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Thursday, June 26, 2025

Liberal online hate enforcement regime will cost taxpayers $200m: PBO

Source: X

Canadians can expect to shell out at least $200 million on the Liberal government’s “online harms” enforcement regime, which critics have blasted for violating freedom of expression. 

The Parliamentary Budget Officer made the estimate in a recent report on Bill C-63, also known as the Online Harms Act. Taxpayers funds will be used to establish its new full-time 330-person bureaucracy, if the bill, which mandates the creation of a Digital Safety Commission, passes.

The government’s independent budget analyst estimated that the total operating cost of establishing the bureaucracy proposed by the censorship bill would be $201 million over the next five years.

“The costs may be higher if the Digital Safety Commission, Ombudsperson or Office decides to employ significant external legal, IT or consulting services after reaching their full capacity,” the PBO said.

According to the report, the bureaucracy could have the capacity to reduce this cost through potential “administrative monetary penalties, fines, or regulatory charges it collects.”

Multiple parties have criticized Bill C-63 over its potential to limit freedom of speech through, among other aspects, the introduction of an online hate speech offence under the Canadian Human Rights Act. 

“Trudeau will spend over $200 million of taxpayers’ money on his useless 330-person censorship bureaucracy instead of using that money to hire police, protect Canadians, and lock up criminals,” Michelle Rempel Garner, the Conservative MP who requested the report, said in a statement. 

On her personal Substack, she estimated that “under-resourced” public safety institutions such as the RCMP could hire 204 new police officers for the equivalent cost of the “over-bloated” bureaucracies described in the bill.

Justice Minister Arif Virani, who has been the bill’s leading champion in the House of Commons, did not respond to True North’s requests for comment. 

Rempel Garner notes the report does not include a “still-to-be-costed” increase to the workload of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, which, because of the bill, would be responsible for policing “a flood of extra-judicial ‘prosecutions’” over individual social media posts.

Rempel Garner believes that the Human Rights Commission will be “flooded” by complaints from online activists and offended individuals, which, due to the excessive increase in the commissions’ workload, could also increase costs.

“In their briefing with me, the PBO suggested that the government was not able to give its analysts estimates on the number of complaints it anticipated the CHRC would receive if the bill came into force,” Rempel Garner said in the article. “So, it’s reasonable to assume today’s $200M PBO analysis is just the tip of Bill C-63’s spending iceberg.”

On True North’s Andrew Lawton Show, Peter Menzies, a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and former CRTC vice-chair, had issues with the cost of the bill as well.

He worries that the system will be used vindictively, saying that anytime somebody really doesn’t like something said on social media, they could file a complaint with the CHRC.

He thinks the bureaucracy described by the PBO report will be “even more active” than the already existing Digital Safety Commission, and although one might not be found guilty for illegitimate claims made against them, the legal process acts as a punishment in itself.

“As is often said, the process is the punishment. It can drag out for years, and they usually end up shaking you down for some money; no matter how innocent you feel you might be, the process just wears you down,” he said.

Menzies believes having social media companies agree to protect people online is a more effective and less costly solution than what the Liberals are offering with Bill C-63.

LEVY: Jews, Iranian dissidents rally in support of Goldie Ghamari

Source: True North

About 100 members of the Jewish and Iranian communities gathered at Queen’s Park Wednesday evening to tell Premier Doug Ford what they thought of the decision to kick MPP Goldie Ghamari out of his Progressive Conservative caucus.

Touting signs reading “Doug Ford stop caving to Anti-Semites” and “Investigate NCCM (the National Council of Canadian Muslims)” organizers spoke of how supportive the Iranian-born Ghamari has been to the Toronto Jewish community since the atrocities of Oct. 7.

”Bring her back, bring her back,” the crowd repeatedly chanted.

Ford issued a statement late last Friday before the long weekend indicating the controversial Carleton MPP was being removed for her “serious lapses in judgement.” 

The removal followed a virtual meeting between Ghamari and prominent right-wing Brit Tommy Robinson to discuss the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), recently declared a terrorist entity by the Canadian government.

After the NCCM pressured the Ford government to remove her from caucus, Ghamari said she was not aware of Robinson’s background or his apparent history of Islamophobia.

