Jagmeet Singh says NDP is onside with Justin Trudeau and their Communist Chinese Masters won’t trigger an election over sell out of Canada to ChiComs

OTTAWA – The New Democrats say they are not willing to trigger a federal election over rising concerns about foreign interference in Canadian elections, and are instead continuing to push for a public inquiry on the issue.

Newly Independent MP Han Dong voted with opposition parties in favour of such an inquiry on Thursday, the day after he resigned from the Liberal caucus amid what he says are false allegations that he advised a Chinese diplomat on what the Trudeau government considered a high-priority file: the arbitrary and retaliatory detention of two Canadians in China.


None dare call it treason…

Share

The inside story of how the Liberals and NDP faced a crisis that shook their alliance — and why Justin Trudeau’s government survived it

OTTAWA—There were supposed to be no surprises.

It’s the bedrock of the Liberal-NDP deal — a simple notion that, despite the two parties’ competing political interests, neither would ever catch the other off guard.

But eight months into the governing agreement that could see the NDP prop up the minority Liberals until 2025, that principle was violated.

The Liberals had quietly introduced a series of amendments to their firearms bill. And the New Democrats were blindsided.

Share

NDP standing by candidate who claimed Hamilton police ‘protect Nazism’

Checks all NDP DEI boxes, Black, Muslim female, disabled, hates Jews

New Democrat Leader Marit Stiles is standing by her candidate in Thursday’s Hamilton Centre byelection after video emerged of Sarah Jama accusing the city’s police force of protecting “Nazism” and targeting “Black Muslim Palestinians.”

Ms. Jama is a real piece of work.

Share

NDP Gotta NDP…

Antisemitism charges upend Ontario byelection race in NDP stronghold

HAMILTON — It was expected to be a smooth cruise to victory in a riding staunchly New Democrat for almost two decades under former party leader Andrea Horwath, who quit last year to become mayor of Steeltown.

But accusations of antisemitism against NDP candidate Sarah Jama — which she denies — are buffeting the campaign in Thursday’s Hamilton Centre byelection, putting the disability activist and the party’s newly minted leader Marit Stiles on the defensive.

Share

NDP not ‘ruling out’ making interference inquiry a must for continuing Liberal support

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he is not “ruling out” making a public inquiry into foreign interference a condition for continuing the governance deal with the federal Liberals, but says that is not a decision he is making just yet.

Singh told The Roy Green Show on Saturday that he plans to bring up the issue of foreign interference with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during their meetings on the confidence-and-supply agreement signed between the New Democrats and Liberals.

Share

NDP leader should be holding Trudeau to account

It would be kind to call federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh “two-faced.”

During daylight hours, Singh is the enthusiastic lickspittle of the Trudeau Liberals. “Yes, Mr. Trudeau. Whatever you say, Mr. Trudeau.”

But after dark, “Jag-meek” transforms into “Jag-gernaut.” After propping up the Liberal government all day, Singh opens up his Twitter app and spends his evening hours tearing the Libs new ones.

Share

Jesse Kline: Pointless Tucker Carlson motion shows Jagmeet Singh has turned NDP into parody of itself

Even Jack Layton, the patron saint of Canadian socialism, whose so-called orange wave saw the New Democrats form Opposition for the first time in history, could scarcely have imagined the power held by current NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, thanks to his supply and confidence agreement with the Liberals. Instead of presenting itself as a serious governing alternative, however, the NDP has devolved into a parody of itself.

Share

Is this really what could torpedo Justin Trudeau’s minority government in 2023?

Two large figures in the New Democratic Party — the current leader and the former one — have raised the spectre of a looming health-care election in 2023.

It’s Christmas, not Halloween. Does either NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh or ex-leader Thomas Mulcair really want to scare Canadians as they head toward the holidays and a new year?
Here is a spoiler alert: No, Canada is not likely to plunge into an election over health care next year. It may well be that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s governing deal with the New

Democrats will become more fragile in 2023 — and maybe even fall apart — but health care is probably not the breaking point.

I see no reason for the Staritza to be so panicked. Jaggy knows he’s reached his Peak.

Share

Singh says he could abandon deal to support Liberals if PM doesn’t take action on health crisis

The New Democrats are ready to withdraw from the confidence-and-supply agreement they signed with the Liberals if there is no federal action to address the health-care crisis, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Monday.

The deal reached in March committed the NDP to supporting the minority government on key votes in the House of Commons to avoid triggering an election before 2025. In exchange, the Liberals have promised to make progress on a number of NDP priorities, including health care.

Share

John Ivison: Singh’s grasp on economics suggests he’s visiting from Planet Moneybags

OTTAWA — It’s all the rage these days for politicians to bash the Bank of Canada, which is not surprising given the central bank is as popular as halitosis for driving up interest rates.

With another hike expected this week — the sixth this year — opposition party leaders were getting their retaliation in early.

The guy is Trudeau’s doorstop.

Share

Jagmeet Singh Vows To Stay The Course And Remain A Useless Twit

NDP unlikely to pull support for Liberals if commission concludes use of Emergencies Act was unjustified: Singh

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says it is unlikely that his party would pull their support for the Liberals if the Public Order Emergency Commission examining the federal government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act concludes that doing so was not justified.

In an interview on CTV’s Question Period, Singh said the New Democrats will reserve their judgement until all of the facts are aired by the national inquiry. But, hypothetically speaking, “simply because it was the wrong decision wouldn’t be enough for us to break, or to force the country into an election.”

Share