CanadaPolitics
- thebeaverton.com "I can't believe anyone would vote for Trump," says smug Canadian man planning to vote for Poilievre
OTTAWA - A smug man from Canada wasted no time this morning chastising Americans for re-electing terrifying liar and felon Donald Trump, despite the fact that he plans to vote for terrifying liar and asshole Pierre Poilievre in the next Canadian election.
OTTAWA – A smug man from Canada wasted no time this morning chastising Americans for re-electing terrifying liar and felon Donald Trump, despite the fact that he plans to vote for terrifying liar and asshole Pierre Poilievre in the next Canadian election.
Matt Hunter, a 36-year-old barista, took time away from attending a Poilievre rally to rant about how stupid Americans were for falling for Trump’s fascist bullshit.
“I just can’t believe that someone could look at a petty asshole running on slogans, lies, and faux outrage and think, ‘Yeah, this guy will be good for the country,’” Hunter laughed, taking a quick second to repost an “Axe the Tax, Build the Homes, Fix the Budget, Stop the Crime” tweet on X. “It makes no sense. Luckily we up here in Canada have more common sense. Pierre says so.”
“When Poilievre becomes Prime Minister next year, he’s gonna stand up to Trump. They’re so different in ways that I can’t even describe. Don’t even ask me what those ways are. Just trust me, bro. He’ll bring Canada home again.”
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Canada Announces Carbon Emission Caps for Oil and Gas Sectors | The Trudeau government has focused on the oil and gas production industries because the large amounts of energy they use make them the c
www.nytimes.com Canada Announces Carbon Emission Caps for Oil and Gas SectorsThe Trudeau government has focused on the oil and gas production industries because the large amounts of energy they use make them the country’s largest source of greenhouse gases.
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/14921311
> I think they're covering scope 1 and 2 emissions, but not scope 3. That is to say that they're trying to limit emissions during extraction, transportation of fossil fuels, and refining (and from the electricity those use) but not from when the fossil fuels are burned. >
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The former Ford government staffer at the centre of the Greenbelt scandal used personal emails to do government business. He is refusing to hand them over - thestar.com
www.thestar.com The former Ford government staffer at the centre of the Greenbelt scandal used personal emails to do government business. He is refusing to hand them overThe Ontario government says Ryan Amato has twice refused to share any emails — and it can't compel him to do so in response to a Star FOI request.
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Our Democratic Futures : Proportional Representation for the US, the UK and Canada - Fair Vote Canada
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/31690333
>Canada, the US and the UK all suffer the consequences of winner-take-all voting systems that distort election results, polarize politics and shut voters out. > >In this webinar, leading experts and campaigners for proportional representation from Canada, the US, and the UK, discuss the issues each country has with their winner-take-all elections, how transitioning to proportional representation can help address these issues, and what the routes to reform in each country look like. > >Co-sponsored by: > >Fair Vote Canada: https://www.fairvote.ca/ >ProRep Coalition (California): https://www.prorepcoalition.org/ >Make Votes Matter (UK): https://makevotesmatter.org.uk/
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Government of Canada reduces immigration.
www.canada.ca Government of Canada reduces immigrationToday, the Honourable Marc Miller, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, announced the 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan: a plan that will pause population growth in the short term to achieve well-managed, sustainable growth in the long term. For the first time ever, the levels plan inc...