He and members of his caucus were nowhere to be seen Wednesday evening.

Salman Sima, once a prisoner of the Iranian regime, said the issue with Ghamari is a “matter of freedom of speech” not just for politicians but for every Canadian citizen.

Daniel Bordman, a Jewish activist who organized the rally, said Ghamari has been a “voice of reason” in a time of “madness.”

He said the MPP has been the “first to jump up in defence” of the Jewish community whenever a politician attacks Israel and the Jews.

Bordman said Ghamari has done an excellent job and Ford “has not” despite promises to support the Jewish community.

He has sent a message for the past nine months that “anything goes,” Bordman said.

”Doug Ford has never stood with us…not for one second,” he said. “His words are empty… after nine months of chaos.”

The lawful demonstration was briefly interrupted by a violent pro-Palestinian protester, identified as Mohammad Assadi, who started to attack people in the crowd. About a half dozen police and Queen’s Park security quickly intervened and led him away from the rally

The NCCM, which has consistently trash talked Israel over the past nine months and shared propaganda about the conflict, expressed satisfaction that Ghamari was removed from Ford’s caucus:

For her part, Ghamari told True North she is not ready to speak publicly but referred to her statement of July 1 in which she stated that she is proud to speak up about the terrorist Islamic regime in Iran and how it is a danger to Canadians.

She also noted that she’s a Conservative and “that will never change.”

CSIS director to retire after seven-year tenure

Source: X

After an eventful seven years as the head of Canada’s top spy agency, Canadian Security Intelligence Service director David Vigneault will be retiring.

Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc made the announcement Thursday, commending Vigneault for his service despite a tenure marked by numerous challenges.

“David Vigneault has dedicated his career to safeguarding Canadians, and we thank him for his service,” LeBlanc stated. 

Yet, Vigneault’s time in office has not been without controversy.

Appointed as the ninth director of CSIS in June 2017, Vigneault previously held positions at the Canada Border Services Agency and the Privy Council Office. 

He aimed to increase transparency within CSIS, but his efforts have been met with mixed reactions. 

One of the most pressing issues during Vigneault’s leadership has been foreign interference. 

Internally, Vigneault also faced significant criticism for how he managed the agency’s workplace culture. An annual report revealed 24 harassment investigations in 2023 alone.

As reported by True North, Vigneault has also expressed concern over a Supreme Court ruling that protects IP addresses from unreasonable search and seizure. 

While he called for a national discussion on the matter, Vigneault expressed dismay that court approval was required. 

“We need to have a national discussion on this, because, as I said, it is at more than just the federal level. From a CSIS point of view, it’s the ability to get access to data. The previous line of questioning regarding the Supreme Court decision on Bykovets is one that we are actively looking at,” Vigneault told MPs. 

“The concern we have is that the proper judicial authorization is required to be able to take those IP addresses so that we can get to the actors and apply the tools that we have. This is a very serious concern.”Moreover, CSIS under Vigneault’s watch has been scrutinized for its monitoring of activists and groups associated with the parents’ rights movement, especially those opposing radical gender ideology.

The Daily Brief | Sir John A Macdonald Heritage Minute quietly deleted

Source: Historica Canada - Facebook

Historica Canada quietly deleted a sympathetic portrayal of Sir John A. Macdonald from its official YouTube page, citing “feedback from educators” on the first Canadian prime minister’s “controversial” legacy.

To nobody’s surprise, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has replaced outgoing Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Wayne Eyre with a key mover involved in the Liberal government’s woke military “culture change” agenda.

And Immigration Minister Marc Miller said that Ottawa is toying with the idea of buying up hotels to house the exponential influx of asylum seekers coming to Canada.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and William McBeath.

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Alberta NDP trail UCP by 14 points, new poll reveals 

Source: X

The Alberta NDP elected a leader in a landslide victory last month, but the rest of the province appears unconvinced in his ability to lead, a new poll suggests. 

Former Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi won the Alberta NDP leadership contest on the first ballot on June 22.

In the days following that victory, polling from Abacus Data reveals that the Alberta NDP trails the United Conservative Party by 14 points.

The Abacus Data surveyed 1,000 Albertan voters.

