Liberal MP says he was threatened with ‘consequences’ for opposing $250 cheque proposal

OTTAWA — A Liberal MP said he was threatened with unspecified “consequences” if he votes against the government’s proposed $250 cheques, an affordability measure that continues to face an uncertain path through the House of Commons.

Hamilton MP Chad Collins said earlier this week that he would vote against the government’s cash rebates because they leave out seniors and people with disabilities.

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Federal Liberal candidate facing Indigenous heritage questions now applying to become Metis

OTTAWA — A federal Liberal candidate in B.C. who publicly identified as Indigenous for years says she now plans to apply for Metis citizenship after a local Metis society publicly questioned her heritage claims.

In a statement provided by a Liberal Party of Canada (LPC) spokesperson, Madison Fleischer, the party’s candidate in the Cloverdale—Langley City byelection, said she is in the process of putting together an application for Metis citizenship that will be submitted to Métis Nation British Columbia (MNBC).

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HANNAFORD: Call an election now!

It is time for an election.

On 20th January, the Government of Canada will go nose-to-nose with the incoming Trump administration over the president-elect’s announcement that both Canada and Mexico will face a 25% tariff on their exports to the US.

The problem is that here in Canada, and especially in Alberta, we don’t trust the leadership of the federal government to do the job.

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Dancing While Montreal Burns

Justin Trudeau’s government offers a weak response to the city’s violent anti-Semitic riots.

The Roman Emperor Nero is said to have “fiddled” while Rome burned. That’s not wholly true. Rome did catch fire during Nero’s reign, but there were no fiddles or bowed instruments of any kind. The original story, as reported by the historian Suetonius, is that Nero put on a stage costume, climbed to the top of a tower, and sang about the fall of Troy as Rome went up in flames beneath him.

But here in Canada we don’t need Nero. We have Justin Trudeau, he of the strange fondness for costumes and blackfacedancing while Montreal burns.

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3rd World Class Status At Last!

This popular GTA restaurant chain allegedly withheld wages from international students and refugees

A well-known Caribbean restaurant chain is accused of owing almost $95,000 to a group of GTA workers that it allegedly failed to pay minimum wage — and, in some cases, did not pay at all.
Twelve former employees allege Sunrise Caribbean repeatedly issued bounced or incomplete paycheques to its cashiers, servers and chefs, some of whom have now been out of pocket for almost a year.

Most of them are refugee claimants or international students, the labour advocates representing them say.


A plague on all their houses.

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GUNTER: Time to get serious about immigration if we want to avoid Trump’s tariffs

President-elect Donald Trump’s threat of a 25% tariff on all Canadian goods entering the U.S. as of his first day in office has to be taken seriously. Seventy-eight percent of our exports (and about 42% of our economy) are based on trade with the U.S.

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John Ivison: Canadian troops sit in Putin’s crosshairs without the defensive weapons they were promised

Vladimir Putin made it clear that NATO’s bases in Eastern Europe are on his radar, when he said last week that Russia reserves the right to strike the alliance’s military installations .

The words must have chilled the 1,600 or so Canadians based in Latvia supporting Operation Reassurance, the biggest reinforcement of NATO’s collective defence in a generation.

According to people familiar with the mission, morale is flat, with many of the troops feeling exposed, under-equipped and forgotten by the Canadian public. The black humour in Camp Adazi has it that the Canadians would be a “speedbump” if the Russians attacked.

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Michael Barutciski: The Trudeau government claims it will reduce immigration, but how serious is it really?

The beleaguered Trudeau government recently released its annual report on immigration and it features a surprising about-turn—a pledge to significantly reduce immigration after years of touting it as a catalyst for Canada’s economic prosperity.

A proposed “temporary” reduction in “permanent resident” admissions—highlighted during an important press conference at the end of October—is getting the most media attention. However, the startling post-pandemic increase in the much larger “temporary resident” category is what ultimately destabilized the immigration system.

It isn’t serious in the least just more lies.

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Cost of living, unemployment factors in record-breaking Canadian consumer debt

TORONTO – Consumer debt rose to a record $2.5 trillion in the third quarter as many Canadians continue to struggle with high living costs and rising unemployment, new surveys from two credit bureaus say.

Newcomers and consumers who borrowed money for the first time in the past 12 to 36 months saw the biggest rise in missed payments, compared with the same consumer group last year, Equifax’s report published Tuesday, showed.

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John Ivison: Another wake-up call to ready for war as Canada slumbers on

On the day that Vladimir Putin said NATO members are now directly involved in the war in Ukraine because they have supplied missiles being used to bomb Russia, Justin Trudeau was announcing a yuletide $6.3-billion GST holiday on Christmas trees, beer and popcorn.

Canada, remember, is the country that can’t afford to hit its NATO spending target of two per cent of GDP for another eight years.

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Could Montreal riots bring down Justin Trudeau?

The fallout from a riot in Montreal on Friday afternoon has reverberated across the Canadian news landscape in the days since, with citizens and politicians reacting to the chaos and disturbing signs of overt antisemitism from the event. Though the violence was speedily quelled and widely condemned, questions remain about the state of Canada’s multicultural society and whether it can withstand the mounting internal and external pressures on its integrity and cohesion.

I wish.

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Feds expect 4.9 million with expiring visas to ‘voluntarily’ leave Canada in next year

With almost five million temporary permits expected to expire over the next year, the feds expect them to leave voluntarily.

So said Immigration Minister Marc Miller to the Commons immigration committee when confronted with that number by Conservative MP Tom Kmiec, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

“There are many ways that people leave the country,” said Miller. “The vast majority leave voluntarily. That is what is expected.”

They lie so casually.

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The Canadian system of government is a sanctimocracy: rule by the holier-than-thou

Justin Trudeau Smarmy Prick

… A diagnosis of anxiety fits his own government, too. Mr Trudeau and his party have traversed an arc from heroic to hapless during nine years in office, and today are despised by many in Canada. … A letter has been circulating among Liberal MPs calling upon Mr Trudeau to resign.

h/t PA Cat

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Freeland says we’re in a ‘vibe-cession’ and she’s got the cure

OTTAWA — Federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said on Monday that she hopes her government’s proposed GST holiday will help bridge the gap between Canada’s macroeconomic picture and historically stressed-out households by bringing good vibes to the latter.

“People have been talking about a ‘vibecession’… and the fact that Canadians just aren’t feeling that good,” Freeland told reporters at a press conference in Ottawa to promote the temporary sales-tax reprieve. “That’s shaping their economic behaviour in ways that are not great for the Canadian economy.”

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