Auditor General Probing Canada Summer Jobs Program

The Canada Summer Jobs program is currently undergoing a performance review by the Auditor General and the findings are scheduled to be reported by year’s end, according to a federal government memo.

It is the first audit since those administering the government program were accused of discrimination by Christian employers applying for Canada Summer Jobs (CSJ) grants.

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Terry Glavin: Mélanie Joly can’t wait to make up with China’s dictators

It’s a circle that can’t be easily squared.

On the one hand, there’s the spectacle of Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly happily abasing herself at the feet of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Beijing on Friday after being summoned to China to take instruction on how Canada should behave itself as Xi Jinping persists in flouting international trade rules, accelerates his encirclement of Taiwan and pours ever greater resources into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

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The Trudeau Show is on summer hiatus

You might not know much about Steven MacKinnon, but for the past six months, his job in the House of Commons has been to take the questions the Prime Minister would rather avoid. Those are the ones without easy answers where the government wants to deflect blame, drown debate, or stall.

As the government’s acting House Leader, filling in during the maternity leave of Karina Gould, Mr. MacKinnon fielded all manner of uncomfortable questions. And right after he was sworn in as Labour Minister on Friday, he was doing the same thing outside Rideau Hall.

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Trudeau’s Mass Immigration Scam: Foreign student permits are already outpacing 2023’s record numbers

Even as federal Liberal government is pledging to cap the number of international study permits, its own data show Canada is approving permits at a pace faster than last year, which saw a record number of approvals.

According to numbers curated online by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), Canada handed out 216,620 international study permits in the first five months of 2024.

The little prick is currently on vacation.

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PM’s waning political fortunes necessitate calls to quit

There is no denying that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rescued Canada’s Liberals from a looming annihilation in 2015.

His political achievement was quite extraordinary. He moved the Liberals from third-party position in the House to a majority government in 2015.


Everyone with a brain cell knew he was unqualified, but no one could have predicted the disaster he would prove to be for Canada.

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Joly tells China’s top diplomat Canada won’t ‘tolerate any form of interference in our democracy’

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says she didn’t soft-pedal Beijing’s interference in Canadian affairs or its human-rights record during blunt talks with her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi last week, a one-day visit aimed at reopening channels of dialogue after six years of a deep freeze in bilateral relations.

Ms. Joly met with the Chinese foreign minister for three and a half hours at the Diaoyutai State Guest House in Beijing on Friday but the two ministers did not break any significant ground in strained bilateral relations. A major reset is unlikely in part because of unfavourable perceptions of China among Canadians, she said.

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ANALYSIS: How Number of MPs Not Running for Re-Election Compares to Previous Years

Like clockwork, in the months before each federal election is called, a number of MPs from each party will announce they are not running for re-election, each with his or her own particular reason. This time around, the numbers tell an interesting story.

The previous two elections saw 59 MPs in 2019 and 34 MPs in 2021 quitting or not seeking re-election by the time the writ was dropped. Of these, in 2019, 24 were from the governing Liberals, 21 were Conservatives, and 14 were NDP, and in 2021, 19 were Liberals, nine were Conservatives, and the other six were NDP, Bloc Québécois, and Independent.

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BARBER: Making Canadians pay for Trudeau’s dystopia

In April, PM Justin Trudeau announced more funding for infrastructure to further his housing program. A program that is hoped will accomplish two things both not usually mentioned.

The first is to sway young voters to stick with the Liberal Party because they are fleeing. The second is to help urbanize as much of Canada as possible. The second goal is justified because of environmental concerns, but also includes vote buying. City dwellers require more government supported services such as public transportation and this often drives votes to the Liberal party. There is also money to get people to use public transit in the 2024 budget. Much of this is also a coverup of the disaster Trudeau’s immigration policy has wrought.

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The Epidemic Of Antisemitism In Canada

The toxic effects of the Hamas’ October 7 massacre in Israel have spilled over into Canada in the form of a sharp intensification of antisemitic incidents.

As Deborah Lyons, Canada’s former ambassador to Israel and now its special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combating antisemitism, said recently, “It’s clear from the data we’re seeing, particularly coming from police units across Canada, that there’s a huge increase in antisemitism in terms of hate crimes happening. I would say the level of antisemitism now in Canada is at an all-time high. It’s unprecedented.”


Maybe we shouldn’t have imported an Islamist 5th Column after all!

Maybe we shouldn’t have allowed our universities to become racist Marxist shitholes!

Maybe we shouldn’t have declared open season on White People under the guise of DEI and CRT!

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Trudeau’s Canada: Older and facing homelessness, many for the first time in their lives

Guy-Émile Beauparlant was born in Montreal but the family moved early and often throughout Quebec to wherever his father found construction work.

Beauparlant left school when he was of working age, embarking on a lifetime of menial jobs. Some he enjoyed, such as climbing trees to hand pick unblemished apples, or working outdoors on a dairy farm. Others he liked less, like roofing the expansive airplane hangars at the St-Hubert airport, or making insulation derived from shredded newspapers — hot, dusty work that clogged his respiratory passages and burnt his eyes.

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Trudeau’s Canada: How renovictions are affecting the lives of Toronto residents

Just about anyone who lives in Toronto will tell you that trying to find a home in the city has become a challenge. But for many renters, keeping one has become a challenge too.

Renovation evictions, colloquially known as ‘renovictions,’ have become a growing concern in the city as housing becomes more competitive and market rents go up.

The term generally refers to a situation where a landlord takes advantage of their right to renovate a property in order to clear out tenants who may be paying lower rents and to get new ones who pay market rates.


Trudeau is stupid and evil.

His mass immigration scam is just an identity politics gambit to win ethnic vote blocs.

He and his government should be in shackles for the lasting economic and social damage they have inflicted on Canadians.

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Canada braces for Trump 2.0 as the former president takes the lead in U.S. presidential race

Polls suggest former president Donald Trump is in a strong position to win back the presidency this November — a development that could have wide-ranging implications for Canada, given how tumultuous his first term was for this country.

Trump leads a united party despite sometimes intense opposition and criticism of his election denial and role in the January 6 insurrection attempt.

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Canada’s $10-a-Day Daycare Faces Audit Following Complaints

Canada’s auditor general has announced plans to evaluate the effectiveness of the federal child care program, as providers continue to voice concerns about the program’s impact on the sector and ability to meet its stated goals.

The office of the auditor general is in the process of launching an audit of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care program (CWELCC) and is considering involving provincial auditors general in the investigation, said Auditor General Karen Hogan. She made the remarks in a July 18 letter reviewed by The Epoch Times and sent to the Association of Day Care Operators of Ontario (ADCO), the industry association for the province’s daycare providers.

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