Of the respondents, 54% of decided voters said they would choose the UCP if an election were held today. Another 40% would vote for the Alberta NDP, while 6% would opt for another party. 

The UCP holds a 34-point lead over the Alberta NDP outside of Edmonton and Calgary. In Edmonton, where the UCP won no seats in the last election, the Alberta NDP are just two points ahead of the UCP. 

UCP caucus whip Shane Getson said that Albertans recognize the work the government is doing to make life better for them. And since the 2023 general election, he said the caucus has created jobs, paid down debt and grown the Heritage Fund.

“Albertans also have no interest in going back to the NDP’s radical ideas and job-killing policies,” he said in a statement to True North. “A change in NDP leadership won’t change that.”

Nenshi has been able to shore up numbers in Calgary, where he served as the mayor from 2010-2021. The Alberta NDP trail the UCP there by four points, down from eight in March. 

The survey also shows that the new leader might find success with one major party change he proposed during the leadership campaign — divorcing from the federal branch of the NDP.

After winning the leadership contest, Nenshi told reporters that he won’t wait to put the question to the membership of whether the Alberta NDP should separate from the federal party.

“That’s what members are really talking about, and I hear it every day,” he said at the time. “And the way I like to lead is, I don’t like things that are bubbling under the surface, so I’d like to surface that conversation with members as soon as possible.”

When asked about the possible separation, 49% of Albertans said they supported it, compared to just 21% who opposed it. 

When looking at Alberta NDP supporters, 49% said they support the split, as did 43% of federal NDP supporters. 

Halifax police still investigating attack on lesbian couple by group of Middle Eastern men

Source: X

Halifax police are requesting public assistance in identifying a group of Middle Eastern men who beat and injured a lesbian couple following a confrontation in the city’s downtown.

Emma MacLean was celebrating her birthday with her girlfriend, Tori, June 22 when they were catcalled by a group of Middle Eastern men, the couple alleges. The calling turned into slurs and an alleged assault after the men found out the couple were gay.

“We are working on identifying everyone who was involved,” Halifax Regional Police told True North in an email Thursday afternoon.

The police arrived on the scene at the 1600 block of Argyle Street in Halifax, Nova Scotia, at 1:50 a.m. on June 23, but most of the suspects were gone by then.

A video of the incident recorded by a bystander shows over ten men surrounding a woman while kicking and dragging her around. Another woman, identified as MacLean, can be seen trying to fight the men off of her girlfriend.

In an interview with CTV, MacLean said she was afraid to go back downtown after the incident, which left both of them with injuries.

She said that her girlfriend was left with bruises on her arm and under her eye, while she was given a black eye and now has a chipped tooth and a broken nose from the attack.

The altercation began when the men catcalled her, and Tory told the men to back off, saying, “Hey, that’s my girlfriend.”

This remark led to the group hurling “homophobic slurs.”

In a Facebook post, MacLean described the men as “Middle Eastern” and said they were “believed to be from Syria.”

After the altercation, Tori followed the men and, according to MacLean, verbally confronted them saying that their behaviour was not acceptable.

This is when MacLean said the interaction escalated into a physical attack.

“I see Tori being pushed on the stairs right in front of the BMO Centre. They are cement stairs, and she’s on her back. That’s when all the men start punching and kicking her,” MacLean said in the interview.

MacLean shouted at them to stop attacking her girlfriend. When they didn’t listen, she said, her “fight or flight” instinct kicked in, and she jumped on one of their backs, putting one of them into a chokehold to restrain him and save her girlfriend.

By the time police arrived, the fight had ended, though according to MacLean one of the attackers stayed and said that it was the girls who attacked them.

She said that the police were given the ID of a man involved in the attack, though despite this Halifax police still need help identifying the men.

Police are urging anyone with information about the incident or video from the area to call them at 902-490-5020. 

“Anonymous tips can be sent to Crime Stoppers by calling toll-free 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submitting a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca or using the P3 Tips App,” the Halifax police said.

Saskatchewan files for injunction against CRA over “unfair and unconstitutional cash grab” 

Source: Obert Madondo

Saskatchewan is taking legal action against Ottawa, accusing the Trudeau government of treating the province unfairly and violating the Constitution. 

