Canadian employers won’t hire outspoken Muslim advocates of “Palestinian human rights,” says cabinet’s Special Representative on Combating Islamophobia. Alleged hiring bans followed Hamas’ October 7 killing and kidnapping of Jews in Israel including eight Canadians, said the report to Parliament: 'An anti-Arab backlash has led to loss of income.'
Drug Injury Counts Skyrocket
Numbers of serious adverse drug reactions have skyrocketed since hospitals were required to report all incidents, figures show. Parliament in 2014 mandated reporting under Vanessa’s Law named for an Ontario schoolgirl who died after taking ordinary prescription medication: "No Big Pharma executive has ever gone to jail."
Conceal Contractor From MPs
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly’s department will not tell MPs which consultant it hired to run security at Canadian embassies abroad. It followed protests by the Commons government operations committee after managers hired a state-controlled Chinese contractor: "The name of the supplier ultimately selected cannot be provided."
Met Privately With Tax Lobby
Home prices are unsustainable and have normalized a “massive increase in value” for retirees, says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. He made the remarks at a private seminar with Canada’s leading advocates of a home equity tax: 'It’s not like your grandparents saying, ‘Ah, bread used to cost me a nickel.'
Gov’t Knew Millions Wasted
The Department of Public Works in an internal document acknowledges it knew within months its $700 million pandemic ventilator program was a waste of money. The memo contradicts testimony by then-Public Works Minister Anita Anand that cash was paid to favoured contractors "prior to the information coming forward."
Put $604M In EVs — In China
The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board put more than $600 million in China’s electric vehicle sector accused by cabinet of unfair trade practices. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland blamed Chinese industry for job-killing schemes, telling Canadian workers: “We are going to protect you.”
Feds Name & Shame Colleges
The Department of Immigration is granting itself new powers to name and shame colleges and universities that abuse the foreign student program. Administrators caught in “unethical behaviour” face year-long suspensions and public blacklisting: "That is totally unacceptable."
‘Slush Fund’ Report Due Soon
Conflict Of Interest Act investigations at a federal agency dubbed the “green slush fund” will be made public by month’s end, says the Office of the Ethics Commissioner. It follows complaints against Liberal-appointed directors of Sustainable Development Technology Canada: "The Office is still working towards the August 1 deadline."
Bid You Happy Canada Day
Blacklock's pauses for the 157th anniversary of Confederation to wish all friends and subscribers a happy Canada Day. We're back tomorrow -- The Editor
A Sunday Poem — “July 1st”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Went downtown this Canada Day to join the celebration. A girl wrapped in red-and-white sold three flags for two dollars, five for three. She wanted my money…”
Review: Old Time Religion
On October 6, 1920 the city of Ottawa prepared for a riot. The mayor dispatched police to ring St. Patrick’s Hall. Inside, 700 Canadian Catholics, Sinn Féiners and sympathizers rallied for Irish nationalism. Eamon de Valera, a founder of the Irish republic, sent a note to delegates: “No enlightened Canadian will be able to stand by and see an unoffending people massacred.” Outside 3,000 Protestants from nearby Carleton County threatened to descend on the hall and crack heads.
Historian Robert McLaughlin captures the moment in Irish Canadian Conflict, a vivid account of a story now strangely erased from the Canadian experience, the clash of Canadian Protestants and Catholics on the Irish question.
Ancient hatreds from the old country were layered over all the raw nerves that jangled in the new homeland: English versus French, monarchist versus republican, wealthy versus poor. Irish independence was among the great political upheavals of the 1920s and there were more than a million Irish in Canada. When an Irish nationalist, Terrence MacSwiney, starved himself to death in a British jail in 1920, sympathy marches were held in Halifax, Montreal and Québec City.
Voters “Done With Trudeau”
Canadians are “done with Trudeau,” New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh said yesterday. But Singh said he will stick to terms of a Supply And Confidence Agreement that would keep the Prime Minister in office until June 30, 2025: "We are not trying to plan for an election."
Tell Senate: Keep Spank Law
Lawyers and schoolteachers are petitioning Parliament to reject private bills to ban spanking in correcting children’s behaviour. Two separate bills in the Commons and Senate would repeal a corporal punishment provision of the Criminal Code dating from 1892: "It is impossible to imagine how a parent could successfully foster their child’s development without ever applying reasonable and minimal force."
‘Exploring’ 2021 Fed Coal Ban
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault is still “exploring options” to enforce a ban on thermal coal exports he announced three years ago, says a federal memo. Thermal coal exports went up after the announcement: "This makes Canada the first country in the world to make this commitment to address climate change."
Wants Hands Off Betting Ads
Parliament must allow professional sports to self-regulate gambling promotions, says CFL Commissioner Randy Ambrosie. The Canadian Football League in a letter to senators said federal controls were unnecessary: "We do not agree."



