Sabrina Maddeaux: The U.K. Labour Party is finally doing something on immigration. Why can’t Canada?

Across the Atlantic, an unlikely beacon of hope has emerged for correcting Western immigration excesses: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who leads the U.K.’s centre-left Labour Party. This May, he announced sweeping new rules that should set a new standard for serious immigration reform regardless of political ideology.

In Canada, though most politicians will now admit we’ve massively messed up the immigration file, their vision for fixing the problem lacks clarity and sufficient ambition. Canadian leaders would be wise to take inspiration from Starmer’s immigration overhaul for an urgent made-in-Canada reset.


There’s a reason Muslims own our streets.

Their votes certainly count.

But there’s more.

Canada is run by criminals.

Our elites deliberately imported incompatible cultures as a divide and conquer tactic to ease the way for their mass immigration scam.

They criminalized citizens labeling them Racists and Islamophobes for objecting to having their country stolen from them.

This was done so our political class and our corporate class could exploit for personal gain the shortages created by the chaos of mass immigration.

The elites know they are guilty of a heinous crime.

The Jewish community is just collateral damage, an easy sacrifice to keep the Muslims and their useful idiots onside.

The elites will use the Mohammedans as their thugs while the Great Replacement continues apace.

Your replacement.

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Mark Carney is making himself the moonshot Prime Minister – for better or for worse

Prime Minister Mark Carney is not managing expectations.

That’s what most politicians do when leading a country, or a province, or any other jurisdiction where millions of people are watching for lofty promises to turn into results. You under-promise and over-deliver, you fudge the timelines, and you temper your language so that you’re not saying you will land a man on the moon before the decade is out, but rather, that your country should “commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth.”

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Ottawa under fire for withholding deportation data amid immigration concerns

The federal government is refusing to release figures on how many undocumented immigrants remain in Canada, sparking criticism from opposition MPs and reigniting debate over immigration policy and capacity.

Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner (Calgary Nose Hill) called for a national deportation strategy in the House of Commons, blaming the Liberal government for overwhelming Canada’s infrastructure.

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Jesse Kline: Mark Carney fast tracks the road to serfdom

Have you heard the good news: our federal, provincial and territorial leaders all agree on the pressing need to build the critical infrastructure necessary to develop our natural resources, get them to market and turn Canada into an “energy superpower.”

Yet despite all the optimism and goodwill expressed by Prime Minister Mark Carney and his provincial counterparts following the first ministers’ meeting in Saskatoon on Monday, it’s readily apparent that the seeds of disunity and obstructionism are already taking root.

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Minister lacked details about CSIS operation linked to asset who reportedly smuggled teens

A federal watchdog agency found a breakdown of ministerial accountability after reviewing a clandestine operation abroad connected to claims a CSIS operative smuggled teenage girls into Syria to join ISIS.

The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) released a heavily redacted version of a top-secret report last week. CBC News has now learned the case involving smuggling claims triggered the review into human source operations.

The report found CSIS failed to give the public safety minister enough details about an operation. A CSIS memo also didn’t convey past issues, and that a number of CSIS activities are “problematic and potentially unlawful,” to help guide his scrutiny of the proposed operation, the report said.

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Honest Injun! Fraser apologizes, says comments on Indigenous consultation eroded trust

OTTAWA – Justice Minister Sean Fraser apologized Wednesday for comments he made about the government’s duty to consult with Indigenous leaders on major projects.

Fraser said Tuesday that the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples requires consultation but does not amount to “a blanket veto power” over projects.

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Surging Canadian pride in face of Trump’s insults sags after Canada’s federal election, poll finds

A surge in Canadian pride when Canada’s sovereignty and dignity were under assault from U.S. President Donald Trump has slumped back to normal levels after the federal election, according to a public opinion poll.

Last year — in May and again in November — 80 per cent of Canadians said they were proud to be Canadian in opinion polls, but patriotism surged this spring, climbing to 86 per cent in early March, during the lead-up to April’s federal election call.

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German, Norwegian officials urge Canada to join ‘familiar family’ in buying new submarines

Senior German and Norwegian defence officials say they’re confident Canada will sign on to the ReArm Europe plan in the coming weeks and such a move will make it easier for the Liberal government to buy new submarines from allies.

