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Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Gov issued convicted human smuggler a Canadian passport despite ban

Source: Facebook

The Liberal government issued a fresh Canadian passport to a convicted human smuggler linked to the deaths of nine people on the St. Lawrence River despite having his travel documents revoked and being banned from applying for a new passport.

As first reported by the CBC, 51-year-old Thesingarasan Rasiah, a Canadian citizen living in Montreal, Quebec, was granted passport documents on April 11, 2023, despite having been forced to hand his in as part of his release conditions in a human smuggling case dating back to 2021.

Immigration Lawyer Sergio Karas told True North that it’s rare for a Canadian citizen to be barred from accessing a passport. 

“The threshold to be met to deny or restrict a passport is very high,” he said. “Passports can be denied to Canadian citizens if the authorities allege that they have misused it or if they have security concerns, or if ordered to restrict the passport by a court.”

In 2021, Rasiah was caught “receiving” a Sri Lankan national who had just been smuggled into Canada in Cornwall, Ont., a small town close to the US-Canada border.

A police interview obtained by the CBC revealed that the man who was smuggled claimed that Rasiah charged him $7000 to illegally enter Canada and that the man planned to pay him Rasiah back through indentured servitude.

Following the investigation, Rasiah was sentenced to 15 months in jail in September 2023—police then re-arrested him in May 2024.

Rasiah was re-arrested following an investigation into the deaths of nine people on the St. Lawrence River. Police alleged Rasiah continued to operate a human smuggling ring despite having been caught and convicted already. 

According to an RCMP news release in June, Rasiah was one of eight charged with operating the “large-scale human smuggling ring” that allegedly funnelled illegal migrants into the US from the Cornwall area.

“Between July 2022 and June 2023, this group allegedly smuggled hundreds of desperate migrants through communities along the St. Lawrence River across borders into the United States,” the news release said. “Migrants were allegedly charged thousands of dollars by the smugglers. Dangerous night-time crossings even cost some migrants their lives.”

During the subsequent raid on Rasiah’s home, the RCMP discovered the new passport, found on April 11, 2024, according to court documents obtained by the CBC.

The CBC further noted that in 2008, Rasiah was sentenced to 52 days in jail after being convicted for holding two Canadian passports that “weren’t in his name” after landing at Toronto Pearson Airport.

In 2017, he was charged in connection with a “human smuggling event” at the port of entry in Dundee, Que., in which he pleaded guilty to “counselling misrepresentation” in breach of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. He received an 18-month conditional sentence as a result of the charge.

According to the article, the Canadian passport system is “siloed” from the justice system, preventing Service Canada’s administrators from accessing law enforcement databases. The system relies on law enforcement to flag candidates’ past criminal activities.

The Bloc Quebecois MP Kristina Michaud criticized the Liberal government’s lax border security during Question Period in the House of Commons Tuesday, calling it “dangerously incompetent.”

Liberal Immigration Minister Marc Miller said he would have to verify that the story was true before commenting and that he would be “happy to report back to the house” after he does.

“While the feds are telling us that everything’s okay at the borders, we’re learning that they’re giving a passport to a notorious criminal smuggler,” BQ MP Julie Vignola said during QP Tuesday. “Criminal smugglers are running the show at the borders, right under the federal government’s nose.”

Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc said the Liberal government has “invested greatly” in border security, touted that the Liberals reversed cuts Conservatives made at the border and vowed to continue to work with US partners to arrest and prosecute human and drug smugglers across the border.

Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada did not respond to True North’s request to comment before the provided deadline; however, an automated message said that due to privacy laws, the government is unable to provide details on individual cases. 

Child poverty skyrocketing with every province witnessing increased rates: report

Source: Unsplash

Child poverty is climbing at rates never seen before in Canada.

Campaign 2000’s 2024 national report card highlighted that approximately 1.4 million children, or 1 in 5 kids, lived in poverty in 2022.

The report showed that in the last two years, Canada experienced record increases in rates of child and family poverty, nearly reaching a cumulative 5% increase or an additional 360,000 children who fell into poverty.

“The jump in poverty rates in 2021 was the first increase in 10 years, and the latest increase in 2022 was the largest on record, signalling a failure of the federal poverty reduction strategy to sustain progress made with the Canada Child Benefit and the temporary emergency pandemic benefits,” reads the report card. 

The record-setting increase in child poverty rates between 2021 and 2022 saw 195,170 additional children enter poverty. 

“The numbers in this report card are shocking, even to those of us who track this issue,” said Leila Sarangi, National Director of Campaign 2000 and lead author of the report card. Every province, territory and the City of Toronto have seen their largest annual increase in rates of child poverty within the last two years.”

