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Saturday, September 27, 2025

OP-ED: Canadian emission targets miss the forest for the trees

Krystle Wittevrongel is senior policy analyst and Alberta project lead at the Montreal Economic Institute.

If Canada were to be carbon neutral tomorrow, it would take China only 21 days to ensure our current annual emissions were put back into the atmosphere. 

And it’s only expected to get worse. As a share of the global total, China’s greenhouse gas emissions have risen from 19.4 per cent in 2005 to 27.4 per cent in 2019. Meanwhile, Canada’s shrank from 2.0 per cent to 1.6 per cent of the global total over the same period.

Needless to say, with such a small carbon footprint, Canada alone can’t solve climate change.

That has not prevented Ottawa from setting aggressive emissions reduction targets for Canadians. Its plan is so aggressive it aims to eliminate nearly half our emissions by 2030.

With it, we can anticipate drastic cuts on Canadian families and businesses, across every aspect of society. We can also expect it to be accompanied by a fast-increasing carbon tax.

The federal government is hoping that reducing Canada’s emissions will help reduce worldwide emissions.

It is pursuing this path despite criticism of it leading to widespread economic and social harm, being wildly unrealistic, and even trapping Indigenous Canadians in poverty. 

But, adding insult to injury, there’s a good chance it might not achieve its goals of greening our environment. That’s because, with the way it is designed, we can expect (without fail) that a decent share of any emissions we work hard to cut here will simply pop up elsewhere—like a game of environmental Whack-a-Mole. 

This is due to a phenomenon known as “carbon leakage” whereby investment and industrial activity, and the associated emissions (often in energy-intensive sectors), shift or “leak” from one jurisdiction to another where carbon taxes are not as expensive, and emissions standards are likely not as stringent. 

Let’s look at aluminum, for example. Both China and Canada are major aluminum producers, but when Canada produces it, it doesn’t emit nearly as much pollution into the atmosphere as when China does it. By some measures, Canadian aluminum is about seven times greener than Chinese aluminum.

By this logic, we should try to attract as many aluminum smelters here as possible, and make it more advantageous for consumers to buy Canadian aluminum.

But because Ottawa’s green schemes don’t consider the global impact Canadian industry can have, Canadian aluminum producers are currently made less competitive due to the added costs of carbon taxes. This is a clear-cut case of the loss of competitiveness due to locally focused emissions reductions schemes actually making things worse for the planet by making aluminum that’s less green more attractive.

But by Ottawa’s count, as long as these extra tonnes of greenhouse gases don’t get emitted within our borders, it’s a reason to pop open the champagne and celebrate.

This comes at a great cost to Canadians, as it leads to losses of investment, jobs, and tax revenue.

But what does it mean, globally? If our reductions are having no impact on the global climate, are the concessions that Canadians are making worth it? 

When we look at it, it will take only nine days (or less!) for China to essentially erase the cuts made by Ottawa’s emissions reductions plan through 2030. The constrained production, jobs not materialized, and forgone quality of life improvements (not to mention government revenues) through 2030 will be quickly invalidated by these Chinese emissions.

This is why our governments need to shift their focus from local emissions reduction to measuring the global impact of their climate strategies. It should consider the fact that reducing global emissions may actually mean an increase in local or domestic emissions.

The sort of greenwashing where we export emissions (and jobs) doesn’t help anybody. We’re too small an emitter for our efforts alone to make a difference. As the saying goes, we need to think globally, in the way we act locally.

Premiere of The Freedom Occupation

It’s been a year since the Freedom Convoy descended on Ottawa to protest nearly two years of Covid-19 restrictions. For three weeks, thousands of demonstrators, bolstered by pick up trucks and semi-trailer trucks, filled the city’s downtown core. 

It was the first demonstration of its magnitude in Canadian history.

Was the government justified in invoking the Emergencies Act? Was the convoy peaceful, or was in fact there a real threat of danger?

The Freedom Occupation seeks to uncover the truth about what really happened in Ottawa last year.

