A strong Canada ‘will help make America great again,’ Carney tells New York business leaders

A strong Canada ‘will help make America great again,’ Carney tells New York business leaders

Prime Minister Mark Carney told a crowd of New York industry titans and financiers on Thursday that Canada and the U.S. need to pursue a new partnership — a bilateral relationship premised not on how things were done in the past but one where a stronger, more independent Canada can selectively help “make America great again.”

Carney said as U.S. President Donald Trump prompts “tectonic shifts” in trade, and as the world becomes “more divided and dangerous,” Canada must focus more on “taking care of ourselves” and building up at home by embracing its status as an energy superpower.

But that doesn’t mean Canada wants to close itself off from the U.S., Carney said in lunchtime remarks to about 200 attendees at the city’s Yale Club.

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GOLDSTEIN: Albertans are frustrated with being Canada’s cash cow

GOLDSTEIN: Albertans are frustrated with being Canada’s cash cow

The reality is that many Albertans — and not just those already convinced that separation is the only answer — are legitimately frustrated with their province’s status in Canada.

Gratuitously insulting them over the next five months, at least, as Albertans debate their future role in or outside of Confederation, serves no purpose.


The CBC. Absolute arsehole of journalism in Canada.

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John Ivison: Poilievre may prove shrewd to back America’s alliance as Carney embraces Europe

John Ivison: Poilievre may prove shrewd to back America’s alliance as Carney embraces Europe

The United States has informed its European allies of its plan to significantly cut its military contribution to NATO, the German news outlet Spiegel reported on Tuesday.

The Europeans are scuttling to fill the gaps that will be left by departing American warships and fighter jets.

But the ripple effects may be felt far beyond Eastern Europe.

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Germany pledges four submarines by 2036 in high-stakes pitch to Canada

Germany pledges four submarines by 2036 in high-stakes pitch to Canada

Should the Liberal government decide to go with the ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) bid, the German shipbuilder has now pledged to deliver four Type 212-CD submarines to the Canadian Navy by 2036, the country’s defence minister tells CBC News.

Boris Pistorius said Wednesday that he has every confidence that the company will meet the delivery goal, which emerged early on as one of the major competitive differences between TKMS and South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean shipyard.

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Records show Carney spent more than Trudeau on luxury in-flight meals

Records show Carney spent more than Trudeau on luxury in-flight meals

Prime Minister Mark Carney and his entourage billed taxpayers $195,400 for gourmet in-flight meals during three international trips in 2025, according to records obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

The documents show Carney’s flights to London, Rome and Brussels featured luxury meals including veal escalope, beef tenderloin with bordelaise sauce, Scottish salmon fillet and “slow simmered beef with red wine reduction sauce.”

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Canada’s scary debt problem: Federal, provincial debt to exceed $2.4 trillion this year, report finds

Canada’s scary debt problem: Federal, provincial debt to exceed $2.4 trillion this year, report finds

As prices for just about everything skyrocket and an untold number of Canadians are going deeper into debt trying to keep up, the Fraser Institute’s latest study is a reminder that Canada and the provinces have been hurdling their own roads of indebtedness since the 2008 recession.

In its latest research bulletin on the growing debt burden for Canadians, the public policy organization found that the combined federal and provincial net debt, adjusted for inflation, has nearly doubled from $1.24 trillion in 2007-08 to a projected $2.44 trillion this fiscal year, a growth of 97.7 per cent.

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German submarine bid promises Canada $86B economic boost and tens of thousands of jobs

German submarine bid promises Canada $86B economic boost and tens of thousands of jobs

An average of up to 50,000 jobs could be created in Canada over the next five years should the federal government opt to buy the German-made Type 212CD submarine, CBC News has learned.

Up until this point in the fierce competition over the navy’s new submarines, both the German and Norwegian governments and the builder, ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS), have been reluctant to reveal strict details of the potential economic benefits that could accrue from their proposal.

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HUNTER: CBSA’s most wanted list nabbed dozens of villains. Then Trudeau killed it

HUNTER: CBSA’s most wanted list nabbed dozens of villains. Then Trudeau killed it

There are 17 of them accused in a widespread campaign of terror and extortion of South Asians in Brampton.