The Liberals have sent the Canada Revenue Agency after the Saskatchewan government for refusing to collect the carbon tax. Consequently, Saskatchewan’s Minister of Justice and Attorney General, Bronwyn Eyre, announced filing an injunction “to stop this unfair and unconstitutional cash grab by the Trudeau government.”

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe echoed the minister’s concerns in a post to X, where he deemed sending the CRA after the province’s bank account was “unfair and unconstitutional.”

Canada’s Minister of National Revenue, Marie-Claude Bibeau told True North that Saskatchewan is a registered distributor in non-compliance with the fuel charge under the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act. 

“With the adoption of Bill 151, the Government of Saskatchewan chose to step into the role of an assigned distributor, obligated to adhere to the law like any other. The GGPPA spells out the consequences for non-compliance, and the Supreme Court of Canada has confirmed its constitutionality (2021),” said the minister.

The Canada Revenue Agency has pursued collections as required by law, according to Bibeau.

“We stand firm in upholding the law and will continue to deliver the full Canadian Carbon Rebate to the people of Saskatchewan. Our commitment to fairness and equality for all Canadians is unwavering, as we strive to level the playing field and champion environmental responsibility nationwide,” said Bibeau. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suspended the carbon tax on home heating oil in Oct. 2023, primarily benefiting Atlantic Canadians.

“Our government said Saskatchewan families should receive fair and equal treatment,” said Eyre.

Numerous provinces and territories took exception to the exemption, with seven out of 10 provincial premiers and the Northwest Territories calling for carbon tax relief. A Conservative motion passed in the House of Commons in Apr., demanding Trudeau meet with premiers about the carbon tax; he has yet to oblige.

The province stopped collecting carbon tax on electric heat at the start of 2024. The Saskatchewan government stopped sending Ottawa federal carbon levy funds at the start of March. Saskatchewan owns the natural gas utility SaskEnergy, which allowed it to stop collecting the tax.

After ceasing the collection of the carbon tax levy in Jan., Saskatchewan’s inflation declined quicker than predicted. Manitoba experienced a similar decrease following the suspension of its fuel tax. The two provinces saw their inflation remain below the rest of the country halfway through the year, with the taxes uncollected.

Eyre was not pleased with the Liberals’ response.

“One Trudeau minister called it ‘immoral’. Another Trudeau minister said that if we wanted a carbon tax exemption, we should have elected more Liberals. And then they started with the threats. They threatened to take away any rebates. They threatened fines and jail time, all because the Saskatchewan government was providing the same carbon tax relief here that the federal government was giving to other Canadians,” she said.

The CRA initially announced that it would audit Saskatchewan for not paying carbon levies to the federal government at the end of Apr. Despite this, Moe said his province “consider ourselves paid in full.”

Eyre said the federal government is returning to their “favourite move” of attacking bank accounts.

During the Freedom Convoy, Canadian banks froze nearly $8 million held in 206 accounts. These freezes were enacted under laws targeting terrorist and money laundering activities. However, subsequent testimony from the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police revealed no evidence of criminal or extremist group financing in the protests.

Saskatchewan’s justice minister said that providing other parts of Canada with tax relief while “garnishing” Saskatchewan’s bank accounts violates the constitution. 

“Section 126 of Canada’s constitution does not allow the federal government to grab money from a province’s bank account. So today, the province of Saskatchewan has filed an injunction to try and stop this unfair and unconstitutional cash grab by the Trudeau government,” said Eyre.

The minister advocated that the carbon tax be taken off of everything for everyone.

“But until that happens, your Saskatchewan government will protect our province and ensure tax fairness for Saskatchewan families,” she concluded.

True North reached out to Environment and Climate Change Canada but received no reply. 

Liberals’ digital services tax goes into effect despite warnings of American retaliation

Source: Unsplash

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has implemented its digital services tax despite years of repeated warning that the United States would retaliate against such a move.

The digital services tax is a levy placed on technology companies that provide a digital service to Canadians, granted they earn at least $1.1 billion in annual global revenues and at least $20,000,000 annually in Canada. 

These include tech companies Meta, which operates Facebook and Instagram, as well as Google, Amazon, Uber, Lyft, Airbnb, Netflix, and Spotify. 