Distributed by True North, this documentary from Emmanuel Productions seeks to expose the real story behind the Freedom Convoy and to tell the whole story.

Tune into The Freedom Occupation now! 

Parents erupt, police called to school board meeting over prosthetic breast wearing teacher

Parents shouted-out a school board meeting after being told the board has no timeline in place to address a controversial high school teacher who wears protruding prosthetic breasts to class.

As True North reported, a transgender educator in September started wearing watermelon-sized prosthetic breasts with protruding fake nipples to teach shop class at Oakville Trafalgar High School.

On Wednesday, parents interrupted the Halton District School Board, shouting criticisms about the members’ lack of results in fixing the controversy, which has spurred several bomb threats and international media coverage.

“It’s time to do something about the problem,” shouted one woman. “The community has been disgusted by your lack of action.”

The outburst started when the board’s director of education, Curtis Ennis, said the board has yet to produce a timeline about when it will adjust the district’s dress code policies.

Ennis said the board is stymied by a legal hurdle that prevents Ontario districts from adjusting teacher policies when the teachers are in-between contracts.

After five minutes of order the meeting again turned to chaos, when a man in the gallery shouted an obscenity directed at Ennis.

The gallery then erupted, with between five and ten parents intermittently shouting rebukes at the board members.

The board initially tried to restore order, but after its attempts inflamed the gallery, the board members fell to silence, and called the police.

“You’re supposed to be taking care of the kids,” said a man who stood up in the seated gallery and started gesturing with a pointed finger.

“My kids are at the school every day with these bomb threats going on, and you’re going to sit up here [and say] ‘We’re going to look at the policies to figure it out,’?

“What do you think this is?”

The man then walked out of the room.

Oakville Trafalgar High School, where the trans educator teaches, has received a string of bomb threats going back to November. The most recent threat was made that same day.

“I’m afraid to send my son to school every day,” said a woman.

“We just want a decent dress code,” said another. “I don’t get what’s the big issue here.”

Board trustee Margo Shuttleworth addressed the crowd, saying their questions were out-of-place at the meeting – and that a system was established to take their questions online.

“So nobody can get an answer. Because you guys keep circling around and circling around,” responded one man.

“The questions are being submitted,” said a woman, “but they’re not being answered. Answer the questions!”

Amid the chaos, several board members stood up and disappeared into back rooms.

Several police officers arrived after ten minutes, and restored order. An officer escorted out one woman who had made vulgar accusations, including that children were being sexually abused.

The Daily Brief | Legault pressures Trudeau to fix illegal border crossers crisis

After facing mounting pressure to step down over allegations of political interference, RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki announced on Wednesday that she will be retiring from her post next month.

Plus, as Quebec deals with an unprecedented surge of asylum seekers, Quebec Premier Francois Legault says the prime minister needs to let migrants and asylum seekers know that they can no longer come to Canada.

And despite pressure from some politicians and media voices to stay in office, disgraced Toronto Mayor John Tory will resign this Friday.

These stories and more on The Daily Brief with Anthony Furey and Rachel Emmanuel!

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MP tables motion for feds to show receipts from trip to Queen Elizabeth’s funeral

Conservative MP Stephanie Kusie on Wednesday tabled a notice of motion, asking a parliamentary committee to request unredacted receipts from the Trudeau government’s trip to Queen Elizabeth’s funeral last September.

Kusie’s motion asks for a person-by-person breakdown of government expenditure, including how much each individual spent on accommodation, travel costs, food, alcohol and drinks.

Kusie asked that the unredacted receipts be produced by March 6th. 

The notice of motion comes months after access-to-information requests from the Toronto Sun revealed that government officials rented a $6,000-per-night hotel room in London.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) later filed requests to learn who stayed in the room, but the government sent redacted answers. 

On Wednesday, Kusie announced she will soon ask for a detailed list of expenses. The parliamentary Government Operations and Estimates committee will decide at its next meeting whether to approve or deny Kusie’s motion.