Jasper Wieck, the political director of the German Ministry of Defence, and Norway’s program director of submarines, Capt. (N) Oystein Storebo, spoke with CBC News recently about the pitch for Canada to join their existing partnership, in which the two nations are constructing cutting-edge boats that will begin to enter service in 2028.

No mention by Carney of NATO’s upcoming demand for a 3.5% members spend: Nato will force Britain to spend 3.5pc on defence

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Will the damage ever be undone?

On the anniversary of a national psychotic episode. . .

Four years ago this week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ordered the flags lowered on all federal buildings across Canada. He’d already ordered the flags lowered on Parliament Hill over the weekend before. All the flags remained at half mast for six long months.

There were riots. Statues of Queen Victoria, Queen Elizabeth, John A. Macdonald, Egerton Ryerson, Joseph Hugonard, James Cook and other historical figures were toppled by mobs or formally removed in Charlottetown, Winnipeg, Toronto, Kingston, Hamilton, Lebret and Victoria.

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Should Canada build a pipeline to the West or the East?

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith went into the first ministers’ meeting calling for a commitment to an oil pipeline to the northern B.C. coast. Some Eastern Canadian premiers suggested they’re keen on an oil pipeline that would go across the country from west to east.

Neither exists yet. There’s no company proposing to build either. But even as concepts, they are very different. They would serve very different purposes.

Decarbonized? Is that oil gone flat?

h/t Mauser

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High immigration is worsening Canada’s economic problems, says report

By overseeing one of the most dramatic immigration surges of modern times, Canada has cratered housing affordability, kneecapped productivity and concealed the true state of its economic growth, according to a new profile by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

The OECD is a club of 38 countries that effectively comprise the developed world. Every two years, each member state receives a comprehensive “economic survey” prepared by OECD economists.


Canada is Banana Republic. I am not kidding. A criminal cabal is in charge.

Immigration was horribly abused by Politicians and Corporations to line their pockets at our expense.

It never made economic sense to flood Canada with unskilled 3rd World migrants.

It only ever made sense if your goal was to profit from the economic and social hardship caused by mass immigration.

I hope Trump invades.

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Canada investigates dual-citizens serving in IDF for war crimes, fueling concerns of growing hostility toward Israel

Canadian citizens who have recently served in Israel’s army are being quietly investigated for war crimes, according to the Toronto Star

Canadian media reported on Tuesday that individuals involved in combating Iranian-backed terror in the war triggered by Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack are now facing criminal investigations. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) are reportedly questioning Canadian citizens – both active-duty and reservist members of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) – regarding allegations of committing crimes against humanity during their service.

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First Nations don’t have a veto over nation-building projects, Mark Carney’s justice minister says

OTTAWA—Justice Minister Sean Fraser says the federal duty to consult and engage Indigenous people on major nation-building projects does not amount to granting those communities a veto.

After the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) warned Prime Minister Mark Carney he must secure Indigenous Peoples’ consent to his plans to expedite massive infrastructure projects, citing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, Fraser said the legal duty under that declaration is viewed by international experts and the current government as limited.

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Smith says push for oil pipeline not just an ‘ideological argument,’ as premiers, Carney meet

SASKATOON, Sask. — Pushing for an oil pipeline to be on the first list of major projects to be fast-tracked by the federal government is about more than mounting “just an ideological argument,” Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said at the opening of a meeting between premiers and the prime minister on Monday.

Speaking to reporters on her way into the First Ministers’ Meeting in Saskatoon, Smith expressed hope other premiers would rally around her desire to see a pipeline built carrying Alberta bitumen to the coast of British Columbia.

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The wokest military on earth

One of the stated goals of the Carney government is to rejigger Canada’s various military relationships. After decades of reflexively going along with the United States on defence issues, the Liberals are signalling a plan to make nice with Europe.

This week’s speech from the throne stated that Canada will be joining “ReArm Europe,” a massive planned buildup of the continent’s military strength, largely as a check against Russia.

But as Canada strikes out to make new friends, these new allies may encounter a Canadian military that is slightly different than what they remember. Even for Western militaries that have embraced nostrums of equity and inclusion, in many ways Canada has gone further than all of them.

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