Trudeau says he will not call public inquiry into Chinese electoral interference

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is ruling out a public inquiry to examine China’s interference in Canada’s democracy and once again insisted the influence activities of Chinese diplomats and their proxies did not affect the outcome of the 2019 and 2020 elections.

Speaking to reporters in Toronto marking the anniversary of Russia’s all-out military assault on Ukraine, Mr. Trudeau said he is satisfied with hearings now being conducted by a parliamentary committee into the past two election campaigns.


Trudeau won’t catch much flak at all for failing to call an inquiry, thank Poilievre for that.

Poilievre sucked the air out of the ChicCom interference story with his boneheaded comments on Christine Anderson.

With those comments Poilievre told his CPC cronies that he doesn’t care about the fears and concerns of average Canadians and that the CPC will continue to support a callous & destructive policy of mass immigration.

By his statement Poilievre also signalled he was a fully pledged member of the UNIPARTY.

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Canada’s worker ‘shortage’ is an illusion, and bringing in cheap labour doesn’t help

… Rather than not enough workers, the issue is that the prices of the goods and services that workers produce have increased faster than their wages, motivating businesses to hire more workers and sell more.

Canada’s current tight labour markets overwhelmingly reflect increases in the demand for workers, not a decline in their numbers. And the solution is not to satiate that demand with cheap labour, which undermines labour productivity and average economic living standards in the population.


The CPC lost my vote because they refuse to speak out on the mass immigration scandal.

They want bodies to feed the greed of the corporate class and they don’t care where they come from or how damaging the impact is on you and your family.

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Loblaw earns $529M in Q4 profits as Canadians continue to be hit with higher food prices

Loblaw Companies on Thursday forecast annual earnings above analysts’ expectations, after the Canadian retailer’s fourth-quarter results beat estimates, helped by strength in its pharmacy business and as demand held up for groceries.

The company says it earned a profit available to common shareholders of $529 million. Its fourth-quarter revenue rose about 10 per cent to $14.01 billion, topping estimates of $13.75 billion.


One industry expert put it bluntly: “This is what collusion looks like”

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After years of cozying up to China, Trudeau impotent in face of election interference

Any strong words Trudeau may mouth about China are to be taken with a very large grain of salt.

The most recent reports have revealed just how extensive China’s activities have become, and exposed the Trudeau government’s astonishing reluctance to treat them with the seriousness they deserve

Once established, it can take a long time to escape a bad reputation, as Canada has when it comes to China.

It’s been decades in the making, with successive prime ministers seized by the perceived gains to be had from the world’s most populous market. The current prime minister famously expressed his enthusiasm for the one-party state’s “basic dictatorship.”

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ChiComs Recognized Trudeau As Useful Idiot & Worked To Defeat O’Toole: Insiders say Conservatives debated going public with election misinformation warnings in 2021

… Among the allegations were that if O’Toole formed government, he’d ban the popular social messaging app WeChat, and that his hawkish stance on the Chinese government would lead to an increase
in anti-Asian racism in Canada, accusing him of mirroring then-U.S. president Donald Trump who referred to COVID-19 as the “Chinese virus.”

“O’Toole is like former US President Trump 2.0, completely inheriting his mantle,” reads one posting included in the memo.

“In fact, there are already signs that O’Toole is ‘on par’ with Trump.”

Trump? I wish!

More evidence that the LPC is a subsidiary of the CCP.

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Canadian military found Chinese monitoring buoys in the Arctic

The Canadian military found and retrieved Chinese monitoring buoys in the Arctic this past fall, a development whose public exposure adds another item to a list of pressing concerns about Beijing’s interventions in Canadian affairs, including interference in recent federal elections.

The buoys were spotted by the Canadian Armed Forces as part of Operation Limpid, a continuing effort to provide early detection of threats to Canada’s security. Earlier this month, the North American Aerospace Defence Command shot down a different Chinese surveillance device: a high-altitude balloon that traversed North America before it was destroyed.


The LPC and the corporate class must be getting greased pretty good by the ChiComs and Canada’s China class.

Junior seems always willing to kowtow to Beijing in order not to offend the CCP’s embedded 5th column.

There has to be a reason for it. What do they have on Junior & Co?

 

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Conservatives woo ethnic-minority, newcomer voters, in bid to flip key seats from Liberals

The Conservatives are wooing ethnic-minority Canadians and newcomers to try to broaden their support in urban and suburban seats they need to win the next election, as a new poll shows the Tories have nibbled away at the Liberals’ lead among racialized voters since Pierre Poilievre became leader.