The report showed that families are poorer than they were nine years ago, when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first took office.

“Across all family types, families were living in deeper poverty than they were in 2015, the year the federal poverty reduction strategy measures progress from. Custom data shows that the Canada Child Benefit has lost its power to sustain poverty reduction and that income inequality among families with children is widening,” it said.

The Canada Child Benefit has been ineffective in reversing this trend with 2022 seeing the lowest reduction to date. 

The Census Family Low Income After-Tax Measure defines poverty as below the median income of all tax filers. Families, in general, were $14,276 below the measure after tax in 2022, compared to $10,050 in 2015.

While child poverty increased in every single province and territory, the worst increase was in Nunavut, which saw a 6% rise. Ontario was the province that fared worst, with a 3.5% increase.

“It’s been thirty-five years since the federal government signed on to uphold all children’s rights and eradicate child poverty, but clearly, the federal poverty reduction strategy is failing. We are heading quickly in the wrong direction and failing our children, again,” said Sarangi.

The Conservative Party of Canada issued a press release highlighting the stark increase. The party showed that food costs have increased by 35% since 2015.

“No wonder that in the last two years, Canada saw 358,520 more children living in poverty than during the height of the pandemic in 2020,” said the party.

Recent data from Food Banks Canada showed that visits have increased 90% in the last five years. While 2022 saw 1.4 million children suffer from food insecurity, the number jumped to 1.8 million in 2023. 

Food Banks Canada gave Canada a D- on its 2024 Poverty Report Card. 

Nearly 60 recommendations were suggested to the federal government from the report card which Sarangi said should serve as an alarm bell and a call to action.

The Rachel Parker Show | Dismantling CBC HIT JOB on Coutts + the future of female sports

Source: Unsplash

Today on the Rachel Parker Show, Rachel Parker is joined by Coutts organizer Marco Van Huigenbos to discuss the CBC Fifth Estate’s latest documentary on the Coutts blockade. Van Huigenbos, who was featured in the short film, says he’s disgusted by the portrayal of the peaceful protest.

Later on the show, Rachel is joined by women sporting advocates Meghan Murphy and Linda Blade to discuss why fewer girls are entering sports than boys. Murphy also has a prediction on the future of trans ideology.

Tune in now!

The Faulkner Show | Stand-up comedians CANCELLED for being too controversial

We are now at the stage in Canada’s downfall where mayors are cancelling stand-up comedy shows because certain comics are deemed to be too controversial. God forbid people want to laugh a little.

In Peace River, Alberta, the mayor attempted to cancel a Danger Cats show and the city of Comox, BC, successfully shut down a show by allegedly attempting to bribe a local club owner out of hosting the comedy trio.

Brendan Black of the Danger Cats joins Harrison Faulkner on the latest episode of The Faulkner Show.

The Danger Cats are on tour now.

Trudeau supports Ukraine using US missiles in long-range attack on Russia

Source: X

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Defence Minister Bill Blaire support Ukraine’s recent long-range attack on Russia using US missiles – a move Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned would amount to a declaration of war from NATO countries.

Ukraine launched American long-range missiles into Russia after outgoing US President Joe Biden approved the attack. The escalation comes just two months before President Donald Trump takes office, promising peace negotiations between the two belligerent countries.

Following Russian missile and drone strikes, which reportedly killed 11 people, including two children, leaving eighty-nine injured, including 11 children – Ukraine has launched US-army-made Army Tactical Missile Systems, ATACMS, into Russia for the first time.

Tuesday is the 1000-day mark since Russia invaded Ukraine. According to NATO, North Korea sent an estimated ten thousand soldiers to aid Russia in driving out Ukrainian forces from its Kursk border region in the last month.

With just two months left in the White House, the Biden Administration gave the green light for Ukraine to use the ATACMS long-range strikes into Russia.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said Ukraine launched the attack in the Bryansk region Monday night. It claimed that six US-army-made ATACMS were used in the attack and that five of the six were intercepted while debris from one of the missiles fell on a military base, causing a fire. Russia reports no casualties or damage from the barrage.

Tuesday morning, Putin signed a revised nuclear doctrine, which states that any massive aerial attack on Russia could trigger a nuclear response and that any such attack would be considered a joint attack if NATO was involved.

In response to reporters at the G20 Summit in Brazil on Monday, Trudeau said he supports the U.S. and its allies’ decision to allow Ukraine to launch aerial attacks into Russia.