- www.fairvote.ca First-past-the-post election leaves BC more polarized - Fair Vote Canada
BC's 2024 first-past-the-post election has robbed voters of choice, polarized communities, and when it comes to the biggest issues, resolved nothing.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/31487063
> While British Columbians wait with baited breath for the final results from BC’s provincial election, one thing is clear: First-past-the-post has robbed voters of choice, deeply polarized communities, and when it comes to the biggest issues facing British Columbia, resolved absolutely nothing. > > BC Conservative leader John Rustad’s election night speech captured the sorry state of affairs: > >> “If we are in that situation of the NDP forming a minority government, we will look at every single opportunity from day one to bring them down …and get back to the polls.” > > A leader whose party received 44% of the popular vote vowing to do everything in his power to ensure the legislature doesn’t work for the majority, gunning for the next chance to seize all the power with less than half of the vote, is a brutal, yet predictable outcome of first-past-the-post. > > If the supposed advantages of our winner-take-all system are its ability to cater to the centrist voter, ensure “strong, stable majority governments”, prevent “backroom deals”, deliver fast results on election night, and keep out extremists, it has failed utterly on all counts―all at once. > > BC’s election has exposed these claims for what they are: at best, misleading talking points from those who haven’t reviewed the evidence, and at worst, deliberately dishonest assertions from shallow politicians who consistently put their own ambitions of power ahead of the public interest when it comes to electoral reform...
- mondoweiss.net I resigned from Canada’s largest broadcasting corporation over its complicity in Israel’s genocide
I resigned from CBC after voicing my concerns over their coverage of Palestine. I have since seen how the CBC’s policy on impartiality helped manufacture consent for genocide.
CBC is complicit in Israel's genocide of Palestine.
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While you are struggling to make rent, boomers are installing elevators in their homes.
www.ctvnews.ca Home elevators are becoming more commonIt might seem pretty rare to find a house with an elevator, but chances are higher you might find one in Calgary these days.
From CTV News (Bell Media): >"It might seem pretty rare to find a house with an elevator, but chances are higher you might find one in Calgary these days."
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Police In Canada Warn Lawyer Over Her Social Media Posts On Israel
YouTube Video
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/30385203
> BACKGROUND > > Joanna Berry is a Canadian immigration and refugee lawyer in Ontario, Canada. On October 2, two Niagara Police Officers, one of them a sergeant detective, paid her a visit to her home. They told her they were there on behalf of the Ottawa Police Department because of her "personal social media." They begin to tell her that "10 lawyers who are of the Jewish faith" have filed a complaint with the police about her social media. As you can tell from the video, Joanna Berry, is outraged by the visit and clearly distraught. I reached out to the Niagara Regional Police for comment but they did not respond to my inquiry. I spoke with Joanna Berry also and she gave OTL Media permission to publish the video. She told us that she wants Canadians to see it and for the video to be a warning. > > "This is very Orwellian" > > On The Line Media is run by Samira Mohyeddin, a multi-award-winning journalist, documentary maker, and producer at CBC Radio One’s The Current.
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If you were thinking the Conservatives wouldn't be as bad as the Liberals when it comes to regulating the Internet, think again.
michellerempelgarner.substack.com The bill to protect Canadians online that the Liberals should have written.Conservatives will present new legislation to protect Canadians online that preserves their civil liberties.
