said: "What are the options? I don't have the answers for you."

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Gov’t Polls Urban Crime Fear

Urban crime is so alarming householders may start to arm themselves, says pre-election Privy Council research. Federal focus groups targeted crime fears in the Greater Toronto Area where Liberals elected 49 MPs in the last campaign: "A number reported no longer traveling to certain parts of the GTA that they viewed as being dangerous."

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Pay Despite ‘Stupid Mistake’

Tax Court has censured the Canada Revenue Agency for making a “stupid mistake” with T4 slips. However a judge ruled he was powerless to correct the error since a tax filer did not report it in time: "There is nothing the Court can do."

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Tells Press An Election’s Near

A federal election call is imminent, Public Works Minister Jean-Yves Duclos yesterday told reporters. Leaders of all opposition parties said they were ready: "Let's go."

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Make U.S. ‘Lose Their Minds’

Blanket surcharges on Canadian energy exports to the U.S. would see Americans “lose their minds,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford said yesterday. He made the remark as Ontario began collecting a 25 percent surcharge on hydroelectricity exports to Great Lakes ratepayers: "We will not back down."

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Liberals Targeting Arab Vote

Cabinet should introduce more awareness of “Arab cultures” in schools, says Privy Council in-house research. Cabinet aides in pre-election polling targeted focus groups in cities with the largest Arab Canadian communities: "Many felt more needed to be done by the federal government."

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CBC Inconvenient For Rivals

The CBC is “politically inconvenient” for the Conservative Party, says a senior Liberal MP. Yasir Naqvi (Ottawa Centre) in a pre-election report to constituents depicted the CBC’s $1.4 billion annual subsidy as a campaign issue: "It is a necessity."

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Observing 34 Years Of Stress

Thirty-four years after the GST was introduced amid a public outcry the federal sales tax remains complicated and stressful for small businesses that collect it, says in-house Canada Revenue Agency research. The vast majority of businesspeople surveyed said acting as federal tax collectors was so complicated they had to hire accountants to manage the paperwork: "Descriptions included words like ‘complicated,’ ‘stressful,’ ‘painful,’ ‘frustrating’ and ‘overwhelming.’"

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“We Have To Win”: Carney

Liberal leader Mark Carney last night appealed to supporters to prepare for a make-or-break general election campaign. “We have to win this election,” Carney told a Party leadership convention in Ottawa: "I will need a lot of help."

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Chretien Boosting Energy Tax

Cabinet should consider an energy export tax to hit the U.S. “where it really hurts,” former prime minister Jean Chretien said last night. It was up to premiers to agree, he added: "Governments altogether can consider going further and hitting the Americans where it really hurts."

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“Carney Loophole” Targeted

Federal leadership candidates should be required to meet the minimum ethics requirements of ordinary public office holders by disclosing assets, debts and income, says Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre. The proposal would require amendments to the Conflict Of Interest Act to close what Poilievre called a “Carney loophole.”

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Illegal Labour To Get Permits

Cabinet is prepared to allow illegal immigrants to remain in Canada providing they work in construction, says Immigration Minister Marc Miller. The proposal expands a temporary program targeting home builders in the Greater Toronto Area: "These undocumented migrants are already living and working in Canada."

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A Right To Advertise Upheld

Advocacy groups and lobbyists have a constitutional right to inform and persuade voters with pre-election advertising, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled. Judges in a 5-4 decision struck an Ontario law that limited ad spending by unions, corporations and advocacy groups for a full year prior to an election campaign: "Political debate dominated by any one actor including political parties threatens balance in the political discourse."

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Jail Cellphone Jammers OK’d

Cabinet after years of study has approved cellphone jamming at federal prisons. The waiver under the Radiocommunications Act targets bootleg cellphones used by inmates to bypass surveillance systems that monitor prisoners’ calls: "This is the first exemption granted to correctional facilities."

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A Sunday Poem — “Glory”

Poet W.N. Branson writes: “When wars begin, grandmothers chide the invaders as they enter the square. But it’s tolerated, when most expect to be home by Christmas…”