‘What steps did he take’? Lawyers query Carney’s role at company beset by sexism allegations

OTTAWA — A year-and-a-half before he became leader of the Liberal party, Mark Carney took on a daunting job. In August 2023, he was appointed chairman of a revamped board of directors at Bloomberg LP, a U.S. financial information and media company.


Carney is a grifter. End of story.

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Trump’s recent silence on Canada — and Quebec’s response — could cost the Liberals a majority

Four days before Prime Minister Mark Carney called this snap election, I warned in this space that the “Rest of Canada” should be careful not to overinterpret the rise in Canadian pride among Quebecers. Since it became clear that U.S. President Donald Trump wasn’t joking about turning Canada into the 51st state, Quebecers had rallied behind the Maple Leaf — standing shoulder to shoulder with the ROC to keep the country strong and united.

That surge of Canadian patriotism gave the federal Liberal Party a lift. Quebecers may not fully understand Carney’s French, but his resumé passed the job interview. And while Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s French may be better, his “direct” style and a certain “je ne sais quoi” still manage to rub most Quebecers the wrong way. As for the Bloc? Its mission isn’t to speak for Quebec in Washington — it’s to look after Quebec in Ottawa.

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Canada’s Mark Carney Shares the Same Goal as China — Ending American Dominance

Canadians may be hell bent against becoming America’s 51st state, but if the April 28 elections confirm globalist central banker Mark Carney as prime minister it could go China’s way.

In the divisive election campaign following Carney’s appointment to lead the ruling Liberal Party, the high-flying ex-governor of the Bank of Canada with strong Chinese business connections is whipping up anti-American sentiment supported by European socialists, which has hallmarks of a CCP strategy.

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Poilievre may lose his Ottawa-area riding as Liberals poised to sweep the region

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is at risk of losing his Ottawa-Carleton riding as the party scrambles to send in volunteers to save the seat he has held since 2004, two federal and two provincial Conservative sources say.

With several polls showing the Liberals poised to win the election, the loss of Mr. Poilievre’s riding would put the leader in a difficult position to hang on to his party post.

“Sources” = “Doug Ford says”

h/t Mauser

Of course – Trump reinserts himself into Canadian politics, saying ‘as a state, it works great’

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On this one issue, Mark Carney sounds a lot like Justin Trudeau

Canada doesn’t have a gun-control problem. And Mark Carney should stop pretending it does.

We do have a problem with gun crime, particularly in some of our larger cities. And we also have a problem with intimate-partner violence. These problems need attention and, critically, more resources. What they don’t need is more gun-control laws: everything that should be illegal already is, often several times over.

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Michael Higgins: We are heading for a nightmare — even the government thinks so

Canada is on a dark path with a future that is bleaker and more depressing than most dystopian movies or novels, at least according to one report.

To make matters worse, this stark, despairing existence is predicted by our very own Canadian government.

And unless we change our ways, we have only 15 years before this miserable life is upon us.

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Regime Media’s Brantford Boomer Stares from the Overton Window

A fascinating experience played out at the Conservative Vaughan rally line up. Lawyer and political satirist, who also advocates for housing, cannabis, criminal law and documenting COVID-denialism since 20211, Caryma Sa’d appeared with a life size cut out of the Brantford Boomer during a live stream by The Pleb, a Youtube personality and journalist covering politics and the culture war The Pleb, who gained his popularity live covering the Ottawa Freedom protest; often providing footage contradicting the main stream media’s narrative, purposefully misinforming Canadians of events on the ground.

h/t Auntie Polly

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Adam Zivo: Carney’s platform a failure on crime and drugs

Vancouver Junkies – How could this not be considered a successful community integration?

Canadians are exasperated with the crime, violence and drug use that has swept through their cities over the past decade. While the Liberals have promised to fix these issues should they be reelected, it is clear from their platform that they aren’t taking this file seriously.

The Trudeau government’s failures here cannot be understated. The country is awash with fentanyl and over 50,000 Canadians have lost their lives to opioids since 2016. Organized gangs are running amok and violent crime has exploded to levels unseen since the pre-Harper era, reversing what had previously been a 20-year downward trend.

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‘Disruptive’ man challenges Poilievre’s promise to ‘put an end to antisemitic riots’ in Canada

A man interrupted a question-and-answer session with Pierre Poilievre on Monday, pressing the Conservative leader to provide specific examples of antisemitic riots in Canada. The man added that he knows of none since 1933.

During a campaign event at the Canadian Association of Retired Persons’ Toronto headquarters, Poilievre promised to “put an end to these raging, antisemitic riots in our streets.” He also reiterated an earlier campaign promise to deport any foreigners in Canada on temporary visas who “terrorize our Jewish community.”


While the Hamas rallies in our streets are driven primarily by the Muslim death cult they do have their useful idiot infidel allies.

Still it would be nice to hear a politician call for a halt to Islamist immigration. 

Islam is an ugly stain on our politics.

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This election was supposed to be about restoring hope for young Canadians. What happened?

This is what Carney and his predator pal Wiseman have in store for you.

Fairness for every generation: That was the name of the game a year ago, when the federal Liberal government was trying to recapture the support of young Canadians increasingly flocking to the Conservatives.

The finance minister at the time, Chrystia Freeland, presented a federal budget named exactly that and gave a forceful speech defending her party’s proposed – and now abandoned – capital-gains tax hike.

“Do you want to live in a country where the only young Canadians who can buy their own homes are those with parents who can help with the down payment?” Ms. Freeland said.

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Tasha Kheiriddin: Poilievre’s platform a direct challenge to Carney’s boomer tome

With just days to go before election day and millions of Canadians already having voted, both the Liberal and Conservative parties have finally dropped their full platforms. And the two are as different in substance, structure and style as the two campaigns — for better and worse.

Substance-wise, the Liberals offer a slew of big-ticket items: a $5 billion Trade Diversification Corridors Fund, billions for Arctic sovereignty, major housing and health infrastructure, and — refreshingly — a serious uptick in defence spending to exceed current NATO commitments. They also promise to drop the deficit in the “operating budget” to $220 million by 2028-2029 (more on that math later).

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Bug And Tug: WEF Investigates Klaus Schwab Over ‘In-Room Massages’ And Other Allegations

One day after it was reported that World Economic Forum founder Klaus Schwab, 88, resigned after Chairman after 55 years, the WSJ reports that Schwab is under investigation by the organization he created after a whistleblower alleged financial and ethical misconduct by Mr. “eat the bugs” and his wife.

h/t DS

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Canada election sees record high early voting, figures show

A record 7.3 million people have cast their ballots over four days of advanced voting in Canada’s election, official figures showed on Tuesday, in a possible sign of elevated interest in the 28 April poll.

Elections Canada said its estimated tally for voting from Friday through Monday marked a 25% increase over the 5.8m advanced ballots cast in the 2021 vote.

Canada, a country with a population of 41 million, has 28.9 million eligible voters, Elections Canada said in November.

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How Trump’s Canada threats dampened Quebec separatist movement – for now

It was the middle of the night when the Bloc Québécois realized they had achieved the improbable. For weeks, the separatist party in Canada’s francophone province had been campaigning hard to steal an electoral district in Montreal long held by the Liberals.

When the trickle of votes finally stopped on that September evening, the Bloc’s Louis-Philippe Sauvé had emerged victorious by a narrow margin of 200 votes.

Chastened by the loss, the then prime minister, Justin Trudeau, admitted his Liberals had “a lot of work to do”. The defeat reflected a governing party in tatters and a leader losing his grip on power.

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