The parliamentary committee schedule does not list a date for its next meeting.

LEVY: Tory gave Toronto the very circus he promised to avoid

And that’s a wrap.

Toronto mayor John Tory is out the door as of Friday.

The mayor known as Mr. Dithers finally made good on his promise to resign late Wednesday evening after the 2023 budget passed with barely a whimper.

This was in stark contrast to a morning marred by protests, disrupted proceedings and a decision by the past-her-best-before-date speaker Councillor Frances Nunziata to lock the public out of the council chamber.

Last Friday evening Toronto’s 68-year-old mayor announced his intention to resign “to reflect on his mistakes” after carrying on a three-year affair with a member of his staff.

That woman is said to have left the mayor’s office in 2021 and is now working at MLSE, of which Rogers holds a 37% stake.

(Despite calls to do so, Tory has repeatedly refused to step down from his seat on the Rogers Trust despite the perceived conflict of interest.)

For five days, Toronto was subjected to the very circus Tory promised to avoid when he took the reins in 2014 following the chaotic Rob Ford era.

It was vintage John Tory.

After his unemotional speech, he made it clear he wasn’t vacating the mayor’s office quite so quickly. 

He claimed he needed to stick around until Wednesday to ensure his budget as strong mayor got through.

Since the budget no more had his handprint than those of past years (crafted months before by city bureaucrats), it was just a stall tactic.

It quickly became clear he wanted to put his finger to the wind one more time to see if he had the support to stay.

Certainly he did from those who stood to lose the most with Tory’s resignation. The lobbyists, the developers, his highly paid staffers and his council lapdogs, activists and Old Boys – some of whom weighed in very loudly on social media and in the media that he should stay.

A Forum poll was commissioned to ask 1,000 Torontonians whether he should go or stay. No word on whether taxpayers covered the tab.

No doubt he was surprised to learn that the results were almost evenly divided and 11% said they didn’t know.

In other words there was no overwhelming appetite for him to remain on as mayor.

With the budget passed and perhaps with the stark realization that he didn’t have the support he thought he did, Tory issued his resignation letter to the clerk late Wednesday night.

While people will look back and perhaps suggest he did the right thing by finally stepping down, he dithered to the end.

It shouldn’t have been this way. Pure hubris and the lust for strong mayor powers led him to run for a third term after promising the public and his family he wouldn’t and while still carrying on with his former staffer.

His perennially poor judgment has now cost the city months — if not up to a year — of instability and the hefty price tag (in the millions) of a by-election.

I can guarantee you, knowing Toronto’s political elite as I do, there will be little focus on the business of the day over the next few months and much on who’s running and what they’re saying each hour of the day.

It may mean a leftist will sweep to power and many such sharks have been circling in the past few days, several of them retreads or those who aspire well beyond their competence category.

Certainly members of the legacy media were already listing his successor, several of the candidates suitably woke. To be frank, Tory moved so far to the left with his policies and constant virtue signaling, residents may not know the difference.

Truly, the city needs someone with financial acumen and the balls to clean up the mess left behind by Tory. But it remains to be seen if there’s anyone waiting in the wings to take on the challenge.

On a positive note, I hope that this race will engage voters far more than the one last October when Tory managed the media coverage and limited being put on the hot seat to a mere two debates (even, I suspect, playing a role in choosing the inexperienced candidates who would debate him.)

None of the city’s important issues were debated – the escalating crime, a ballooning budget and a debt dangerously close to the 15% debt ceiling level, the city’s drug addiction problem and the harm caused by harm reduction sites, the decrepit look of downtown and the impact of Vision Zero, which has been pushed by bureaucrats with no vision.

I can only hope that Toronto voters do their part and wake up to the reality of what Toronto has become and pay attention to those who have a plan to fix it.

Hard choices need to be made to repair the damage and politicians can’t keep throwing money at issues thinking that will solve the problem.

The city has been destroyed over the past eight years by a mayor who took his marching orders from the activists, the “defund the police” crowd, the greedy developers, the lobbyists and the Old Boy network.