Instead, cops, prosecutors, the Canada Border Services Agency, and others will serve up their usual po-faced approach and start scolding you for suggesting there is a problem of foreign criminals in this country.

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What will Mark Carney’s role be in the Alberta referendum?

What will Mark Carney’s role be in the Alberta referendum?

Announcing her referendum question last week, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith invoked the last prime minister’s name four times.

“When I was first elected premier, I was very concerned that it would be almost impossible to restore provincial rights stolen from Alberta and other provinces by the Trudeau-Singh government in Ottawa,” she said, also referencing the former NDP leader, Jagmeet Singh, whose caucus supported the Trudeau government from 2022 to 2024.

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Google and Apple rail against Carney government’s police powers bill

Google and Apple rail against Carney government’s police powers bill

OTTAWA — Google and Apple are warning that the Carney government’s effort to make it easier for police and spies to intercept private communications risks opening up “backdoors” in their products that would hinder Canadians’ privacy and make their data vulnerable to malicious hackers.

Officials from the multibillionaire tech giants railed against the legislation that Ottawa has argued would modernize police and spy powers as they testified in front of a parliamentary committee Tuesday, claiming the proposed reforms are overly broad and pose a risk to encryption in a way that could undermine user trust and goes further than other Western countries.


Carney wants to shut down the internet like Iran.

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More Canadians will inherit their family home, entrenching inequality across generations

More Canadians will inherit their family home, entrenching inequality across generations

Shrinking families and tepid homebuilding is paving the way to a future where homes will increasingly be inherited assets in Canada, passed down from one generation to the next.

It would mark a major shift from family homes being bought and sold, entrenching inequality across generations, with a lucky few inheriting secure housing and appreciating land wealth while others are permanently locked out. Yet this issue remains absent from Canada’s housing policy discussions, even though it is one all of us should be concerned about.

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Food insecurity in Canada has hit ‘crisis’ level, millions of Canadians going hungry

Food insecurity in Canada has hit ‘crisis’ level, millions of Canadians going hungry

Canadians continue to face an uncertain future as income fails to keep pace with food price increases.

New data released from Statistics Canada showed that 24% of Canadians were living in a food-insecure household last year.

In real numbers, the percentage works out to approximately 9.8 million people, including 2.4 million children, living in households that struggled to afford the food needed.

(more…)

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John Ivison: Carney knows from experience separatism can get very real if Alberta is mishandled

John Ivison: Carney knows from experience separatism can get very real if Alberta is mishandled

Mark Carney was asked Monday about his role in the forthcoming Alberta referendum campaign and the response was reassuring.

The prime minister wasn’t exactly Henry V at Agincourt on St. Crispin’s Day, rallying his outnumbered troops in a call to arms.

But he is a veteran of these campaigns from his time in the United Kingdom during the Brexit and Scottish independence referendums. He knows that when emotions run high, a positive appeal is needed to offset gloomy portents about the certain costs, and uncertain gains, of independence.

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Canada negotiating to buy Saab’s GlobalEye airborne early warning aircraft

Canada negotiating to buy Saab’s GlobalEye airborne early warning aircraft

Canada has entered into negotiations with Saab to buy its GlobalEye airborne early warning aircraft, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Wednesday.

He revealed the plan at the opening of the annual arms trade show CANSEC in Ottawa.

“With a suite of advanced sensors and mission systems, Saab’s GlobalEye will be a key resource for the Canadian Armed Forces to detect and deter threats across the Arctic,” Carney told the audience of defence contractors and military officials.

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LILLEY: Refugee health program abuse is costing you, but Liberals ignore it

LILLEY: Refugee health program abuse is costing you, but Liberals ignore it

There are tens of thousands of people in Canada who are getting taxpayer-funded health benefits from a program for refugees despite having their refugee claim denied. That’s one of the big headlines from a new report by the Parliamentary Budget Officer.

Earlier this year, the PBO revealed that the cost of the Interim Federal Health Program, which covers refugee and asylum claimants, had risen from $60 million a year to close to $1 billion annually.


This is evil at work.

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