No Evidence Backs PM Claim

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s claim of “explosive” top secret evidence linking the Conservative Party to foreign agents was dismissed yesterday by the Commission on Foreign Interference. The Commission made a scant, two-paragraph reference to the claim in its 860-page report: "The Prime Minister spoke."

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Must Show Up For The Bonus

A $177,000-a year executive at the Canada Revenue Agency has lost a claim for bonus pay while she was off work. A federal labour board dismissed the complaint under a lucrative “performance pay” program that rewards the vast majority of executives government-wide: "It is unfair."

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CBC Ombudsman Calls Bias

The CBC engaged in a “blatant lack of balance” in covering a dispute between Catholics and LGBTQ advocates, a network ombudsman said yesterday. The censure for breach of the CBC’s own code of conduct followed a 2023 story that “could reasonably lead one to perceive some degree of bias.”

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Compensation Topping $40M

A First Nation that announced its discovery of children’s graves at a Residential School has sought tens of millions in federal grants including the cost of building a national shrine at Kamloops, B.C. The requests followed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s 2021 pledge to “make amends” though no human remains have been recovered to date: "The department is ready to flow funds."

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Military Far Below Minimum

The Canadian Armed Forces are thousands short of minimum strength for regular, fully trained soldiers, sailors and air crew, according to figures in a Department of National Defence briefing note. It said a program to bolster enlistment by targeting immigrants enrolled fewer than 120 volunteers: "People are at the core of everything the Canadian Armed Forces does."

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RCMP Mismanage Air Patrol

An RCMP air patrol was so mismanaged its helicopters only flew till 4 pm weekdays, says an internal audit. The Mounties announced the lease of new helicopters only after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened 25 percent tariffs over inadequate border security: "How do we do that?"

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Gov’t Steps Up Water Patrols

The Canada Border Services Agency yesterday served notice of a new program to train officers to board fugitive vessels in Canadian waters. Managers did not specify whether the initiative was prompted by U.S. complaints of lax security at the border: "Officers are required at times to board vessels which are underway."

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MP Petitions To Boycott Israel

The New Democrats’ lone MP east of Ontario has sponsored a petition to boycott all trade with Israel. Québec MP Alexandre Boulerice (centre) earlier described Israel as a “boot crushing a human face.”

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Graves Funds Paid Publicists

Millions paid to a British Columbia First Nation to recover suspected children’s graves at an Indian Residential School were instead budgeted for publicists and consultants, documents show. The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations attempted to conceal the financial records under the Access To Information Act: "We are not seeking to intervene in this matter but are trying to understand."

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Just Mild About Last Budget

Chrystia Freeland’s last budget as finance minister was rated by Canadians as “mediocre,” “unfocused” and “smoke and mirrors,” says in-house focus group research by the Department of Finance. Pollsters hired by the department said taxpayers, especially older Canadians, were upset by unchecked deficit spending: "Words used to describe the budget included ‘insufficient,’ ‘mediocre,’ ‘meh.'"

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Forget About $250 Cheques

Cabinet’s promise of $250 pre-election cheques is dead, says Public Works Minister Jean-Yves Duclos. Speaking as the Prime Minister’s “Québec lieutenant,” he said the $4.7 billion giveaway was now untimely: "We have concerns."

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$1B Life Line For Canada Post

Cabinet has extended a $1,034,000,000 line of credit to the post office. The loan is to “maintain its solvency and ensure it can continue its operations,” the Department of Public Works wrote in a terse notice: "The corporation must be put on a path to viability."

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Ukrainians Are Likely To Stay

Many Ukrainian war refugees will likely remain in Canada permanently, Immigration Minister Marc Miller told reporters Friday. Miller said Canada had “limited capacity” though only a third of 962,612 war refugees granted permission to enter Canada landed here: "I am not sending them back to Ukraine as long as the war continues."

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A Poem: “Great Again”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes:: “The National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel, Memphis. A black-and-white photo shows Jesse Jackson reading the Chicago Daily Defender…”

Book Review: The Search For Beauty

Genevieve Fuji Johnson, a political scientist, spied the land for democracy. Not the raucous democracy of Parliament, but the beautiful democracy envisioned by ancient Greeks. Her search ended badly. The result is this crisp and engaging book. There is nothing like disillusionment to inspire compelling non-fiction.

“Deliberative democracy is a rich ideal,” writes Fuji Johnson, associate professor at Simon Fraser University. “It invokes a democratic system of governance in which citizens actively exchange ideas, engage in debate and create laws responsive to their interests and aspirations.”

“Ideal” is the key word here. Many Canadians think of democracy as the right to dissent and be left alone. Democratic Illusion went in search of something finer.