> > > As opposed to Bill C-63, which pushes [age verification bullshit] far into the future and behind closed doors through an opaque regulatory process, our new Conservative legislation will directly legislate [age verification bullshit] that online operators must adhere to. > >
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The 219 MPs Who Voted Against Advancing Electoral Reform
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/28858201
> The 219 Corrupt MPs Who Voted Against Advancing Electoral Reform > > Results of Motion M-86: > > > ❌219 MPs: 🔴107 🔵111 > > ✅103 MPs: 🔴40 🔵4 ⚪️30 🟠24 ⚫️3 🟢2 > > ❓14 MPs: 🔴9 ⚪️2 🔵2 🟠1 > > Use Control-F to find your MP: > > 🔵Conservative: > > Poilievre, Hon. Pierre (Carleton) > > Aboultaif, Ziad (Edmonton Manning) > > Aitchison, Scott (Parry Sound—Muskoka) > > Albas, Dan (Central—Okanagan—Similkameen—Nicola) > > Allison, Dean (Niagara West) > > Arnold, Mel (North Okanagan—Shuswap) > > Baldinelli, Tony (Niagara Falls) > > Barlow, John (Foothills) > > Barrett, Michael (Leeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes) > > Berthold, Luc (Mégantic—L'Érable) > > Bezan, James (Selkirk—Interlake—Eastman) > > Block, Kelly (Carlton Trail—Eagle Creek) > > Bragdon, Richard (Tobique—Mactaquac) > > Brassard, John (Barrie—Innisfil) > > Brock, Larry (Brantford—Brant) > > Calkins, Blaine (Red Deer—Lacombe) > > Caputo, Frank (Kamloops—Thompson—Cariboo) > > Carrie, Colin (Oshawa) > > Chong, Hon. Michael D. (Wellington–Halton Hills) > > Cooper, Michael (St. Albert–Edmonton) > > Dalton, Marc (Pitt Meadows–Maple Ridge) > > Dancho, Raquel (Kildonan–St. Paul) > > Davidson, Scot (York–Simcoe) > > Deltell, Gérard (Louis-Saint-Laurent) > > Doherty, Todd (Cariboo—Prince George) > > Dowdall, Terry (Burnaby North-Seymour) > > Dreeshen, Earl (Red Deer—Mountain View) > > Duncan, Eric (Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry) > > Ellis, Stephen (Cumberland—Colchester) > > Epp, Dave (Chatham-Kent—Leamington) > > Falk, Rosemarie (Battlefords—Lloydminster) > > Falk, Ted (Provencher) > > Fast, Hon. Ed (Abbotsford) > > Ferreri, Michelle (Petersborough—Kawartha) > > Findlay, Hon. Kerry-Lynne D. (South Surrey–White Rock) > > Gallant, Cheryl (Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke) > > Généreux, Bernard (Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup) > > Genuis, Garnett (Sherwood Park—Fort Saskatchewan) > > Gladu, Marilyn (Sarnia—Lambton) > > Godin, Joël (Portneuf—Jacques-Cartier) > > Goodridge, Laila (Fort McMurray—Cold Lake) > > Gourde, Jacques (Lévis—Lotbinière) > > Gray, Tracy (Kelowna—Lake Country) > > Hallan, Jasraj Singh (Calgary Forest Lawn) > > Hoback, Randy (Prince Albert) > > Jeneroux, Matt (Edmonton Riverbend) > > Kelly, Pat (Calgary Rocky Ridge) > > Khanna, Arpan (Oxford) > > Kitchen, Robert (Souris—Moose Mountain) > > Kmiec, Tom (Calgary Shepard) > > Kram, Michael (Regina—Wascana) > > Kramp-Neuman, Shelby (Hastings—Lennox and Addington) > > Kurek, Damien C. (Battle River—Crowfoot) > > Kusie, Stephanie (Calgary Midnapore) > > Lake, Hon. Mike (Edmonton—Wetaskiwin) > > Lantsman, Melissa (Thornhill) > > Lawrence, Philip (Northumberland—Peterborough South) > > Lehoux, Richard (Beauce) > > Leslie, Branden (Portage—Lisgar) > > Lewis, Chris (Essex) > > Lewis, Leslyn (Haldimand—Norfolk) > > Liepert, Ron (Calgary Signal Hill) > > Lloyd, Dane (Sturgeon River—Parkland) > > Maguire, Larry (Brandon—Souris) > > Majumdar, Shuvaloy (Calgary Heritage) > > Martel, Richard (Chicoutimi—Le Fjord) > > Mazier, Dan (Dauphin—Swan River—Neepawa) > > McCauley, Kelly (Edmonton West) > > McLean, Greg (Calgary Centre) > > Melillo, Eric (Kenora) > > Moore, Hon. Rob (Fundy Royal) > > Morantz, Marty (Charleswood—St. James—Assiniboia—Headingley) > > Morrison, Rob (Kootenay—Columbia) > > Motz, Glen (Medicine Hat—Cardston—Warner) > > Muys, Dan (Flamborough—Glanbrook) > > Patzer, Jeremy (Cypress Hills—Grasslands) > > Paul-Hus, Pierre (Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles) > > Perkins, Rick (South Shore—St. Margarets) > > Redekopp, Brad (Saskatoon West) > > Reid, Scott (Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston) > > Rempel Garner, Hon. Michelle (Calgary Nose Hill) > > Richards, Blake (Banff—Airdrie) > > Roberts, Anna (King—Vaughan) > > Rood, Lianne (Lambton—Kent—Middlesex) > > Scheer, Hon. Andrew (Regina—Qu'Appelle) > > Schmale, Jamie (Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock) > > Seeback, Kyle (Dufferin—Caledon) > > Shields, Martin (Bow River) > > Shipley, Doug (Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte) > > Small, Clifford (Coast of Bays—Central—Notre Dame) > > Soroka, Gerald (Yellowhead) > > Steinley, Warren (Regina—Lewvan) > > Stewart, Jake (Miramichi—Grand Lake) > > Strahl, Mark (Chilliwack—Hope) > > Stubbs, Shannon (Lakeland) > > Thomas, Rachael (Lethbridge) > > Tochor, Corey (Saskatoon—University) > > Tolmie, Fraser (Moose Jaw—Lake Centre—Lanigan) > > Uppal, Hon. Tim (Edmonton Mill Woods) > > Van Popta, Tako (Langley—Aldergrove) > > Vecchio, Karen (Elgin—Middlesex—London) > > Vidal, Gary (Desnethé—Missinippi—Churchill River) > > Vien, Dominique (Bellechasse—Les Etchemins—Lévis) > > Viersen, Arnold (Peace River—Westlock) > > Vis, Brad (Mission—Matsqui—Fraser Canyon) > > Wagantall, Cathay (Yorkton—Melville) > > Warkentin, Chris (Grande Prairie—Mackenzie) > > Waugh, Kevin (Saskatoon—Grasswood) > > Webber, Len (Calgary Confederation) > > Williams, Ryan (Bay of Quinte) > > Williamson, John (New Brunswick Southwest) > > Zimmer, Bob (Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies) > > > 🔴Liberal: > > Trudeau, Right Hon. Justin (Papineau) > > Freeland, Hon. Chrystia (University—Rosedale) > > Joly, Hon. Mélanie (Ahuntsic-Cartierville) > > Ali, Shafqat (Brampton Centre) > > Anand, Hon. Anita (Oakville) > > Beech, Hon. Terry (Burnaby North—Seymour) > > Guilbeault, Hon. Steven (Laurier—Sainte-Marie) > > Anandasangaree, Hon. Gary (Scarborough—Rouge Park) > > Arseneault, René (Madawaska—Restigouche) > > Arya, Chandra (Nepean) > > Bains, Parm (Steveston—Richmond East) > > Battiste, Jaime (Sydney—Victoria) > > Aldag, John (Cloverdale—Langley City) > > Bibeau, Hon. Marie-Claude (Compton—Stanstead) > > Bittle, Chris (St. Catharines) > > Blair, Hon. Bill (Scarborough Southwest) > > Boissonnault, Hon. Randy (Edmonton Centre) > > Bradford, Valerie (Kitchener South—Hespeler) > > Brière, Élisabeth (Sherbrooke) > > Chahal, George (Calgary Skyview) > > Champagne, Hon. François-Philippe (Saint-Maurice—Champlain) > > Chatel, Sophie (Pontiac) > > Chiang, Paul (Markham—Unionville) > > Cormier, Serge (Acadie—Bathurst) > > Damoff, Pam (Oakville North—Burlington) > > Dhaliwal, Sukh (Surrey—Newton) > > Dhillon, Anju (Dorval-Lachine-LaSalle) > > Diab, Lena Metlege (Halifax West) > > Drouin, Francis (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell) > > Dubourg, Emmanuel (Bourassa) > > Duclos, Hon. Jean-Yves (Québec) > > Duguid, Terry (Winnipeg South) > > Ehsassi, Ali (Willowdale) > > El-Khoury, Fayçal (Laval—Les Îles) > > Fraser, Hon. Sean (Central Nova) > > Fry, Hon. Hedy (Vancouver Centre) > > Gaheer, Iqwinder (Misssissauga—Malton) > > Gould, Hon. Karina (Burlington) > > Hajdu, Hon. Patty (Thunder Bay—Superior North) > > Hardie, Ken (Fleetwood—Port Kells) > > Hepfner, Lisa (Hamilton Mountain) > > Holland, Hon. Mark (Ajax) > > Hussen, Hon. Ahmed (York South—Weston) > > Hutchings, Hon. Gudie (Long Range Mountains) > > Iacono, Angelo (Alfred-Pellan) > > Ien, Hon. Marci (Toronto Centre) > > Jaczek, Hon. Helena (Markham—Stouffville) > > Jones, Yvonne (Labrador) > > Khalid, Iqra (Mississauga—Erin Mills) > > Khera, Hon. Kamal (Brampton West) > > Koutrakis, Annie (Vimy) > > Lambropoulos, Emmanuella (Saint-Laurent) > > Lamoureux, Kevin (Winnipeg North) > > Lapointe, Viviane (Sudbury) > > Lattanzio, Patricia (Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel) > > Lauzon, Stéphane (Argenteuil—La Petite-Nation) > > LeBlanc, Hon. Dominic (Beauséjour) > > Lebouthillier, Hon. Diane (Gaspésie—Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine) > > Longfield, Lloyd (Guelph) > > MacAulay, Hon. Lawrence (Cardigan) > > MacKinnon, Hon. Steven (Gatineau) > > Maloney, James (Etobicoke—Lakeshore) > > Martinez Ferrada, Hon. Soraya (Hochelaga) > > May, Bryan (Cambridge) > > McDonald, Ken (Avalon) > > McGuinty, Hon. David J. (Ottawa South) > > McKay, Hon. John (Scarborough—Guildwood) > > McKinnon, Ron (Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam) > > Miao, Wilson (Richmond Centre) > > Miller, Hon. Marc (Ville-Marie—Le Sud-Ouest—Île-des-Soeurs) > > Morrissey, Robert J. (Egmont) > > Ng, Hon. Mary (Markham—Thornhill) > > O'Connell, Jennifer (Pickering—Uxbridge) > > Oliphant, Hon. Robert (Don Valley West) > > Petitpas Taylor, Hon. Ginette (Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe) > > Powlowski, Marcus (Thunder Bay—Rainy River) > > Qualtrough, Hon. Carla (Delta) > > Robillard, Yves (Marc-Aurèle-Fortin) > > Rodriguez, Hon. Pablo (Honoré-Mercier) > > Rogers, Churence (Bonavista—Burin—Trinity) > > Romanado, Sherry (Longueuil—Charles-LeMoyne) > > Sahota, Hon. Ruby (Brampton North) > > Sajjan, Hon. Harjit S. (Vancouver South) > > Saks, Hon. Ya'ara (York Centre) > > Samson, Darrell (Sackville—Preston—Chezzetcook) > > Sarai, Randeep (Surrey Centre) > > Scarpaleggia, Francis (Lac-Saint-Louis) > > Schiefke, Peter (Vaudreuil—Soulanges) > > Sgro, Hon. Judy A. (Humber River—Black Creek) > > Shanahan, Brenda (Châteauguay—Lacolle) > > Sheehan, Terry (Sault Ste. Marie) > > Sidhu, Maninder (Brampton East) > > Sidhu, Sonia (Brampton South) > > Sorbara, Francesco (Vaughan—Woodbridge) > > St-Onge, Hon. Pascale (Brome—Missisquoi) > > Sudds, Hon. Jenna (Kanata—Carleton) > > Tassi, Hon. Filomena (Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas) > > Thompson, Joanne (St. John's East) > > Valdez, Hon. Rechie (Mississauga—Streetsville) > > Vandal, Hon. Dan (Saint Boniface—Saint Vital) > > Virani, Hon. Arif (Parkdale—High Park) > > Yip, Jean (Scarborough—Agincourt) > > Zuberni, Sameer (Pierrefonds—Dollard) > > Fonseca, Peter (Mississauga East—Cooksville) > > Kusmierczyk, Irek (Windsor—Tecumseh) > > O'Regan, Hon. Seamus (St. John's South—Mount Pearl) > > Wilkinson, Hon. Jonathan (North Vancouver) > > Statement: > > Canadians are done with the first-past-the