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Politics! Carney's 'delete laws' bill, G7 wraps

Politics! Carney's 'delete laws' bill, G7 wraps

CBC18-06-2025
In this politics roundup, we first check in with the CBC's Aaron Wherry in the Alberta Rockies about the main takeaways from the G7 summit, which wrapped without Donald Trump after he left to deal with the escalating Israel-Iran conflict.
Then, we speak to Toronto Star national columnist Althia Raj about C-5, an omnibus bill which is moving through parliament at breakneck speed. The bill's intent is to speed up approval for resource projects, but it's been panned by critics as dangerous and undemocratic.
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American behind pro-Canada rallies says 'most Canadian thing ever'... 'we're sorry' about Trump
American behind pro-Canada rallies says 'most Canadian thing ever'... 'we're sorry' about Trump

CBC

time33 minutes ago

  • CBC

American behind pro-Canada rallies says 'most Canadian thing ever'... 'we're sorry' about Trump

Kate Powers "felt shame" when she first heard U.S. President Donald Trump talking about annexing Canada. Powers said she was born and raised in western New York in the Buffalo-Niagara Falls area. "Growing up, Canada was the backyard [with] trips to Toronto, trips to the Shaw Festival, trips to Stratford, family vacations in cottage country up on Georgian Bay," Powers told CBC Hamilton. "So, the idea to me that the president of the United States would get to a place where he would say we're going to annex Canada as the 51st state, to me is appalling. And I felt shame when I heard him first start talking this way." Powers is a co-organizer of a series of rallies from the Pacific to the Atlantic, from Alaska to Vermont to London, England, celebrating the longstanding friendship between the United States and Canada. Known as the 'Elbows Up for Canada' movement, the rally organizers represent a coalition of American and Canadian advocacy groups. Rallies are planned for July 5, including in Buffalo, N.Y. and Detroit, Mich. Powers said people with some small "grassroots groups" in Windsor, Ont., and in Ottawa will be participating in the rallies. One of the rallies is actually going to be sort of in the middle of the St. Lawrence River … so, folks in Canoes and kayaks and paddle boards from the United States and Canada are going to meet up just in the river across from Prescott, Ont.," she said. "They'll be at the great Canadian flag right down by the water in Windsor, and then there will be an event in Detroit directly across from them." 'Citizens on both sides want to build bridges, not walls' "In an era when division seems to dominate headlines, we want to show that the spirit of friendship and cooperation is alive and well along our shared border," Detroit-based co-organizer Audrey Bourriaud said. "These rallies prove that ordinary citizens on both sides want to build bridges, not walls." Powers gave credit to "the women in Quebec who made the human chain in February to oppose fascism," for the initial inspiration for the rallies. "I turned to my husband and I said we should do that across one of the bridges in Niagara Falls," she said. On Trump's so-called 'Liberation Day,' on April 2, when "he was announcing all of these arbitrary and capricious tariffs," Powers said the first "counter programming" rally was held in the shadow of the Peace Bridge in Buffalo. She said dozens of people turned out in "freezing rain [and] howling wind" to stand in solidarity with Canada. "We waved our flags and we sang the Canadian National anthem as loud as we could for them, although I'm sure they couldn't hear it across the river," Powers said. We want our Canadian friends to know that we're still friends, that regardless of the vitriol coming out of the White House, the predatory threats, that we love and respect Canada as a sovereign nation. Powers said the upcoming rallies have several goals. "The first one is to say to you … to everybody in Canada, the most Canadian thing ever — to say we're sorry," she said. "I know a lot of Canadians are hurt, are angry, are frustrated, are scared, and I don't blame them. It's important to me that folks understand that there's more than 300 million people in the United States and only 70 million people voted for Donald Trump … and a lot of us are just appalled and we are doing everything we can, but we do feel like we're dancing in quicksand right now around a lot of issues. "We want our Canadian friends to know that we're still friends, that regardless of the vitriol coming out of the White House, the predatory threats, that we love and respect Canada as a sovereign nation," Powers added. Additionally, Powers said Americans in general have not forgotten the numerous times that Canada has shown up for the U.S. as a good neighbour. "We are grateful to Canada for the ways that it has shown up for us at Normandy during the Civil War, after [the] September 11 [terrorist attacks], to fight the fires in California earlier this year," she said. "We respect your sovereignty, we respect the long-standing relationship and we understand that the trust has been broken and we're going to work to repair it. "We really want to counter the narrative that it's the most natural thing ever that the United States should annex Canada or, like he said earlier this week, that Canada is a nasty country to negotiate with. We know that that's not true, so we want to counter that narrative, and if we cannot reach him, we want to at least reach all of the governors on the northern border of the United States to say we might need to make our own arrangements with Canada," added Powers. In June, five Canadian premiers, including Ontario's Doug Ford, visited Boston at the invitation of some northeastern U.S. governors to try to forge alliances against Trump's tariffs. Ford was joined by fellow premiers Tim Houston of Nova Scotia, Susan Holt of New Brunswick, Rob Lantz of P.E.I. and John Hogan of Newfoundland and Labrador for a day of meetings at Massachusetts State House with the governors of seven states or their delegates. Speaking to reporters while in the U.S., Ford said he'd spoken to leaders from around the world who are "dumbfounded" by Trump's rhetoric. "We're in disbelief too, but now we're going to build forward," he said. Earlier this year, Canadians across the country were boycotting American products and cancelling vacations plans to the U.S. Those sentiments may not be as potent now, but for many the sentiment lingers. Yao Ameyaw told CBC News he's still avoiding spending money south of the border.

