
Mark Carney is on holidays. The government won't say where
However, politicians weren't always so cagey. The Canadian Press reported than when Brian Mulroney was prime minister, he routinely informed reporters where he was vacationing. Former prime minister Jean Chrétien broke from the practice, causing what the media described as a 'furor' in 1993 when his office refused to follow protocol and disclose his week-long holiday at Florida's PGA National Golf Resort and Spa.
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Yet, holidays have long caused controversy: Free vacations at the hands of the wealthy Irving family caused a major problem in 2003 for Chrétien, who said politicians had every right to accept freebie holidays.
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'You know, we have the right to accept hospitality. I do accept hospitality once in a while. I visit my son-in-law, who has a lake, and I fish with him and I'm there with my grandson. Perhaps I should confess that,' Chrétien said at the time. (His son-in-law is billionaire Andre Desmarais.)
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It's not just Liberals, either.
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Prime minister Stephen Harper's Labour Day visit to New York in 2011 — he saw a New York Yankees game and a Broadway show with his family — cost taxpayers some $45,000 and Peter MacKay, then the defence minister, had a military helicopter pick him and his buddies up during a fishing trip in July 2010.

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National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Chris Selley: We'll thank Travis Dhanraj for 'pulling back the curtain' on CBC News
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Toronto headquarters. Photo by Aaron Lynett/National Post/File One of the results of the Liberals' long-unexpected election win earlier this year is that the issue of CBC's future immediately came off the boil — and it wasn't even all that big of an issue during the campaign, despite Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's unambiguous promise to defund CBC's English-language operations entirely. Travis Dhanraj, a balanced and energetic reporter and until recently host of CBC's Canada Tonight, who mysteriously vanished from CBC's airwaves earlier this year, dropped a bomb this week that could bring the issue back to life very quickly, and perhaps very usefully. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS Enjoy the latest local, national and international news. Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events. Unlimited online access to National Post. National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ARTICLES Enjoy the latest local, national and international news. Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events. Unlimited online access to National Post. National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors 'I had no real choice but to walk away,' Dhanraj wrote in an open letter about what he termed his 'forced resignation' from Mother Corp. '(But) I still have my voice. And I intend to use it. Because this isn't just about me. It's about trust in the CBC — a public institution that's supposed to serve you. It's about voices being sidelined, hard truths avoided, and the public being left in the dark about what's really happening inside their national broadcaster.' This newsletter tackles hot topics with boldness, verve and wit. (Subscriber-exclusive edition on Fridays) By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again He accused the network — credibly, it must be said — of 'performative diversity, tokenism, (and perpetuating) a system designed to elevate certain voices and diminish others.' Dhanraj is brown-skinned, and quickly developed a reputation on the Canada Tonight newsmagazine show for inviting, shall we say, non-CBC types on to the public airwaves. (An appearance by Toronto Sun columnist Brian Lilley caused particular consternation among those who carry CBC tote bags.) Kathryn Marshall, who is representing Dhanraj in a planned complaint to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, alleged this week that CBC management assumed Dhanraj would hold a 'liberal world view' because of his skin colour, and were dismayed when it didn't pan out the way they assumed it would. (I should say, knowing Dhanraj slightly and having watched him in action, both at press conferences and on TV, I really have no idea what his 'world view' is … except that it's not hopelessly blinkered. That's a good thing. He's a reporter.) 'When the time is right, I'll pull the curtain back,' Dhanraj wrote, portentously. 'I'll share everything. I'll tell you what is really happening inside the walls of your CBC.' The sooner the better, please! Because it's just possible that this federal government might be serious about implementing reforms at the public broadcaster, and as of yet those proposed reforms amount to very weak and expensive tea. A thousand years ago, in February, the former Heritage minister under the former prime minister proposed what she called a 'new mandate' for CBC. It was unprepossessing, to say the least: A ton of new money, naturally, plus a partial ban on advertising and some changes to how senior management positions are appointed. The CBC-related commitments in Mark Carney's Liberal platform (notwithstanding the promise of $150 million extra funding) were even weaker tea: When you're including 'the clear and consistent transmission of life-saving information during emergencies' as a new imperative for your public broadcaster, you know you're either out of ideas or have a severely dysfunctional public broadcaster. Because communicating life-saving information during emergencies is kind of Job One for broadcast journalism. This advertisement has not loaded yet. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The first thing CBC did when COVID hit, let us never forget, was to cancel all its local newscasts. It later turned out that calamitous CBC CEO Catherine Tait had hunkered down for the pandemic in Brooklyn. She was last heard defending senior executives' bonuses, even as the network was shedding hundreds of jobs, as something akin to the divine right of kings and queens. Amazingly, she kept her job until her recently extended contract expired in January this year. If I believed that an extra $150 million a year would fix what ails CBC, I wouldn't lose sleep over spending it. My complaints about CBC are myriad and easily Google-able. And it pains me the extent to which Canadian news — including private outlets such as this one, as well as CBC — is now subsidized by the Canadian taxpayer. But the simple fact is that if that support disappeared tomorrow there would be a hell of a lot less news out there, and that's never a good thing. But I don't believe an extra $150 million would make much difference; I think it would just disappear into the gaping maw of middle management, emboldening them to get even more in the way of journalists simply doing the work they want to do. CBC news needs to be torn down to the studs and rebuilt, not tinkered with at the margins. So what Dhanraj and Marshall are teasing here is tantalizing, because it speaks to something existential about the CBC's news organization — something conservatives have always believed. It's not 'for Canadians'; it's for certain kinds of Canadians. That has never been any public broadcaster's mandate. And it is, perhaps, why the ratings are so poor. I feel terrible for Travis Dhanraj, but I can't wait to see what's behind that curtain. National Post cselley@


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
B.C. seeks to claw back future ownership and breeding of exotic cats
VICTORIA – The British Columbia government is proposing to ban the breeding, sale and future ownership of all exotic and non-domestic cats, including servals, ocelots and European wildcats. The proposed changes would add the cats to the list of about 1,200 animals already designated as 'controlled alien species' under the provincial Wildlife Act. A statement from the government says the changes respond to 'long-standing concerns' from animal-welfare organizations and wildlife experts about public safety and environmental risks that such animals pose. The government says the changes would also benefit the animals themselves by creating standards for their keeping. The proposed legislation would allow current owners of such cats to keep them until their deaths, provided they apply for free permits. Provincial law already prohibits the ownership of large cats such lions, tigers, jaguars, leopards and cheetahs. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 8, 2025.


Edmonton Journal
4 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Bell: Doug Ford warns Carney — Ontario premier can be an 800-pound gorilla
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