post system as it favours the powerful few over the needs of the many, forcing folks to often choose between 2 bad choices at the ballot or their vote is spoiled. We cannot continue with first-past-the-post as it enables corrupt politicians to vote against a fairer electoral system that would represent 95% of the vote instead of 40%. Canadians deserve a electoral system that will allow them to vote for their favourite candidate and to hold the government accountable without having to vote for the most popular opposition in order to fire the corrupt MPs of the government. > > We need to build up the pressure and force the corrupt MPs to listen to the voices of everyday Canadians. > > Here's what you can do: > > Send a letter to your MP and demand they support proportional representation and advance electoral reform immediately. (Letters do not require stamps) > > Use Open Parliament to watch their next moves. > > Use 338Canada to watch the polls. > > Protest against them on the streets. > > Hold strikes demanding proportional representation be passed without a referendum, try to push for a national general strike. > > Vote them out. > > Bring the topic of proportional representation up when meeting with them in person. > > Talk to your family, friends and neighbours about proportional representation. > > We have more than a year to pass proportional representation, so lets get it done before the next election and force the corrupt MPs to do the right thing and make our democracy fairer. > > Sources: > > https://docs.google.com/document/d/1REoZ89VAqdcT2eqoGrkQpBOyxUWB9Dioc_-mpgvGZ9g/edit#heading=h.wcvuwdkfukli > > https://www.fairvote.ca/21/02/2024/vote-result-mps-from-all-parties-vote-for-motion-m-86-for-a-citizens-assembly-but-not-enough-to-win/
- www.pqbnews.com B.C. Green under pressure as party battles to maintain legislature presence
B.C. Greens nominate replacement for outgoing MLA Adam Olsen in what is their most promising riding
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RCMP interviews witnesses in Greenbelt criminal probe
www.thestar.com RCMP interviewing potential witnesses linked to Doug Ford’s government in Greenbelt criminal probeIn a statement to the Star on Friday, Premier Doug Ford's office confirmed that aides and former staffers were being interviewed.
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This Conservative MP is 'best friends' with Trump running mate J.D. Vance
> VP candidate and MP Jamil Jivani bonded over being outsiders at a top U.S. law school
- thewalrus.ca Canada’s Prime Ministers: More like Monarchs than You Think | The Walrus
The key to fixing our democracy? Dismantle an electoral system that panders to the culture of celebrity
Obligatory mention of proportional representation, which is the most important improvement that we could make to our democracy, but this article describes another issue - that the Prime Minister most likely has too much power in this country.
> Canadian prime ministerial powers fall into two main categories. The first is the ability of the prime minister, backed by their staff in the Prime Minister’s Office—the PMO—and the Privy Council Office—the PCO—to direct and control what happens in government and in Parliament. The second is the astonishing unchecked power of patronage Canadians give their prime minister to appoint all the leading figures in the country’s public life, judiciary, and administration.
