NDP Rethinks Border Treaty

New Democrats favour a review of a decades-old treaty that restricts illegal immigrants in the United States from filing refugee claims in Canada, Party leader Jagmeet Singh said yesterday. New enforcement measures against 10,990,000 illegal immigrants in the U.S. were “really scary,” he said: "It's really sad for folks in the States right now."

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Likens Opposition To Nazis

The Hill Times, Canada’s most heavily subsidized weekly, yesterday likened the election of a Conservative Parliament in 2025 to the “beginning of Nazi authoritarianism.” The newspaper earlier criticized Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre for opposing subsidies to newsrooms like the Hill Times: "All we need is a Reichstag fire for our rights to be suspended and to never return to democracy without a fight."

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Feds Paid Carbon Tax Friends

A federal program paid intervenors to take the federal government’s side in a 2021 Supreme Court of Canada challenge of the carbon tax, records show. The Court Challenges Program yesterday would not discuss subsidies paid to advocacy groups to argue in favour of cabinet's fuel tax: "“It is no simple matter to tinker with the Constitution."

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Guilbeault Turns On Fuel Tax

Cabinet may not “go ahead with the consumer carbon price,” Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said yesterday. He called the carbon tax "very unpopular." The rate will jump an average 20 percent effective April 1 to 21¢ per litre for gasoline: "What went wrong?"

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Retaliate With Ketchup Tariff

Canadians will have to mind their brand of ketchup if U.S. President Donald Trump starts a tariff war, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said yesterday. Trudeau invoked a decade-old blacklist of American imports to be targeted with retaliatory tariffs including ketchup: "French’s was still using Canadian tomatoes."

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Wants House Back At Work

Parliament cannot remain shuttered for another nine weeks while Canada is threatened with a trade war, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. Parliament is prorogued until March 24 at the Prime Minister’s request: "Canada has never been so weak."

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Complaints “Tainted” Audit

Secret complaints prompted a Canada Revenue Agency audit of one of Canada’s leading Jewish charities, according to Access To Information records. The Jewish National Fund, a registered charity since 1967, was stripped of its tax status last August 10: 'Complaints tainted the audit.'

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Tariffs Are Up Feb. 1: Trump

U.S. President Donald Trump last night said 25 percent tariffs will be imposed on Canada February 1. His comments came after signing an Executive Order to investigate “persistent annual trade deficits” like Canada’s $100 billion-a year net surplus on cross-border trade: "Canada's a very bad abuser."

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Poor Passport Service Persists

The passport office continually fails to meet its own service standards despite doubling the number of employees, says a Service Canada briefing note. Management blamed mysterious "system outages." 

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China Lures “Future Leaders”

TikTok promotes teen-oriented videos to encourage young Canadians to rely on the Chinese app “as their primary source of ‘unbiased news,’” says a federal affidavit sworn by national security analysts. The Intelligence Assessment Secretariat of the Privy Council called it a long term strategy to “influence future leaders.”

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Count Hundreds Of Conflicts

Shared Service Canada, the federal IT department, counted more than 300 employee conflicts of interest last year, says a cabinet briefing note. The disclosure follows testimony by one public servant that it's “fairly common” for federal employees to moonlight as contractors: "What informed your perception that many government employees run side hustle businesses?"

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Fewer Support Drug Program

Fewer Canadians support decriminalization of cocaine and other narcotics following a failed experiment in British Columbia, says a Department of Health report. Researchers confirmed a majority of the public believe decriminalization perpetuates dangerous drug use: 'It increased five points.'

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Says She’s Good With Money

Liberal MP Chrystia Freeland (University-Rosedale, Ont.) yesterday praised cabinet as being “careful with Canada’s money” under her four-year tenure as finance minister. Freeland five weeks ago tabled budget records confirming her last deficit went 55 percent over target: "These bread and butter issues are more important today than ever."

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Complain MPs ‘Play Politics’

The RCMP in a briefing note complain Opposition critics are “playing politics” over multiple arrests of suspected terrorists. The Mounties in the same document acknowledged “violent extremism is on the rise in Canada.”

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Military Fail On Preparedness

The Department of National Defence is failing to maintain a critical stockpile of emergency medical supplies to protect the military in case of a chemical, biological or nuclear attack, says an internal audit. The report follows investigations showing the Public Health Agency similarly failed to stock pandemic supplies prior to the spread of Covid-19: 'Supplies are needed to treat casualties.'

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