It’s time to tell them they no longer run this town. Toronto residents do.

Brenda Lucki to step down as RCMP commissioner

After facing mounting pressure to step down over allegations of political interference, RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki announced on Wednesday that she will be retiring from her post next month. 

In a statement put out by Lucki, she said that the decision was a personal one after serving five years as the nation’s top cop. 

“This was not an easy decision as I love the RCMP and have loved being the 24th Commissioner,” said Lucki. 

“I am so incredibly proud to have had the opportunity to lead this historic organization and witness first hand the tremendous work being done each and every day.”

Last year, Lucki was accused by a number of RCMP officials of interfering in the investigation of the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting in order to assist Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s gun control agenda. 

“The commissioner told my colleagues and I that we didn’t understand, that this was tied to pending legislation that would make officers and the public safer,” claimed RCMP Chief Superintendent Darren Campbell. “The commissioner made me feel as if I was stupid.”

Lucki was accused of requesting that investigators publish confidential details to the general public. Soon after the shooting, Trudeau announced a slate of firearm bans. 

Campbell’s report was also corroborated by former RCMP strategic communications director Lia Scanlan. 

“I would never dispute Darren Campbell’s notes and at the end of the day, whether we’re saying promise, pressure, influence — they all lead to the same end result,” said Scanlan.

At the time, Scanlan described Lucki’s behaviour towards her fellow RCMP officers as “appalling, inappropriate, unprofessional and extremely belittling.”

During her tenure, Lucki had also claimed that the RCMP was infected with “systemic racism” and claimed that a six-foot broad jump could be seen as one example. 

“Yes, there’s absolutely systemic racism. I can give you a couple of examples that we’ve found over the years,” said Lucki.

“Evidence told us that the average person can broad jump their height. Of course, how many six-foot people do we hire? And there are people in all different cultures that may not be six feet, including there’s not a lot of women that are six feet tall, that would not be able to get through that type of test.” 

The Andrew Lawton Show | RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki is retiring

Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioner Brenda Lucki is retiring from her post next month in what she called today a “personal decision.” Lucki has been accused of interfering in the RCMP’s investigation into the Nova Scotia killing spree to support the Liberals’ gun control plans and she was unable to address key details during her testimony before last year’s Public Order Emergency Commission, which releases its final report next week. True North’s Andrew Lawton says Lucki’s quiet exit means a lack of accountability for her shortcomings on the job.

Also, a new book by Marco Navarro-Genie and Barry Cooper casts a light on the “moral panic” that took hold of Canada over the Covid era. They join The Andrew Lawton Show live to talk about “Canada’s Covid: The Story of a Pandemic Moral Panic,” which is available on Amazon in its extended form.

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BC NDP MLA motion denounces Freedom Convoy on one year anniversary

On the one year anniversary of the Freedom Convoy, an NDP MP’s private member’s motion before the British Columbia Legislative Assembly calls on lawmakers to condemn the movement and affirm the use of vaccine mandates during the Covid-19 response.

Opposition to the vaccine requirements were at the heart of the protest movement which led to the federal government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act. 

“Be it resolved that one year after the anti-vaccine protests in Ottawa and communities including Victoria, South Surrey, Kelowna and Cranbrook, this House denounces the freedom convoy protests and affirms that public health orders, including vaccine requirements, have been an essential tool in B.C.’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic,” NDP MLA Doug Routley’s motion states. 

During debate, Routley referenced since-debunked stories about the Freedom Convoy as a reason to support the motion, including the claim that Freedom Convoy protestors were somehow involved in an arson attempt at an Ottawa apartment building. 

“Many of my friends live and work in Ottawa. One of my friends lives in the apartment building in which a fire was set in the lobby. Many of my friends walked through the city and were harassed because they wore masks or they were a different colour,” claimed Routley. 

“This protest took on dark undertones from the beginning. There was harassment of health care workers. There were entries into public schools. There were threats made that didn’t sound at all like pots and pans celebrating health care workers.” 

