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CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Scott Gillingham to seek second term as Winnipeg mayor
Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham speaks at the State of the City Address on March 14, 2025. (Jeff Keele/CTV News Winnipeg) While the City of Winnipeg election is not for another year, at least one current member of city council is planning to seek another term. Mayor Scott Gillingham will seek a second term as mayor of Winnipeg in the 2026 municipal election. An email from Colin Fast, the mayor's director of communications, confirmed the decision to CTV News. Gillingham was elected for his first term in 2022, winning 27.5 per cent of the vote among 11 candidates. Prior to his election as mayor, Gillingham was councillor for the St. James ward from 2014 to 2022. Election day is Oct. 28, 2026.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Deadline mid-August for voters to register in advance for October's municipal election
Voters in this fall's municipal election will be required to register before they can cast ballots. Changes to local elections were brought on last year after the provincial government introduced a bill that became the Municipal Affairs Statutes Amendment Act. It modified the Local Authorities Election Act, which now requires municipalities to establish a permanent electors register. The City of Edmonton's register is being established using data from the provincial register of electors. The city has a deadline of Aug. 15 for residents to verify their information for its election-day register. Those who don't register by the August deadline will have to fill out an extra form on election day Oct. 20 in order to vote. 'You can still register when you go to vote, but checking your information now helps ensure a smooth process in October,' Aileen Giesbrecht, the returning officer for Edmonton Elections, said in a Thursday media release. The city's register will collect a voter's first name, middle initial, last name, date of birth, physical address, a mailing address if it's different than a physical one, and their eligibility to vote in either the public or Catholic school divisions. More information on how to register is available online. Residents can find out if they're registered to vote on Voterlink, which allows voters to check their status and change registration information.

Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Trump administration to look at replacing Fed chair Jerome Powell this fall, Bessent says
The Trump administration will focus on finding a replacement for Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell this fall, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC on Thursday, adding that officials had 'a lot of good candidates.' Bessent said it was up to the Fed to decide interest rates, although he added that if the U.S. central bank did not cut interest rates soon, any potential rate cut in September could be higher. With the unemployment rate low and inflation above their 2-per-cent target, Fed officials have been reluctant to cut interest rates from the current range of 4.25 per cent to 4.5 per cent until it is clear that the Trump administration's tariff plans won't drive up prices. U.S. President Donald Trump has railed against Powell, a fellow Republican whom he appointed during his first time in office, and again urged him to resign. The president cannot fire Powell over a policy dispute. Powell refuses to change course as Trump ramps up attacks on the Federal Reserve Trump sends Powell a list of global interest rates, says Fed should lower rate to 1% Trump administration officials argue that a tax bill nearing passage in Congress will boost private-sector investment and strengthen the U.S. economy, insisting that while tariff increases could result in a one-time bump in prices, they should not drive up inflation over the longer term. 'If they want to make a mistake here and not cut, that's fine,' Bessent told CNBC, insisting that tariffs imposed by Trump since taking office in January had not fuelled inflation 'thus far.' 'What we've seen so far is that tariff, tariffs haven't hurt. The dog that didn't bark was that tariffs are going to hurt the economy, they're going to hurt markets,' Bessent said, citing a rapid market recovery after a 15-per-cent decline in April. The selloff came after Trump announced higher-than-expected tariffs against most U.S. trading partners on April 2. Based on previous Fed models, he said, the central bank would have already cut interest rates that are 'very high real rates.' Holding off raised the chance that the Fed would need to cut interest rates by more later, said Bessent, who has been named a contender for the Fed chair role. Asked if one could head both Treasury and the Fed at the same time, Bessent said that hadn't been done since the 1930s, but did not explicitly rule out such a solution. Bessent said he was happy in his current job. The Federal Reserve Act explicitly says 'The members of the Board shall devote their entire time to the business of the Board,' which appears to rule out the possibility of Bessent doing two jobs at once. Trump recently named Secretary of State Marco Rubio to serve as his national security adviser, making him the first person to hold both roles since Henry Kissinger in the 1970s. Bessent said the administration will work on nominating a Fed chair to succeed Powell in the fall. 'We've been busy. The president's been doing peace deals, trade deals, tax deals, and we are landing the plane on all of those. So we're going to have more bandwidth after Labour Day,' he said.