Joe Oliver: Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me four times? Seriously?

In Mark Carney’s first month as Liberal leader and prime minister, a picture has emerged of who he is: a technocratic version of Justin Trudeau, without the charisma, great hair or ability to communicate comfortably in French, but with many of his banished predecessor’s other personality characteristics and policy propensities.

Like Trudeau, Carney is a left-leaning, climate-obsessed globalist — a Laurentian elitist who sees big government as the solution to most problems, whether real, imagined or self-imposed. He appears ambitious and narcissistic, is often casual with the truth, is compromised by conflicts of interest and seems beholden to the “basic Chinese dictatorship.” He is advised by Trudeau’s coterie of political operatives , led by Gerald Butts, and presides over a reshuffled Trudeau cabinet. The fourth Liberal term he seeks would, with one or two exceptions, pursue the same dysfunctional policies that inflicted a lost decade on our long-suffering yet credulous electorate. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me four times? Seriously?

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Braid: Conservatives see rebound as Trump goes quiet about Canada

Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives aren’t done yet. The campaign may finally be turning in their direction, despite polls showing Liberal leads.

Poilievre has drawn 16,000 people to a rally outside Edmonton, 5,000 in Surrey, B.C., 6,500 in Oshawa and 3,000 in Kingston, both in Ontario.

These are enormous numbers for Canadian political rallies. The Conservatives aren’t making them up.

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KLEIN: Canada’s media is failing you and protecting the Liberals

There was a time when journalists were watchdogs. They held governments to account. They followed the facts, not the noise. That time feels long gone.

Instead of grilling those in power with substance, far too many media outlets in this country now act like junior high debaters, tossing out childish, irrelevant questions designed to trap or embarrass people they don’t like, while giving others a free ride.

h/t XC

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Jamie Sarkonak: Canada’s cities are riddled with crime. Carney has no plan

His entire take on justice can be reduced to rare emotional engagements. Poilievre, on the other hand, is offering solutions

Last week, an Edmonton man was given a four-year prison term (with only six months left) for beating another man to death in a jealous rage. The Liberal-appointed judge gave him such a lowball sentence because the offender was Indigenous, had a rough personal history, and because “a restrained view of sentencing in this case serves the goal of rehabilitation in Canadian society.”

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Tasha Kheiriddin: Carney should show the West some respect

Liberal Leader Mark Carney should feel right at home in Alberta: after all, he was raised there. But his trip there this week feels more like a political minefield than a homecoming. That’s largely due to his recent quip that while he’s happy to dispatch Ontario Premier Doug Ford to advocate for Canada in Washington, he wouldn’t send Alberta Premier Danielle Smith.

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Of course China wants Carney for PM

The only thing surprising about Beijing’s dictators wanting Liberal leader Mark Carney to win the April 28 election is that anyone would be surprised by it.

As Conservative MP Michael Chong — an actual “target” of Chinese disinformation — put it in the wake of Canadian security and intelligence officials revealing China’s attempt to promote the prime minister’s campaign on Chinese-language social media: “(China) knows that for a decade the Liberals have turned a blind eye to Beijing’s interference in Canada’s democracy.

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Trump’s top tariffs for ‘worst offenders’ take effect

US President Donald Trump’s latest wave of tariffs has come into force, with imports from China hit by a 104% rate amid an escalating standoff between the world’s two biggest economies.

Tariffs ranging from 11% to 104% now apply to imports from around 60 US trade partners, which Trump has dubbed the “worst offenders” for what he considers unfair trade practices.

China has since hit back by raising import duties on US goods arriving in China to 84%.

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Carney con …

Carney con …

h/t Mauser

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Mark Carney’s washed up Liberals are incapable of change

According to the legacy media, the second coming of the Messiah is here, and his name is Mark Carney. Pundits are salivating at his anointment, and pollsters are getting more airtime than ever, giddy with predictions of a Liberal majority. How did we get here?

Last December, as calls for Justin Trudeau’s termination were heard nationwide, the polls showed overwhelming support for a Conservative supermajority. Why, there were even whispers that the Liberals wouldn’t retain their party status in the new legislature. Since then, the tables supposedly turned, and we are now facing a fourth term of the most destructive government Canada has ever known. The Messiah? You’ve got to be joking!

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Pierre Poilievre ramps up his attacks on China Boy Carney — with a little help from Stephen Harper

OTTAWA — The federal Conservatives ramped up sharp partisan attacks this week on Liberal Leader Mark Carney’s character and credibility, with former prime minister Stephen Harper stepping into the spotlight to publicly question the Liberals’ central campaign claim that Carney is the person to lead in a crisis.

On Day 17 of the federal election campaign, the over-large presence of Donald Trump and tariffs prompted a whole new level of heated rhetoric as polls continued to show Carney is the choice of most voters as best able to handle Trump.

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GUNTER: Mark Carney shows Liberal arrogance with comments on Danielle Smith

Did Liberal Leader Mark Carney hit the trifecta?

On Sunday in Victoria, at just his second campaign rally in the West in two full weeks of electioneering, Carney made sneering remarks about Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. Then he displayed the typical smugness of central Canadian elitists insinuating that they and only they have the intelligence and sophistication to see the way forward for all Canadians.

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Poilievre promises to raise $1B by cracking down on offshore tax havens … Brookfield hardest hit

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is promising to crack down on the use of offshore tax havens and recover as much as $1 billion a year in lost revenues.

In a video posted on X, Poilievre said the money recovered through the initiative will be used to help pay for his plan to introduce a $14-billion income tax cut by reducing the rate in the lowest tax bracket from 15 per cent to 12.75 per cent.

“You can’t avoid your taxes, global elites should not be able to either, and that is why I will end the Liberal two-tier tax system,” Poilievre said during a campaign stop in Edmonton on Tuesday.

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With Trudeau gone, it’s like ‘night and day’ in a former Toronto Liberal fortress that turned Tory blue

TORONTO — Seated in a restaurant around the corner from Toronto’s bustling Yonge Street on a drizzling afternoon, Leslie Church says her campaign couldn’t feel more different than the one she lost nine months ago.

“Night and day,” she says. “It is night and day.”

Church was the Liberals’ candidate when the party saw its stronghold of Toronto—St.Paul’s fall to the Conservatives after having held it for more than 30 years, which made the defeat no ordinary loss.

It was said the Jewish vote was central to flipping the riding Conservative. I wonder if they have all got amnesia.

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WHISSELL: Is Mark Carney even on our side?

Mark Carney is not the man to answer a crisis, but he soon may create one.

If you read Carney’s 2021 release ‘Value(s): Building a Better World for All,’ it becomes abundantly clear he’s advocating for a monumental shift in Canada and not stability, “I wrote Value(s) because I believed, even before COVID struck, that we needed radical changes to build a better world for all.”

Radical changes are destabilizing, of course.


Carney works for the WEF and China. Not us.

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EYRE: Pablum for the people, why the media is Poilievre’s greatest threat

If you want to catch Pierre Poilievre in any detail, you have to do it early — in his morning media scrums on 24-hour news channels — before the ‘cycle’ takes over, and his points and his audience have been clipped, cropped, and culled.

For years, pundits have paraphrased his words, scarcely showing him actually speak (even while occasionally praising his political prowess.) To get around the media, Poilievre has had to post videos on social. Now, he’s accused of avoiding the media and not properly getting his message out (et tu, Kory Teneycke?)

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