Canada's population standstill rattling Vancouver's housing industry
Canada's population standstill rattling Vancouver's housing industry

National Post

time40 minutes ago

  • National Post

Canada's population standstill rattling Vancouver's housing industry

For the first time in 74 years, the population of both B.C. and Ontario dropped by a few thousand people in the first months of 2025. Article content Sounds dramatic. And in some ways it is. Article content That's even though the dip in the total number of people doesn't make a statistical difference for either province. In the first quarter of this year, B.C. had 2,357 fewer residents than at the end of 2024; Ontario lost 5,644. Article content Article content But, as Statistics Canada says: 'While small compared to the size of each province, these were the largest quarterly losses in population for both Ontario and B.C. since comparable records began in 1951. ' Article content Article content In each of the past two years B.C. had added more than 160,000 people, an unprecedented annual growth rate of more than three per cent, almost all of it fuelled by Ottawa's openness to international migration. Article content The fact this year has seen the most significant dip in the two provinces' populations in almost three generations appears to signal the end of Canada's recent ultra-high migration experiment. This new phenomenon, a population standstill, is having repercussions, especially on the housing market. Article content The federal Liberals, after a decade in power, seem to have finally got the public's message that their policies were creating too much demand on housing and rents. As a result, in May Prime Minister Mark Carney said, albeit vaguely, that his government will bring 'overall immigration rates to sustainable levels.' Article content Article content Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, meanwhile, is becoming bolder. Last month he said he wants 'severe limits' on population growth to restore some equilibrium to jobs, social services and housing. Article content Article content Such talk is alarming the property development industry, which is experiencing a softening of demand. Even though many analysts say it's simply part of the real-estate cycle, developers are renewing calls for a return to more foreign buyers in Canadian housing. Article content Coinciding with the change in attitude among Ottawa's politicians, StatCan has just published two reports that highlight the power that vigorous migration rates have had on the cost of housing.

Smith to give update on creation of Alberta provincial police service
Smith to give update on creation of Alberta provincial police service

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Smith to give update on creation of Alberta provincial police service

Danielle Smith will give an update Wednesday on the creation of a provincial police service. Mason DePatie reports. Danielle Smith will give an update Wednesday on the creation of a provincial police service. Mason DePatie reports. Alberta's premier will be providing an update on Wednesday about setting up a provincial police service. Danielle Smith, Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis and the parliamentary secretary for Indigenous and rural policing will give a progress update at 12:30 p.m. The mayor of Coaldale and deputy mayor of Hardisty will also be speaking at the event. The last major update on the new police service came back in April when Bill 49 was introduced. The legislation proposes establishing a Crown corporation to operate a provincial police force separate from the RCMP. Municipalities would the have the option of opting in, especially if they feel underserved by the RCMP. According to the town of Hardisty's website, the town spends $2.4 million annually on RCMP services. Earlier this spring, the Town of Hardisty issued a tender to initiate a study on policing. At the time, Mayor Wayne Jackson discussed the issue of rural crime and how the RCMP was stretched thin in the area. When Bill 49 was first introduced, Ellis noted Alberta was short up to 20 per cent in RCMP staffing and paying millions for services that sometimes don't show up. The idea of a provincial police force isn't without controversy. A 2021 study found an independent police service could end up being more expensive than the RCMP.

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