CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton broadcast misinformation in claiming to correct other media’s misinformation, says the network. Management issued a correction after Barton garbled facts in attempting to fault Rebel News Network as unreliable: "Some things weren't true."
Cannot Meet ‘Historic’ Target
Cabinet will not meet its target of reducing poverty by 50 percent, Department of Employment figures show. Then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched the campaign six years ago on a promise he was making history: "We have a plan."
I’m Clear-Eyed On China: PM
Canadians must “take steps to protect ourselves” from China, says Prime Minister Mark Carney. Speaking to reporters, Carney was asked to explain a remark in a televised election debate last Thursday in which he named China as our biggest threat: "I am very clear-eyed about China."
Poem: “Blast From The Past”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Reagan’s slogan for the 1984 elections sounds familiar…”
Review: Look Up
Canadians’ embrace of conservation has come a long way since “back to nature” meant car camping with briquettes, and B.C. tourist films extolled carefree driving up the parkway to Fairmont Hot Springs.
Historian PearlAnn Reichwein of the University of Alberta cleverly documents this evolution through the viewfinder of the Alpine Club of Canada. Once a tea society for Anglophiles and dilettantes – no Jews were allowed for the first 40 years – the club over decades transformed itself into an advocate of conservation and protector of national parks. It was a long climb.
Canada does not see itself as an alpine nation though our mountain ranges are spectacular. The Alpine Club even today has fewer members (10,000) than Calgary’s Glencoe Golf & Country Club (12,000). Most Canadians have never seen the Rockies. Many consider them a backdrop for postcards. Few noticed when the 41st Parliament voted to allow an Alberta ski operator to expand into one national park, and ExxonMobil to conduct seismic tests in another.
Calls China #1 Security Threat
China is the biggest threat to Canada’s security, Prime Minister Mark Carney last night told a TV election debate audience. His remark followed the abrupt departure of three former Liberal MPs in the past month over foreign interference: "China, you say?"
No Reply On Genocide Claim
New Democrat campaign managers yesterday would not say if their still-confidential Party platform will censure Jews. Leader Jagmeet Singh in nationally televised debates repeatedly accused Israel of war crimes while a prominent NDP candidate claimed Jews committed “humanity’s worst crimes.”
Debates Commission OK: PM
Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday said Liberals accept the Leaders’ Debates Commission just the way it is despite new complaints of bias and incompetence. The federal agency with a $3.5 million annual budget has drawn criticism three campaigns in a row: "It's not for me to opine."
Voting Popular Just In Theory
New Elections Canada data show electors are untruthful when asked if they actually cast a ballot. Data from two federal byelections last September 16 showed twice as many electors claimed to go to the polls than the number who actually voted: "Are you sure you voted?"
Tweets Were A Firing Offence
A British Columbia tribunal has dismissed a complaint that publishers of a weekly newspaper fired a reporter for tweeting in support of the People’s Party. The Human Rights Tribunal said it found insufficient evidence but noted management had monitored the journalist’s social media posts: "There is no free press."
Immigration Broken, Says PM
Canada’s immigration system is broken, Prime Minister Mark Carney said last night. “The system isn’t working,” Carney told French-language viewers in the first televised debate of the general election: "Would you say the immigration system in Canada went off the rails in the last seven or eight years?"
Judge Rejects Agency Probe
A federal judge has dismissed calls for an independent investigation of alleged inside dealing at the Canada Revenue Agency. Employees accused a former assistant commissioner, Ted Gallivan, of approving a “secretive tax deal” for a wealthy corporate lobbyist: "It is clear the Agency launched several internal investigations into the state of the workplace."
Records Vanished Says Audit
A First Nation audit of misspent federal grants reported that members destroyed financial records covering years’ worth of expenditures, say Access To Information documents. Auditors hired by the Department of Indigenous Services complained they were unable to investigate numerous irregularities due to missing files: "There are concerns that documents were intentionally taken from the First Nation and destroyed."
Disqualified After Ten Years
Angry Green Party organizers yesterday stormed out of a news conference after being disqualified from TV debates for the first time in 10 years. The Party reneged on a promise to nominate a full slate of candidates in the April 28 election: 'You may be frustrated and angry.'
Predicts Trade War Casualties
Any prolonged trade war will drive Canada into a grinding recession resulting in bankruptcies and joblessness, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. The future was unclear and risk-filled, he said: "The outlook is really clouded."