> Backbenchers in the House of Commons no longer see themselves primarily as representatives of the people who elected them and therefore owing prime loyalty to the interests of their constituents. Canadian MPs see loyalty to their party and its leader as their duty beyond any other. A 2020 study by the Samara Centre for Democracy found that Canadian MPs vote as they are instructed by their party whips 99.6 percent of the time.
> I have become convinced that the key to unlocking the barriers to repairing our democracy is to dismantle this electoral system that revolves around the celebrity and curb appeal of a handful of individuals. If Ottawa worked as it should—if it worked as a representative system based on discussion and resolution of communal issues—then the other problems with the Canadian polity and federation can be overcome. In a country of immense diversity, no other democratic model will work. Fundamentally, the overriding problem for Canadian democracy is the unaccountable power that has gathered into the hands of the prime minister. Until that problem is addressed and redressed, until a sustainable working relationship between the prime minister and Parliament is restored, no tinkering with the other levels of our institutions will work.
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Unhappy with new greenwashing rules, Alberta and fossil fuel companies push back
> Amendments to the Competition Act that became law last month under Bill C-59 require companies to be able to prove environmental claims made to promote a product or business interest. > > Schulz said the changes caused "a lot of concern for industry."
- www.timescolonist.com Snap election unlikely in Canada as European campaigns send incumbents packing
Speculation over whether he will send voters back to the polls before the fixed election date of October 2025 has been percolating for more than a year.
- www.pqbnews.com Singh makes his case to Alberta’s new NDP leader amid party separation talks
But Nenshi intends to ask party members if they want to separate from the federal party
> Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe both often draw links between their NDP opponents provincially, and Trudeau’s decisions in Ottawa, many of which have been backed by Singh and the federal NDP. Smith and Moe contend Trudeau is overstepping into provincial jurisdiction including in health care, energy and the environment.
> “Naheed Nenshi, Trudeau’s choice for Alberta.”
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Les Leyne: What John Rustad is pitching: Tax cuts, addiction treatment, nuclear power, fire Bonnie Henry
www.timescolonist.com Les Leyne: What John Rustad is pitching: Tax cuts, addiction treatment, nuclear power, fire Bonnie HenryB.C. Conservative leader said he’s offering a “common sense” approach to governing
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/23546146
> His common sense vision for public safety involves a big increase in addiction treatment programs, most of them private and some of them involuntary, meaning during incarceration. He wants indefinite apprehension of permanently brain-damaged habitual offenders now wandering the streets, on mental health grounds. That could involve invoking the notwithstanding clause in the charter of rights to bypass constitutional concerns if need be, he said.
> Hospitals now cut services to meet their budget because they look at patients as a cost, he said. “We actually need to reverse that, we need to look at patients as revenue generators.”
- theconversation.com Canada’s settler colonial violence in three acts: Calls for solidarity on National Indigenous Peoples Day
Limiting who public space is for and how it can be used is central to settler colonialism both in Canada and other settler colonial places. Here’s how it’s used to silence and criminalize dissent.
Good explanation of why Canada is supporting Genocide in Gaza.
- breachmedia.ca Inside the ‘shocking’ police operation targeting pro-Palestine activists in Toronto
A heavily-resourced Hate Crimes Unit has engaged in surveillance, night raids, and ‘trumped up charges’ against the Palestinian solidarity movement A heavily-resourced Hate Crimes Unit has engaged in surveillance, night raids, and ‘trumped up charges’ against the Palestinian solidarity movement
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Are there any Canadian news and current events comedy options?
I watch a lot of late night shows and British current events shows (have I got news for you, the bugle podcast). Really wish there was something equivalent for Canada. I know there was “this hour has 22 minutes” and Rick Mercer but I don’t think they’re around any more.
Any other Canadian comedic current events options?
