Liberal climate policies damaged our economy

While Prime Minister Mark Carney acknowledged in a year-end interview with CBC that former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s climate change plan was a $200-billion flop, the roots of that failure predate Trudeau.

They go back to then-prime minister Jean Chretien signing onto the United Nations Kyoto accord in 1998, committing Canada to economy-killing climate targets which – as top Chretien aide Eddie Goldenberg later acknowledged – the Liberals knew they couldn’t achieve.

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AUBUT: Trudeau, Freeland, and Carney turned credentials, identity, and symbolism into substitutes for governing competence

The decline of merit is the story of modern Canada. It began as a slow corrosion under Justin Trudeau, whose rise was fuelled by name recognition and emotional politics rather than achievement. It deepened under Chrystia Freeland, who turned fiscal management into performance art. And it has continued under Mark Carney, whose credentials might suggest competence but whose actions have proven the opposite. These are not isolated examples; they are milestones on a national journey away from merit and toward mediocrity.

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GOLDSTEIN: Mark Carney says Justin Trudeau blew $200 billion on a failed climate strategy

After years of nonsense spouted by Canada’s Liberal government, Prime Minister Mark Carney acknowledged in year-end interviews with CBC that “Canada is not going to reach our 2030 and 2035 climate targets” under former PM Justin Trudeau’s climate change plan.

He said it had “too much regulation, not enough action” with a lot of talk “and then nothing happens,” thus admitting the failure of Trudeau’s taxpayer-financed, $200-billion-plus strategy.

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Top federal department blasted as ‘hypocritical’ for refusing to share layoff numbers

OTTAWA — Canada’s largest public-sector union blasted the top government department as “hypocritical” for refusing to say how many of its employees received notice of a potential layoff weeks ago.

The silence from the Privy Council Office (PCO) signals the government may not be forthcoming with public information as the majority of federal departments and agencies prepare to announce major layoffs in January.


Imperial Ottawa is going to need their Volkssturm.

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Carney Writing 2.5 Billion Dollar Cheque To Zelensky And Pals

Canada to provide $2.5 billion in economic aid for Ukraine, prime minister says

Canadian ‍Prime ‍Minister Mark Carney on ‍Saturday announced an additional $2.5 billion ⁠of economic ‍aid for Ukraine.

The assistance will help Ukraine unlock ​financing from the International Monetary Fund, ⁠Carney said during an appearance with ⁠Ukrainian ‌President Volodymyr ‌Zelenskyy, who also spoke briefly ⁠to reporters.

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Government satisfaction drops sharply as Canadians struggle with cost-of-living pressures

Canadians’ satisfaction with their governments has fallen sharply in 2025, according to new data from the non-profit Angus Reid Institute, as residents grapple with rising costs and ongoing economic uncertainty.

The Government Performance Index, which measures satisfaction across 16 key issues, shows scores have dropped by roughly one-quarter since March.

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MCTEAGUE: Bah Humbug — Ottawa’s green obsession and the cost of Christmas feasting

The holidays are here again, a time of joy and festivity, of peace on earth and good will towards men.

But you’ll be forgiven if you’re not feeling as festive as in years past. After all, it’s not easy to be merry when you’re struggling to heat your home, pay your hydro bill, gas up your car, or put food on the table, let alone put presents under the tree.

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Will 2025 be remembered as the year Canadians re-embraced nationalism?

Nationalism has many different forms, from benign feelings of pride to aggressive chauvinism. Some speak idealistically of civic nationalism, quizzically of economic nationalism, or suspiciously of ethnic nationalism. And in Canada, there is Quebec nationalism and the search for greater autonomy by a myriad of Indigenous nations. All of these made their mark in the past year, and will continue to shape events in 2026.


A cheesy political slogan that Liberal Party media used to engineer the zombie half life of the worst government in Canadian history is what passes for nationalism in today’s balkanized Canada.

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Muslims in Indonesia Show Christians What They Think of Them

Carney loves Muslim values

Indonesia has a reputation for being a “moderate” Muslim nation, but the wind in the Islamic world as a whole is blowing in the opposite direction, as a group of Christians has just discovered.

Morning Star News, which tracks the persecution of Christians worldwide, reported Tuesday that “as police looked on, Muslims in West Java Province, Indonesia on Dec. 14 formed a human wall to block Christians from attending a Christmas service, according to local media.”

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Carney reflects on jump into politics at an ‘important time,’ key subjects in year-end interview

With the final days of 2025 rapidly falling to the wayside, Canadians are likely taking stock of the last 12 months.

The past year has seen some rapid changes on the political scene — most notably in the prime minister’s chair.

At this time in 2024, Justin Trudeau was still mulling whether to stay on or step aside.

His ultimate decision to resign paved the way for Mark Carney to take the helm of the Liberal Party and country, later securing his role as prime minister in April’s election.

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China’s Economic Miracle Was Built on Mass Displacement

Editor’s Note: The Bureau is publishing the following testimony to Canada’s House of Commons committee on International Human Rights from Dimon Liu, a China-born, Washington, D.C.-based democracy advocate who testified in Parliament on December 8, 2025, about the human cost of China’s economic rise. Submitted to The Bureau as an op-ed, Liu’s testimony argues that the Canadian government should tighten scrutiny of high-risk trade and investment, and ensure Canada’s foreign policy does not inadvertently reward coercion. Liu also warns that the Chinese Communist Party could gain leverage over Canadians and treat them as it has done to its own subjugated population—an implied message to Prime Minister Mark Carney, who has pledged to engage China as a strategic partner without making that position clear to Canadians during his election campaign.

This is what Carney wants for Canada.

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There’s a link between Canada’s treatment of Israel and why Canadian Jews feel unsafe

Apparently, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand has summoned Israel’s Ambassador for an explanation as to why Canadian MPs were turned away at the border from Jordan into the West Bank.

The Minister appears to not get it. Here’s what happened. The purpose of the visit, comprised of around 30 Canadians and six MPs, was ostensibly to meet with Palestinians in the territory. But it was more of a publicity stunt, of the sort you might see from Greta Thunberg, sponsored by malign parties and designed by people with an agenda, and meant to embarrass the Israeli government and deflect from the important and difficult work being done by others to try to reduce tensions in the region and mitigate the serious conflicts there.

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The Carney Network: Davos, Beijing, and the 2025 Appointments That Made The Bureau’s Map Look Prescient

OTTAWA — For The Bureau’s 2025 Holiday Special, I sat down once again with Jason James for a long-form, two-hour conversation—our second holiday edition—to answer his questions about the elite networks surrounding Prime Minister Mark Carney and the China connections that have quietly defined his ascent.

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WAGNER: Pierre Trudeau’s separation of God from government

Pierre Trudeau – Happiest with fellow commies

During Canada’s first century, Christianity had a significant place in Canadian society and government. There were several explicitly Christian laws and policies, including prayer and Bible reading in many public schools.

Christianity’s role in Canadian public life is now essentially gone. The main reason for this change was the adoption of Pierre Trudeau’s Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982.

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John Ivison: Canada’s tolerance of antisemitic intolerance has gone too far

Are our values being so warped in the name of accommodation and diversity that we can no longer stand up for what is right?

Osman Azizov is out on bail, National Post has confirmed with police . Azizov is only 18 but he is one of three men charged with 79 offences , including kidnapping, conspiracy to commit sexual assault and hostage taking. They are accused of plotting to terrorize Jews and kidnap young women, according to the charges from Toronto police, following investigation by the RCMP-led Integrated National Security Enforcement Team. The alleged leader, Waleed Khan, has been linked to ISIS.

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