Carney’s Snap Election — And Trump Saw It Coming

Mark Carney’s snap election is a globalist power grab disguised as leadership, continuing Trudeau’s agenda with a more polished image. But Donald Trump saw this coming — and he may be the only one ready to stop it.

Mark Carney’s sudden rise to power isn’t a win for democracy — it’s a globalist takeover in a Canadian suit. Recently installed as Prime Minister of Canada without a single vote, Carney now leads both the country and the Liberal Party just months before a federal snap election that he called. This isn’t about Canadian politics — it’s about global control.

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New Muslim campaign will endorse federal election candidates based on their Anti-Jew Zealotry

New campaign will endorse federal election candidates based on their support for Gaza

MONTREAL – A group representing Canadian Muslims has launched a campaign urging voters to choose federal election candidates based on their support for Gaza.

The Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council says it plans to endorse candidates in several dozen ridings where Muslim voters could hold sway.

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Trump announces 25% tariff on auto sector starting April 2

U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order that he said imposes 25 per cent tariffs on the auto industry, saying the duty would go on all vehicles made outside the U.S. starting April 2.

The announcement is the latest in a set of tariffs that Trump has vowed against various countries since taking office, but the auto-specific duties have been floated by the president for weeks.

“This is the beginning of Liberation Day in America,” Trump said. “Before I was elected, we were losing all of our plants that were being built in Mexico and Canada and other places. Now, those plants largely have stopped and they’re moving them to our country.

Carney and his pals will profit from our misery.

h/t David_Martin

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Trump’s trade war hits home on ‘the front line of Canada’

WINDSOR, Ontario — These are complicated times along Canada’s border.

Whenever President Donald Trump talks about obliterating Canada’s auto industry, he takes direct aim at the people who live over the river from Detroit in Windsor. Windsorites recoil from his threats, but few see Detroiters as adversaries.

But as they gear up to head to the polls on April 28 in a snap federal election, the focus for Canadians in border towns and elsewhere is increasingly their complicated relationship with their neighbors. As long as there’s a trade war, Trump will be the ballot question.

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Some industries may be spared from next round of U.S. tariffs despite Trump threats

It appears some key industries facing the threat of new U.S. tariffs may be spared from President Donald Trump’s next shot in his global trade war — at least for the moment.

Speaking on background, a White House official told CBC News that despite Trump’s repeated threats about sector-specific tariffs, they may not actually happen next month.

“Obviously POTUS has talked a lot about sectoral tariffs, but we may have sectoral tariffs on April 2 and we may not,” the official said in an email.

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Muslim convicted of threatening to bomb ‘every’ Toronto synagogue, ‘kill as many Jews as possible’ says he doesn’t know what a synagogue is

A man who threatened to bomb all of Toronto’s synagogues and “kill as many Jews as possible” has been convicted of two criminal offences, Global News has learned.

… Reached by Global News, Akbari called the witness a liar and said he had only spoken about closing “stupid casinos.” He denied even knowing what a synagogue was.

“It’s a prayer place, I guess, something like that,” he said.

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Peter Menzies: Canada’s (formerly) free press get set to cover an election

Media’s dependence on government inches towards permanence

For the first time in the nation’s history, almost all the media covering an election have a direct, even existential, stake in the outcome.

And when the votes are all counted, a great many if not most of those on the losing sides will blame it on the reporters, editors, headline writers, and producers who will be managing the coverage in the weeks ahead. It’s an open question whether they will be forgiven. Some may be. Most probably won’t.


See the Globe get Ratio’d.

h/t Mauser

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Joe Rogan would ‘rather go to Russia’ than work at UFC event in Canada

Joe Rogan has said he will not be working at UFC 315 in May, as he would “rather go to Russia” than Canada, where the event will play out.

UFC 315 is scheduled for 10 May at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, and given the fight card’s status as a pay-per-view event, many fans expected Rogan to be on commentary duties for the UFC.

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Sinaloa Cartel smuggler at U.S.-Canada border says he’ll “always” find a way to get migrants into the U.S.

On February 1st, President Trump imposed 25% tariffs on nearly all goods imported from Canada. Since then, his administration has engaged in an on again off again trade war with our longtime ally. The tariffs were imposed based on the exaggerated claim that millions of criminals and tons of deadly fentanyl have been pouring over the border into the United States— and that Canada has allowed it to happen.

Last month we went to the northern border, to the Chazy River, where even in the middle of winter, migrants continue to cross its frozen banks, often guided by human smugglers who openly advertise their services on Facebook and TikTok.

h/t XC

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Tom Mulcair: Trump’s threat to Canada means this election must be a choice between the Liberals and Conservatives

With the campaign officially started, Canadians are about to experience something more akin to what we see south of the border: a two-party election.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not taking anything away from the NDP, the Green Party, the Bloc, or their supporters.

They work hard, have their own base and promote their vision and ideals. But in a time of existential crisis for Canada as a whole, they’re an afterthought.

Donald Trump’s very real threat to Canada’s economy and sovereignty hovered over Sunday’s election launch. Who has the experience and expertise to deal with that threat? That’s the only question on Canadians’ minds right now, it’s what’s called the “ballot question.”

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Canada’s new border problem — migrants trying to get out of the US

The family of migrants hiking across the US-Canada border under the cover of darkness through thick snow had apparently underestimated the harsh and unwelcoming forestland that links the two countries.

The parents had lost their shoes along the route, the toddlers were not dressed for winter.

Undetected by border patrol and with hypothermia starting to set in, the mother reluctantly made the call for help shortly after 3am.

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BC Court Voids India ‘Cult’ Marriage

Dera Sacha Sauda Cult Leader With Cult Chick

A British Columbia judge has annulled the marriage of a woman to a fellow member of an India-based “cult group,” saying she didn’t “truly consent” to the 2023 wedding.

The B.C. Supreme Court ruling issued this week says the woman claimed she was manipulated and overwhelmed by a “barrage” of overtures from the man and his family that began in October 2022.

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To Fix Canada’s Housing Crisis, Fix Canada’s Immigration Policy

On all sides of the aisle, Canada’s political class has started to acknowledge that immigration plays a role in this country’s housing woes.

While this admission is a good initial starting point, restoring housing affordability will only begin in earnest when we grapple with how unsustainable Canada’s immigration levels have been of late. When you dig into the numbers, it becomes clear that major immigration reform is needed that goes beyond the measures already put in place by the federal government.

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