Few Prosecutions For Usury

Successful prosecutions under federal usury laws number only four or five a year, according to Department of Justice figures. Cabinet wrote revisions to loansharking bans into Bill C-47 its Budget Implementation Act: "We haven’t seen much."

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Call Fed Probe A Fishing Trip

One of Canada’s largest mortgage brokers describes as “a fishing expedition” an investigation of its business practices by anti-trust lawyers. The federal Competition Bureau seeks a court order compelling Dominion Lending Centres to surrender confidential records: 'It is essentially a fishing expedition.'

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A Sunday Poem: “Huawei”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “It’s been said great nations act like gangsters, small ones like prostitutes…”

Review: The War

A New Brunswick schoolgirl was so anxious over her father’s deployment to Afghanistan she felt like vomiting every time the phone rang. Another recalled a sibling who “had nightmares that my dad blew up and he had no face.” A third remembers being reprimanded for weeping in class: “My teacher told me to stop crying because there was no reason to cry, and that it was stupid for me to cry over something like that. I got mad at her because my dad just left to go to war for six months, and I’m pretty sure that’s a valid reason to be upset.”

These are the stories in Armyville: Canada’s Military Families During the Afghanistan Mission. The  narrative is compelling. Poet Raymond Souster, a WWII volunteer, said every patriot who would send Canadians to war should first walk through the ward in a veterans’ hospital. They should also read Armyville.

PMO Knew Of China Threats

The Prime Minister's Office yesterday acknowledged it was told two years ago of a security memo detailing Chinese threats against the family of Conservative MP Michael Chong (Wellington-Halton Hills, Ont.). There was no explanation of why Justin Trudeau said he only learned of the threats last Monday: "He closed his eyes. It’s only now that he is interested because the information leaked out."

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Illegal Migrant Hotels $127M

Room and board for illegal immigrants who entered Canada at a single Québec border crossing cost more than $127 million in the past five years, new data show. The figures, the highest disclosed to date, include hotel room bookings from Surrey, B.C. to St. John’s: "Staggering."

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Freeland Budget Filibustered

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland faces an opposition filibuster over her latest omnibus budget bill. Conservative MPs at the Commons finance committee delayed all clause-by-clause votes until Freeland appears for questioning: "Oh my goodness."

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Bonuses Were Extra: Fortier

Cabinet's estimated $5.2 billion cost of settling with striking federal employees did not include the expense of $2,500 bonuses, says Treasury Board President Mona Fortier. Bonuses would add more than a third of a billion to the settlement: "We can adjust the amount."

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Post Office Lost $548 Million

Canada Post yesterday reported a pre-tax loss of $548 million last year. Cabinet has yet to detail a management plan to return the post office to profitability but polled Canadians on service cuts: "To what extent would you support or oppose an end to door to door home delivery?"

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Credits Party ‘Achievements’

Alexandre Trudeau yesterday said Canadians “need to recognize certain accomplishments” of the Chinese Communist Party. “I am a reader of Confucius,” the Prime Minister’s brother testified at the Commons ethics committee: "We need to recognize certain accomplishments of that regime."

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Feds Silent On China Threats

Cabinet yesterday would not say how many MPs have been harassed by Communist Chinese agents. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said security advisors never told him foreign agents threatened Hong Kong relatives of Conservative MP Michael Chong (Wellington-Halton Hills, Ont.): 'Are any other MPs the subject of similar threats?'

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Unsure How Many Telework

Cabinet does not know how many federal employees are working from home, says Budget Officer Yves Giroux. Testifying at the Senate national finance committee, Giroux said he asked and had no response: "There seems to be a great lack of information."

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Slave Bill Shames Importers

The Commons yesterday passed into law a bill to name and shame Canadian importers that deal in slave-made goods. One MP described slave goods as commonplace in Canadian stores: "These people are harvesting our coffee or the sugar we eat or making the clothes we wear."

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Counting Few Homeless Vets

A small fraction of veterans are homeless, about half of one percent, according to Department of Veterans Affairs figures. The Department said data were estimates only: "The total number of veterans who experience homelessness might be higher than this."

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CEO Never Asked Questions

Morris Rosenberg, former CEO of the Trudeau Foundation, yesterday testified he never questioned mailing a $140,000 Canadian charity tax receipt to the Beijing address of a TV production company affiliated with the Communist Youth League. “The money actually came with no strings attached,” Rosenberg told the Commons ethics committee: "Isn’t that unusual sir?"

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