The strategy, echoing an approach by former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper, is being backed by more advertising in ethnic-minority media and a ramping up of engagement at community events by Mr. Poilievre and his front bench.


Whether under an LPC-NDP or CPC government mass immigration is still mass immigration.

It will still degrade the historic bonds that unite us.

Your standard of living will continue its rapid decline.

Immigration policy is called the 3rd Rail of Canadian Politics for a reason – you’re being screwed and they don’t want you talking about it.

The Uniparty could save themselves some money by creating interchangeable election signage – “A Smaller piece of the pie for you” is a perfect truth in advertising slogan.

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Liberals Want MPs to Sign Non-Disclosure Agreements to View Vaccine Contracts

Opposition MPs on the House of Commons public accounts committee want to view the contracts for billions of dollars between the federal government and COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers, but the Liberals are seeking a requirement that the MPs sign a non-disclosure agreement before doing so.

Bloc Québécois MP Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné had tabled a motion in committee on Feb. 13 to have MPs look at the contracts free of any redactions and in a controlled setting where no electronic devices would be allowed.

h/t Mauser

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Near Roxham Road, RCMP border patrol relies on locals’ help – and tests their patience

While politicians in Ottawa and Quebec City bicker and negotiate over what to do about Roxham Road, locals must put up with frequent RCMP stops while at the same time trying to keep an eye open to help Mounties enforce border rules.

Matthias Kaiser, a farmer who owns land in the area near what is now internationally known as the official unofficial point of entry for asylum seekers in Canada, is used to interacting with law-enforcement agents from both sides of the border.

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Hey you racists let’s talk Mass Immigration, Housing, & Healthcare

A discussion on limiting mass immigration will still get you called a racist.

None of the mainstream political parties will speak out against it because they all dance to the same master’s tune.

Canada’s immigration policy is driven by the greed of the corporate class to your detriment.

McKinsey is stealing your country.

The LPC-NDP-CPC Uniparty will not be getting my vote.

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Minister Denies Being Influenced by McKinsey On Immigration Targets

Sean Fraser – almost certainly lying.

Immigration Minister Sean Fraser told the House of Commons government operations committee on Feb. 15 that the involvement of consulting firm McKinsey & Company in his department had no influence on how he determined immigration targets for the country.

“I don’t have a relationship with representatives of McKinsey or Dominic Barton, if anybody had been curious,” Fraser said.

“The company had not advised me directly or influenced the decision-making about our immigration levels plan.”

He’s a Liberal which is the same as saying he’s a compulsive liar.

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‘Roxham Road! 60 dollars!’: Here’s how asylum seekers cross irregularly into Canada

Moments after a Greyhound bus from New York City pulls into a gas station bus stop in Plattsburgh, N.Y., Friday at 5:25 a.m., several minivan taxis swarm the vehicle.

About a dozen passengers descend from the bus — mostly single men, but also several couples and a family with three young daughters. They are greeted by four pushy taxi drivers.

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Diane Francis: Can Canada’s welfare state survive Trudeau’s immigration targets?

Seven years of foolish Liberal immigration policy is cratering housing, health care and the middle class in the country’s two largest cities, Toronto and Vancouver. A new report by CIBC Capital Markets reveals that the overly rapid immigration problem is much more serious than most people realized.

… Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government is reducing the living standards of Canadians while at the same time attacking the country’s economic base and resource industries.

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Loblaw’s lifting of No Name price freeze shows discount grocery in Canada is an illusion

Loblaw’s suspension of its price freeze this week on No Name products should prompt us to reflect on a bigger issue: The company’s No Frills chain, which heavily stocks these house-brand items, is not a real discount grocer.

This may come as a surprise for some Canadians, but our country doesn’t really have any true discount grocery chain. With higher food prices and a growing number of consumers seeking refuge from record-setting food inflation at the grocery store, real discount grocery stores would really come in handy. But the option is simply not there.

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Still no answers on yearslong bread price-fixing scandal: law professor

It’s been more than five years since Canada’s Competition Bureau began its investigation into an alleged bread price-fixing scheme involving major grocery chains and bakeries countrywide.

But since then, no charges have been laid and the Bureau hasn’t released conclusions of its probe.

The vice-dean of research in Civil Law at the University of Ottawa says it raises questions about the watchdog’s ability to safeguard consumers or compel companies.

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