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So many self-inflicted wounds, so few allies. Alberta's energy war room was long doomed
www.cbc.ca /news/canada/calgary/war-room-canadian-energy-centre-jason-kenney-danielle-smith-analysis-1.7233216> Kenney, at a 2018 gathering of his United Conservative Party, pledged a "fully staffed rapid-response war room in government to quickly and effectively rebut every lie told by the green left about our world-class energy industry." > > That line worked well in a room full of pro-oil partisans who felt their province's main industry under siege. And it surely felt familiar to Kenney himself, who'd spend so many federal elections in the Conservative Party war room, pumping out attack after counter-attack against the Liberals, NDP or any other would-be threat to his own faction.
>It tried to take down Big Green. It instead picked fights with Bigfoot Family.
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NDP leader says he's more alarmed after reading unredacted intelligence report
> Jagmeet Singh said Thursday he's "more convinced than ever" that some parliamentarians are "willing participants" in foreign states' efforts to interfere in Canadian politics after reading an unredacted version of a bombshell report
> May said she was 'relieved' reading the report
> Yves-François Blanchet said Tuesday he's inquired about getting security clearance
> That would make Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre the only major party leader to refuse to obtain the necessary security clearance to read the report.
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Poilievre says Tories will vote against capital gains tax hike, calls it a 'job killer'
'We're stepping up for Canadians. They're stepping up for the rich,' Trudeau says of Conservatives
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Editorial: Provincial politicians need to decide where loyalties lie | Times Colonist
www.timescolonist.com Editorial: Provincial politicians need to decide where loyalties lieThe Oct. 19 provincial election could be one of those rare watershed elections, like the ones in 1941, 1952, 1972, 1991 and 2017.
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Opposition set to amend election bill to curb MP pension eligibility
> But holding the election on that date would also mean that up to 80 MPs — those who were first elected in the 2019 general election — would have served the six years required to qualify for a parliamentary pension, even if they don't run and win their seats in the next campaign.
[...]
> "Canadians don't want to see members of Parliament putting forward legislation that personally benefits their own pensions," said MP Lisa Marie Barron, the NDP critic for democratic institutions. > > Barron said when the bill reaches the committee, her party will introduce an amendment to strike the date change from the bill and return voting day to Oct. 20 — meaning MPs first elected in the 2019 general election would have to be re-elected in 2025 in order to qualify for Parliament's relatively generous retirement benefits.
- www.canadianaffairs.news Liberals' response to Israel-Gaza conflict puts off religious voters: poll
A new poll shows low support for the Liberals among religious voters, including two groups they've traditionally counted on — Muslims and Jews
> Foreign affairs usually don’t play a role when it comes to voting in Canadian federal elections. But the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza is having an effect on religious voters in this country. That’s the finding of a new poll by the Angus Reid Institute that shows low support for the federal Liberal party among all religious groups, including two groups they have traditionally counted on — Muslims and Jews.
> The poll, which was released in mid-May, shows
- 41 per cent of Muslims support the NDP, 31 per cent support the Liberals and 15 per cent support the Conservatives. By contrast, in a 2016 Environics Institute poll, 65 per cent of Muslims reported voting for the Liberals in the 2015 election, 10 per cent voted for the NDP and just two per cent supported the Conservatives.
- Jewish support for Liberals is also low, with 42 per cent supporting the Conservatives compared to 33 per cent for the Liberals. Liberals have traditionally performed well in federal ridings with significant Jewish populations, the Angus Reid article notes.
- forty-five per cent of Roman Catholics prefer the Conservatives, 24 per cent the Liberals and 16 per cent are for the NDP.
- Among mainline Protestants, 58 per cent are for the Conservatives, 25 per cent for the Liberals and 11 per cent are NDP.
- Seventy-nine per cent of evangelicals would vote Conservative, five per cent for the Liberals and 14 per cent NDP. -Fifty-three per cent of Hindus would vote Conservative, 22 per cent support the Liberals and 18 per cent the NDP.
- For Sikhs, 54 per cent are Conservative, 21 per cent Liberal and 20 per cent NDP.