Hike in defence spending could mean cuts in other areas, Mark Carney warns

OTTAWA — In spending much more on national defence, the federal government might have to cut back in other areas, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday, as he hailed a new and more aggressive target of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to crank up its military budget over the next decade.

Those “trade-offs,” as Carney put it, are expected closer to 2030. But evolving threats and global dangers mean Canada must bolster the Canadian Armed Forces and devote tens of billions of dollars in annual spending to the military and defence-related infrastructure.


Oh No! Will the Trannies be made to do without?

He just signed the deal and can’t be bothered trying.

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Carney Liberals set target of 25% foreigners in the workforce to keep wages depressed & maintain housing shortage for Corporate welfare class’ gain

With Canada in the midst of a labour crunch, the Government of Canada has unveiled new targets to keep one-quarter of the the country’s labour force filled by immigrants.

The figure is contained in a new departmental plan released last Friday by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

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3rd World Corruption in 3rd World Canuckistan? CBSA investigates whether suspected senior Iranian officials were allowed entry into Canada

Canadian border authorities say they are investigating or taking enforcement action in 66 cases involving suspected senior Iranian officials who may have been allowed into Canada, despite a law that bars them from entering the country or remaining in it.

Of the 66, the Canada Border Services Agency has so far identified 20 people as inadmissible because they are believed to be senior Iranian officials, according to figures the agency provided to The Globe and Mail.

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Canada to spend 5% of GDP on defence by 2035, Carney says

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada and its NATO allies have all agreed to hike their defence-spending target to five per cent of annual GDP by 2035.

Carney says Canada can no longer rely on its geography to protect it as new weapons and threats emerge on the wold stage.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte put forward a plan that says allies will invest 3.5 per cent in core defence needs — such as jets and weapons — and 1.5 per cent in defence-adjacent areas, such as infrastructure and cybersecurity.

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BARBER: Don’t trust Carney’s pipeline promises

Prime Minister Mark Carney has a bad habit of evasion when asked direct questions about building pipelines. During his first Question Period in Parliament, his response on the issue was deliberately ambiguous. A June 3, 2025, video posted by The Canadian Press showed the prime minister discussing pipelines — but not committing to approving any.

He merely suggested the possibility, quickly pivoted to a vague discussion of Canada’s long-term goal of becoming an energy superpower, and left it at that.

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MacDonald: Canada must stop neglecting its spy agencies if it wants better defence

Prime Minister Mark Carney has pledged to meet Canada’s NATO obligation to invest two per cent of GDP in defence by the end of the year. But at a time of growing political instability, it’s important to remember that soldiers are not the only ones protecting Canada.

Working in the shadows, Canada has a civilian army of more than 6,400 intelligence practitioners in the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Canadian Security Establishment (CSE) — both with headquarters in Ottawa, where most of their staff are — working around the clock to keep us safe. Unfortunately, according to a Public Safety Canada survey in 2021, 54 per cent of Canadians don’t know what they do. Also, despite the vital role they play in Canada’s defence, their budgets are not included in NATO’s calculation of Canada’s defence spending.

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John Robson: The Spending Paradox

It is widely agreed that if Canadians don’t start focusing more on productivity and prosperity, we’re going to be in a heap of trouble strategically as well as economically. But headlines like “prepare for a decade of thrift and lower living standards” underline the familiar problem of trying to fight an enemy with outposts inside your own head. We’re so certain ever-bigger government makes us healthy, wealthy, and wise that when it makes us ill, poor, and baffled, we think yeah, we can’t afford to spend but we also can’t afford to cut. So the usual political incentives keep us spending, wildly.

You see this problem in the lax fiscal performance of governments of nearly every stripe nearly everywhere. But even more in the way their tongues praise fiscal prudence while their hands mock it.

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Michael Taube: Carney goes about meeting our NATO target in the most Liberal way possible

Prime Minister Mark Carney recently announced that Canada will finally meet NATO’s defence-spending target of two per cent of GDP. But, as the man wouldn’t know austerity if it hit him over the head, it will come at a significant cost to Canadian taxpayers.

The defence spending target has been a long-standing bone of contention between Canada and NATO. “Allies currently meeting the NATO guideline to spend a minimum of two per cent of their (GDP) on defence will aim to continue to do so,” the members agreed in a declaration following a meeting of the North Atlantic Council in 2014. Any allies below this level would “aim to move towards the two per cent guideline within a decade with a view to meeting their NATO capability targets and filling NATO’s capability shortfalls.”


The 5% of GDP spending target is just a sham, NATO countries have until 2035 to reach the “goal” giving loads of time for freeloaders like Canada to promise the sun, moon and the stars while contributing little.