As of last week, the federal government began taxing 3% of all Canadian revenues from the companies. 

The government also plans to apply the tax retroactively to cover money the companies made since 2022, boostingthe government’s expected tax revenues.

Trudeau’s tech tax has angered the United States government, which has repeatedly warned a reciprocal move.

The Americans argue that the threshold the Trudeau government set was purposefully gerrymandered to target American companies while exempting smaller competing Canadian companies.

The United States Chamber of Commerce argues that the digital services tax violates the USMCA free trade agreement as it views the tax as effectively a tariff.

“Now that Canada is poised to pass this legislation, in the face of broad U.S. opposition, it is clear that a more robust response is called for—a response reliant on the trade tools you recently endorsed,” reads the chamber of commerce statement.

“Specifically, we urge USTR to initiate formal dispute settlement procedures with Canada, beginning with consultations under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Free Trade Agreement (USMCA).”

A May 2024 report from the Computer & Communication Industry Association estimates that the DST will result in $1.0 to 2.3 billion in lost export revenues for American companies. The report also estimates that between 1,207-3,140 jobs will be lost.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation’s Ontario director, Jay Goldberg, said that the DST is nothing but a “cash grab,” and that the government ought to scrap the tax before the U.S. government retaliates.

“Canadian consumers know that Trudeau’s Digital Services Tax is nothing more than a tax grab, plain and simple,” said Goldberg. 

“With providers virtually certain to pass along increased costs to consumers, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is sticking Canadians with higher taxes and risking the possibility of a trade conflict with the United States.”

Ratio’d | Pro-Palestine protesters ERUPT in downtown Toronto

On the day that the Toronto Police planned to clear out the encampment at University of Toronto, a major pro-Palestine demonstration was held at the university grounds. Anger boiled over in the crowd as protesters swarmed and encircled Harrison Faulkner as he was asking questions.

The protesters fled the encampment two hours before the deadline and held a demonstration instead of holding their ground.

Watch as chaos erupts in downtown Toronto on the latest episode of Ratio’d with Harrison Faulkner!

CRA takes down Minions meme post advertising child benefit after public shaming

Source: Obert Madondo/X

After being publicly mocked on social media, the Canada Revenue Agency deleted a post on X featuring the famed animated Minions. 

X users called the Thursday morning post a waste of the tax dollars that the organization is responsible for collecting.

The post included a gif of a dancing Minion from the popular children’s movie series Despicable Me speaking the fictional language of Minionese with a hashtag referencing the newly released movie Despicable Me 4.

“Bello banana! Bapple Choppa Mooka-laka ooh-na-na! #CdnTax #DespicableMe4” the post read.

A follow-up post indicated the message was supposedly about the Canada Child Benefit.

“Oops, the minions were at it again! What they meant was: The kids wearing you out? At least applying for the #CanadaChildBenefit is easy – AND you can do it one-handed on your phone.”

Canadians did not respond kindly to the joking nature of the post. 

“No, you are not hallucinating,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre posted on X. “This is the kind of wacko stuff Trudeau’s tax department is busy posting to make you forget they are taking more of your money than ever before.”

Then he called Canadians to sign a petition to “axe the taxes and the weird posts.”

“Like, who approved this?” one user said. “Do they really think Canadians find it funny to hand over 50% of our pay cheques to CRA? And even more now with Carbon Taxes and increased Capital Gains? Get rid of ALL of these MINIONS, starting with Justin Trudeau.”

The federal director for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, Franco Terrazzano, also had a few choice words in reaction to the post. 

“This is perfect proof that we have too many bureaucrats with too much time and taxpayers’ money on their hands,” he said in an email to True North.

On X, the B.C. director for the CTF echoed the sentiment.

“Ya know, it certainly seems fitting the CRA is promoting a movie about minions who serve a supervillain,” one user said.

Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner also piled on, pointing out the problems Canadians face with wading through the CRA bureaucracy as it is – only to find out that they are spending the money they are responsible for taking from Canadians on silly memes.

“It’s extremely hard to reach your agency for help. Canadians are being taxed up the wazoo while their cost of living spirals out of control. Can’t wait to see the comms approvals chain on this one,” she said.

From her indications, the CRA can likely expect a few freedom of information requests over this one.

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