The Conservatives have had the rug pulled out from under them

The Conservatives must be feeling personally attacked by the universe right now.

Just two months ago, national polls had them leading the Liberals by at least 20 points, and they had been luxuriating in fat margins for a year and a half. Then, after Justin Trudeau announced he would resign in early January and Donald Trump started musing about eating Canada for lunch, the red and blue lines on the graph started to converge.


338 Seat Projection: CPC 160 (-17) LPC 139 (+19) BQ 28 (-5) NDP 14 (+3) GPC (+0)

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Ford doubles down on threat to cut off energy to U.S. amid spectre of trade war

Newly re-elected Premier Doug Ford doubled down Monday on his threat to cut off electricity flowing from Ontario to several American states if the U.S. moves ahead with tariffs.

“If they want to try to annihilate Ontario, I will do anything — including cutting off their energy — with a smile on my face,” Ford said during his first news conference since winning a third majority last week. Ontario is a major electricity exporter to New York, Michigan and Minnesota.

“They need to feel the pain. They want to come at us? We’ve got to go back twice as hard,” Ford continued.

h/t OntarioJohn and Mauser

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Making Sense of the Trump Tariffs

They will bring other countries to the negotiating table.

Progressives and conservatives alike have denounced President Trump’s plan to impose reciprocal tariffs on nations that tax American imports, citing the potential costs to U.S. consumers. These critics overlook how tariffs are just one part of the administration’s broader economic strategy.

The Trump administration has three objectives related to America’s position in the international monetary system. First, it wants to maintain but reduce the financial burdens associated with the U.S.’s leading role. Second, it wants to get our national debt on a more sustainable path. Third, it wants to restore America’s industrial capacity.

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What’s Behind Trump’s Love-Hate Relationship With Canada?

There is the theory that President Trump is still bitter about his Canadian hotel ventures that went bust.

Some, on social media, have speculated that a 2019 photograph in which Justin Trudeau appeared poised to kiss Melania Trump, the first lady, at a Group of 7 gathering in France, left Mr. Trump with a grudge against the dashing Canadian prime minister.

And then there is the transactional view, that Mr. Trump sees the acquisition of Canada as the 51st state as the ultimate real estate deal that would seal his presidential legacy.

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Trump says economy-wide tariffs to hit Canada Tuesday

U.S. President Donald Trump says 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs, with a lower 10 per cent levy on Canadian energy, will start Tuesday.

I blame Trudeau. He has provoked Trump and gullible Canadians believed he was acting as a “patriot” when in fact he hoped to bolster LPC fortunes.

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Conservatives and Liberals hiring paid door-knockers ahead of election as volunteer numbers dwindle

With campaign volunteer numbers declining in each successive election and the next election fast approaching, some Conservative and Liberal candidates and MPs are currently in the process of hiring paid canvassers.

“It’s been proven time and time again…,” reads one recruitment email sent out recently to potential paid election canvassers by political strategy firm Right Recruiter, which is owned by veteran Conservative insider Steve Outhouse. “Knocking on doors and speaking to voters face to face wins campaigns. That’s why, with the federal election just around the corner, we are in need of committed campaigners to help support Conservative candidates!”

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J.D. Tuccille: The real reason Canada won’t be the 51st state

U.S. President Donald Trump has a talent for stirring the pot, and he’s done so in two countries with repeated suggestions that Canada should become the 51st American state. Of course, making Canada one state is hardly fair — each province should get its own star on the flag if we’re going to move in that direction. But there’s no good reason to go down that path at all, given most Canadians’ rejection of the idea, and the havoc it would play with the fraught political balance in the United States. Besides, it’s likely that both Canada and the U.S are too big and too centralized as it is.

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Quebec bill on integrating immigrants upsets usual suspects

Municipalities, rights groups concerned about Quebec bill on integrating immigrants

MONTREAL — Quebec municipalities and human rights groups are voicing concerns about proposed legislation that would require newcomers to abide by a set of common values.

They say the new bill on cultural integration could foster anti-immigrant sentiment and impose a heavy administrative burden on communities.

The bill, tabled in January by Quebec’s right-leaning Coalition Avenir Québec government, would have immigrants adhere to shared values including gender equality, secularism and protection of the French language. The legislation is the latest in a series of bills that aim to reinforce Quebec identity, following the province’s secularism law and its overhaul of the language law.

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Has Donald Trump triggered a golden age for drug trafficking in Canada and the world?

As Donald Trump has raged, Canada has reacted.

In December, the federal government pledged an additional $1.3-billion to combat fentanyl trafficking, with increased border security measures that include drones, Black Hawk helicopters and mobile surveillance towers.

In February, Ottawa appointed its first ever “fentanyl czar,” longtime senior Mountie Kevin Brosseau, to oversee our fight against the deadly synthetic opioid.


If so he’s done something that will make junior’s Beijing bosses happy.

They must need mops to clean up the mouth froth from the floor at the Star.

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CBSA says it’s unclear what more Canada can offer to the U.S. to avoid tariffs

The head of the Canada Border Services Agency says it’s not clear what more Canada could offer to the United States to once again avoid the imposition of punishing tariffs on Tuesday, even as a senior U.S. Cabinet member said Sunday that Canada has “done a reasonable job” of securing the border.

Canadian authorities have pledged a series of measures in response to criticism from U.S. President Donald Trump about the cross-border movement of fentanyl and migrants into the U.S. Ottawa said it will spend $1.3-billion over six years on a border plan that includes more dogs, scanners, drones and helicopters. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed former RCMP deputy commissioner Kevin Brosseau to the newly created post of fentanyl czar last month.

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MORGAN: Let’s talk about Islam

‘We must begin by admitting there’s a problem.’

It’s time for the world to have a frank discussion about Islam and how it fits into modern societies that respect human rights. It’s an elephant in the room and ignoring it has real costs.

One of the worst examples was in Rotherham UK where young girls were recruited, groomed and raped for decades by gangs of Pakistani men. The Jay Report estimates over 1,400 young women were victims of these gangs. The number is likely much higher since so many of these crimes went unreported.

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From Alaska to Maine, communities that border Canada worry US tariffs come at a personal cost

DETROIT (AP) — At the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, a quote from former President Ronald Reagan is engraved on one wall.

“Let the 5,000-mile border between Canada and the United States stand as a symbol for the future,” Reagan said upon signing a 1988 free trade pact with America’s northern neighbor. “Let it forever be not a point of division but a meeting place between our great and true friends.”

But a point of division is here. On Tuesday, President Donald Trump plans to impose a 25% tariff on most imported Canadian goods and a 10% tariff on Canadian oil and gas. Mexico is also facing a 25% tariff.

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Before electing Mark Carney as leader, the Liberals should pause for a moment of reflection

A caution from the philosopher George Santayana to members of the Liberal Party of Canada: Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

Step back, therefore, to the night of Feb. 28, 1984. Prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, father of Justin Trudeau, goes on a long, solitary walk through an Ottawa snowstorm and decides that the time has come for him to resign.

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Kelly McParland: Singh pays the price for protecting Trudeau

Jagmeet Singh wouldn’t listen in 2022 when it was suggested propping up the Trudeau Liberals wasn’t a good idea.

Trudeau was not a popular leader. His days as the shiny new face in Ottawa were well behind him. At the time the “supply and confidence agreement” was reached the country had just endured an ill-timed election, called by the prime minister two years before it was due in hopes of leveraging the COVID-19 crisis into a majority government. The gambit didn’t work and Trudeau was handed another minority, almost identical to the one he’d already had.

He wanted that pension. All there is to it.

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