Once adopted, all member nations except Spain will have until 2035 to reach the goal of 5%.

The agreement calls for at least 3.5% of national GDP to be spent on core military needs, while an additional 1.5% can be allocated for related expenditures.

Maybe it’s all an EU plot to rid themselves of NATO and US dominance. Carney would go big on that grift.

I advise against ever taking Carney at his word. He wants us out of NATO and with the EU yoke round our neck.


NATO’s 5% benchmark would cost Canada $150B a year, Carney says

Signing on to NATO’s new defence spending target could cost the federal treasury up to $150 billion a year, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday in advance of the Western military alliance’s annual summit.

The prime minister made the comments in an interview with CNN International.

“It is a lot of money,” Carney said.

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Misses Justin …

How two Toronto ridings spelled the end for Justin Trudeau

It was one year ago this week that the unravelling began for Justin Trudeau’s time at the top of the Liberal party — and it is a story that started and ended in two side-by-side ridings in the heart of downtown Toronto.

Tuesday marks the anniversary of the byelection in Toronto—St. Paul’s, a riding that had been held by the Liberals since 1993, and from 1997 on, through five leaders and all the ups and downs for the party, the seat belonged to Carolyn Bennett.

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Canadian politicians are using real crises to abuse their power

Prime Minister Mark Carney, along with several provincial premiers, have made the claim that conditions of “urgency,” “necessity” and “unprecedented crisis” justify initiating legislative grants of sweeping discretionary powers to the government to act in times of emergency.

U.S. threats to Canadian sovereignty and chaotic tariffs have been layered onto existing crises of economic insecurity, the housing crisis and the climate emergency — all of which have been harnessed by political leaders to rationalize exceptional treatment for priority infrastructure projects.

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Canada and E.U. Pull Together as America Pushes Them Away

Canada signed a defense partnership with the European Union on Monday, the latest indication that two of America’s closest allies are deepening their military cooperation as President Trump pulls away and promises to reduce the United States’ role in international security.

Mr. Trump has been pushing for other countries in NATO — which includes Canada and most European Union nations — to invest far more in their militaries, accusing them of relying too much on the United States.

He has called into question America’s commitment to defending some NATO members and has launched a trade war against some of the closest traditional allies of the United States.


Trump is smart to ditch these parasites.

The EU consists of corrupt, preening authoritarians bleating about democratic ideals while lining their pockets.

Carney’s kind of people.

Qatar corruption scandal at the European Parliament

Qatargate, one year on: EU corruption scandal still unsolved

EU Qatargate seizures
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Ottawa’s electric vehicle mandate threatens the car industry in Canada

The federal government’s electric vehicle (EV) mandate — requiring that 20 per cent of all new vehicle sales in Canada be electric by 2026 — was designed with the best intentions. It was a bold climate policy that aligned with international commitments and aimed to reshape one of Canada’s most critical economic sectors.

But we’re now speeding into a very different corner of the track.


The Star went insane and published this!

“Under current rules, an automaker that falls short of the EV sales target must buy credits at $20,000 per non-compliant unit just to keep selling gas-powered vehicles in Canada. For a company selling 300,000 vehicles a year, falling 10 per cent short could trigger a $600 million penalty. That’s not environmental policy. That’s economic punishment.”

That’s crazy dictator stuff.

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Canada signs landmark EU defence pact, joins $237B arms procurement fund

Lotsa Blow

Prime Minister Mark Carney on Monday at an EU-Canada summit in Brussels formally signed a historic security and defence pact between Canada and the European Union.

In signing the agreement, Carney cemented Canada’s participation in the EU’s €150 billion (C$237 billion) joint arms procurement fund (SAFE), a five-year loan facility that allows participating countries to borrow funds to jointly purchase military equipment.

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Farage inspires rural Canadians to demand independence from Carney

It doesn’t get much more Canadian than an ice hockey watch party at a sports bar in Olds, a small town in the middle of rural Alberta that could not be further from the political elites who run the country from the Far East.

Cam Davies, the leader of the recently renamed Republican Party of Alberta, slaps backs and shakes hands as he signs up new supporters for the cause of independence, even among those keeping one eye on the biggest game of the season.

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Alexander Brown: The latest population numbers are slightly down—but Canadian workers should still be worried

Last week, former Immigration Minister Marc Miller talked about how the Trudeau government’s large-scale immigration—particularly in the aftermath of the pandemic—was responsible for a significant share of Canada’s recent GDP growth. It’s true, of course, but it fundamentally misunderstands the purpose of immigration policy itself. It isn’t to boost growth in the short term merely by adding more people. It’s to be additive to Canada’s economy and society over the long term. This includes Canadian workers.

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