Last March, an investigation by the Ottawa Police Service found that there was no connection between the arson attempt and the Freedom Convoy protestors in the nation’s capital at the time. 

“A man has been charged in relation to a deliberately set fire in an apartment building on Lisgar Street on February 6, 2022. A second man is still wanted by police,” Ottawa Police wrote. 

“There is no information indicating (the suspect) was involved in any way with the Convoy protest which was going on when this arson took place.”

Despite there being no evidence to implicate the Freedom Convoy, several prominent politicians spread the claim including NDP leader Jagmeet Singh. 

On Twitter, Independent MLA John Rustad was the only BC politician to denounce the motion. 

“Why are the BC NDP so eager to condemn the Freedom Convoy but remained silent about the burning of BC’s Churches?” asked Rustad. 

“Let me be crystal clear: 7000 healthcare workers were fired or quit because of mandates and disrespect.”

CAMPUS WATCH: McMaster hosts segregated Black History Month event for non-white staff

Hamilton’s McMaster University hosted a segregated event for non-white employees as part of its Black History Month programming. 

The Ontario university, which is also hosting several segregated events for students this month, joins a growing list of post-secondary institutions where racially segregated events for Black History Month are taking place.

The “BIRS Social” was organized by the university’s BIRS Employee Resource Group. The Feb. 9 event featured “amazing food and music” and was open to staff who are part of the “BIRS demographic.” The latter stands for black, Indigenous and racialized staff. 

McMaster says the event offered an environment for non-white employees to connect with each other.

In addition to the “BIRS Social”, McMaster’s Black Student Success Centre held an event on Feb. 7 called “Embracing Intersections: Blackness and Disability” that was  “open to Black identifying staff, students, faculty, alumni and community members.”

The latter offered “an intimate conversation” with members of the ASE Community Foundation for Black Canadians with Disabilities about “studying, living and working with disability and the work they have done to cultivate access for all through education and awareness, collaborative knowledge sharing, research and policy, and youth empowerment anchored in a national Black Accessibility Knowledge Hub.”

The ASE Community Foundation for Black Canadians describes itself as a group whose mission is “to disrupt disparities at the intersection of Blackness, disability, and gender; driving a cultural shift that supports the collective liberation of our community.”

On Feb. 14, McMaster’s Student Wellness Centre hosted a curated event titled “Black Excellence Fatigue” featuring a conversation about “Black Excellence, fatigue, and navigating black identity and higher education” and “the importance of reclaiming and practicing self-care and finding Black Joy.”

Screenshot: mcmaster.ca

The University’s website notes that the event was “open to black identifying students.”

A “Black Queer Music Night” featuring “karaoke, dancing, snacks, and trivia about Black, Queer music” is planned on Feb. 16. The latter is organized by the McMaster Students Union and is “open to Black 2STLGBQIA+ students.”

Meanwhile, McMaster’s Student Wellness Centre invited “Black identifying students” to decorate doors, describing the activity as a “Decorating and Wellness activity.”

In addition to the events listed above, the description for a Feb. 27 event titled “Let’s Talk About Race: Celebrating Black Faculty” notes that “Black, Indigenous and racialized students, staff and faculty are invited.” The university wouldn’t say whether or not non-racialized people are also invited to attend.

Back in June, McMaster made headlines after it hosted its first segregated graduation ceremony for “Black identifying students”. The ceremony was separate from the main convocation and attendance was not mandatory for black students.

Black Student Success Centre manager Faith Ogunkoya, who organized the ceremony, had told CBC that “the whole day was about celebrating and centering Blackness.”

Other Canadian universities are also hosting racially segregated events during Black History Month, as shown by True North’s Campus Watch reporting. The University of Guelph held an arts and crafts session exclusive to “students who identify as Black” and two events exclusive to black students are planned at Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly known as Ryerson) this month. 

McMaster University did not return True North’s requests for comment in time for publication.

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