Guilbeault, CTV publish fake news about 2024 ‘hottest year ever’ as LA burns

As LA burns, politicians and media are ramping-up global warming hysteria.

According to Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, supported by multiple data sets, the overall trend in Earth’s temperature is actually decreasing — debunking a claim by CTV, posted to social media by federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault — that 2024 was the “hottest year ever.”

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Trudeau makes everyone’s skin crawl

On the day that Chrystia Freeland detonated the remains of Justin Trudeau’s premiership, it was noted that, at the emergency caucus meeting held that night, Freeland and Trudeau hugged. The prime minister likes hugs. He likes being hugged.

In her memoirs, Jody Wilson-Raybould, confirmed that even after Trudeau had fired her as attorney general for refusing to take his political direction in prosecuting SNC-Lavalin, there were hugs.

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Will Chrystia Freeland Be Canada’s Rishi Sunak?

With the resignation this week of Justin Trudeau, all eyes are on the leadership race in the Liberal Party of Canada, which promises to be a major milestone in Canadian political history. If the party finds a replacement with enough popular appeal that it can avoid being completely eclipsed in the upcoming election, it will be in a strong position to compete in the future; the Canadian electorate is, despite its present dissatisfaction with Trudeau, not very conservative. On the other hand, if the party continues on its present course, it may be reduced to a permanent minority. Voters can always turn to the Canadian New Democrats instead, the social democratic party that has already threatened to eclipse the LPC once this century.

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‘Smug’ Justin Trudeau’s downfall a warning for Anthony Albanese after the Canadian PM reaped the destructive rewards of progressive politics

This week, Justin Trudeau resigned as Prime Minister of Canada.

The latest in a run of centre-left darlings to become unstuck.

He follows Ardern, Merkel, Sturgeon – all who resigned without the courage to face voters.

Within a fortnight Trudeau will be followed out the door by Joe Biden, and with a German election just around the corner, I suspect Olaf Scholz knows that he is next.

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OH Boo Hoo!

This is what happened when Justin Trudeau’s mask finally began to slip

There was no snow when Justin Trudeau walked out Monday morning — just the salt-stained steps outside his cottage door. It was January 6, 2025. It had been nine years, two months and two days since he had taken on the job, fulfilling a destiny that had always seemed both inevitable somehow and a little bit absurd.

It seems strange to say he looked emotional; emotions have always been such a big part of his sell. But he did. And it was different. I have no insight into what Trudeau really feels about anything. But the feelings he projects as a public figure have always struck me as something of a mask — not fake necessarily, but performative, permanently infected with a phony tinge of CanCon cheer.


The Star has an unending supply of TDS afflicted Trudeauphiles.

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Hangover coming after Trudeau fiscal bender

Justin, we hardly knew thee!

The federal Liberal caucus has finally forced Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resign. The dam broke after three regional caucuses — including from Ontario and Quebec — told Trudeau to pound sand.

Fighting back against such a large proportion of his caucus would have been near impossible. Trudeau read the writing on the wall.

So he’s gone. But not really.

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The age of Trudeau’s censorship schemes is over

By proroguing Parliament on Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau snuffed the life out of one of his favourite darlings: Bill C-63, also known as the online harms act.

There’s no excuse for suspending democracy at a time like this, but we should at least celebrate the death of this atrocious bill. Had it (or the two bills the Liberals were to replace it with) passed, the Canadian Human Rights Commission would have been made sheriff of the Canadian internet, empowering it to drag anyone through a lengthy tribunal process making online comments perceived to be hateful. What’s worse, anyone reporting mean comments to this tribunal would be allowed to remain anonymous, which would have allowed the process to be weaponized with ease.

 

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Geoff Russ: Canada can only get better now that Trudeau is leaving

Canadians should cheer up. The country is barreling towards rock bottom, which means before long, things can only start to get better.

Justin Trudeau’s underwhelming notice of resignation has rendered him a lame duck and the head of the government largely in name only. Now, the most unimpressive Liberal cabinet in history will claw, hiss, and scratch at each other for the honour of being prime minister for a couple of weeks or months, depending on how unlucky we get.

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Conrad Black: Justin Trudeau is the worst Liberal leader in history

Justin Trudeau is only the second elected prime minister in Canadian history after Jean Chrétien, to be ignominiously pushed out as prime minister by his own party, and this departure is more embarrassing because it follows a bungled attempt to lay all the responsibility for a failed economic policy on Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, turf her out and replace her with a complete new comer to elective office. Chrétien was never taken overly seriously by the Canadian public but was a reasonably competent prime minister with a defensible record. Because the (then) Progressive Conservative Party had been fragmented by the defection of the Bloc Québécois and the Reform party, Chrétien routinely held elections prematurely, since he was sure to win them, as a substitute for doing the necessary to raise his standing in the country and in his party. The fragmentation of the opposition made it effectively a one-party state and the grandees of the Liberal party tired of it and gave Chrétien the order of the boot. Finance Minister Paul Martin had an excellent record and took office with dignity in a spirit of confidence. What we have witnessed in the last few weeks has been an amateurish fiasco.

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Maybe Canadians were the problem, not Trudeau

Here is how things go with Canadian prime ministers: We welcome them in a warm haze of high hopes. We watch them struggle. We realize they don’t have all the answers. We then expel them in an explosion of outrage and disgust.

It happened that way with the unloved Stephen Harper in 2015. Now, a decade later, it is happening with his successor, the equally unloved – for opposite reasons – Justin Trudeau.

Maybe, just maybe, we should ponder whether the real problem isn’t with our leaders but with ourselves.

Nah. It was Trudeau. All of it.

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Survey finds newcomers think immigration system needs better planning

A poll commissioned by CBC News has revealed that over 80% of newcomers to Canada believe that the country’s immigration system is bringing in too many people without proper planning.

In November, Pollara Strategic Insights conducted a survey involving 1,507 individuals to learn about their experiences of immigrating to Canada.

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The Liberal caucus steps into a Trudeau-shaped hole in the universe

There is a thing that happens if you’ve ever had someone in your close circle face a terminal illness.

For months, then weeks and then the final days, every thought and question is about that person: How are they feeling? Is today better or worse than yesterday? Is there any food or drink that appeals to them?

That person is the centre of the universe, with everything revolving around them. And the longer the clock winds down, the tighter the spiral spins in toward them.

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