“I have, for months now, talked about how important it is to degrade the capacity of the Russian military to strike into Ukraine with impunity because Ukraine hasn’t been able to strike on factories and military production sites in Russia,” Trudeau said. “I think it’s a good thing that the United States has done that and other partners are doing that.”

Blaire also supported the US decision to relax restrictions on Ukraine in its use of the US-made long-range weapons.

“Canada has taken a position in support of Ukraine’s request, and also, we place no geographic restrictions on the use of any of the armaments or munitions that Canada provides to Ukraine,” Blaire said in a scrum Monday. “Everything we were able to do to help Ukraine defend itself from that illegal invasion will bring us closer to peace.”

Blaire stated that future discussions about the conflict will inevitably occur, but Canada supports the US decision in the meantime. He said the easing of restrictions will be important in allowing Ukraine to defend itself by targeting Russia’s missile launch sites, airfields, and “other military installations.”

“NATO has been responding to, and Ukraine is also responding to an escalation in aggression from Russia, with the use of now, North Korean soldiers, the use of North Korean munitions, and some of the further attacks, particularly missile and drone attacks that Russia is sending towards Ukraine,” Blaire said.

In September, Putin said the use of long-range missiles would constitute a joint attack by NATO.

“The Ukrainian army is not capable of using cutting-edge high-precision long-range systems supplied by the West,” Putin said. “These weapons are impossible to employ without intelligence data from satellites, which Ukraine does not have. This can only be done using the European Union’s satellites, or US satellites – in general, NATO satellites.”

He also claimed the operation of those missiles could only be assigned by NATO military personnel and that Ukrainian servicemen were incapable of doing so.

“If this decision is made, it will mean nothing short of direct involvement – it will mean that NATO countries, the United States, and European countries are parties to the war in Ukraine,” Putin said. “This will mean that NATO countries – the United States and European countries – are at war with Russia.”

When asked to confirm or deny Putin’s claims, the Department of National Defence did not respond to True North’s requests to comment.

Following Trump’s election victory, Putin said he was open to negotiating a withdrawal from Ukraine, though the details of what that would look like are not known. 

Similarly, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said a Trump win means the war would “end sooner” and that nothing he heard from his conversation with Trump following his victory indicated a departure from Ukraine’s national interests.

Ontario to close 10 supervised drug sites, shift focus to recovery and housing

Source: X

Premier Doug Ford has vowed to shut the doors on ten supervised drug consumption sites as Ontario moves towards a recovery and housing model to deal with the addiction crisis. 

The Ford government tabled its Safer Streets, Stronger Communities Act on Monday, which codifies a ban on where supervised injection sites can be located. 

The legislation bans supervised drug consumption sites near child care centres and schools in response to growing public outcry, closing 10 existing sites, including five in Toronto. 

The omnibus legislation is part of a broader bill introducing other changes involving sex offenders and auto theft.

While Ontario will still be permitted to greenlight municipal requests to the federal government regarding supervised consumption sites, Minister of Health Sylvia Jones confirmed that she doesn’t plan to approve said requests.

“Municipalities and organizations like public health units have to first come to the province because we don’t want them bypassing and getting any federal approval for something that we vehemently disagree with,” Jones told reporters on Monday.

The new legislation extends the provincial government’s powers in areas where it previously had to defer to the federal government, meaning cities will now have to seek approval from the provincial government first when requesting such facilities. 

When asked what criteria would have to be met for the province to grant an exception, Jones made it “clear” that “there will be no further safe injection sites in the province of Ontario under our government.”

Within the announcement that it will be shutting down 10 existing sites, the Ontario government also announced the creation of 19 new intensive addiction recovery facilities that will be referred to as HART Hubs. 

The new spaces, which will combine addiction recovery with 375 “highly supportive” housing units, have been granted a $378 million budget. 

According to government figures, over 80 non-profit groups have already expressed interest in running 10 of the 19 hubs and preference will be given to those that have a pre-existing relationship with housing and addiction services.

The supervised sites slated to be shut down have until March 31 next year to close their doors, at which point the HART Hubs program is poised to be up and running, allowing for a smooth transition. 

However, Jones noted that supervised consumption sites would still be closing in March even if the HART Hubs are not yet ready. 

“We are assessing the proposals right now and we fully intend to have the approvals in place in time,” said Jones.

The Hubs will receive an annual budget of $6.3 million, with $1.3 million specifically allocated to supportive housing. 

An additional $1.8 million will be granted for one-time startup costs.

“In a year from now, you will see HART hubs operationalized in the province of Ontario, 19 demonstration sites in total,” said Jones.

“We will be able to assess the efficacy, the ability for those HART models to actually provide the services out of addiction and into treatment pathways.”

The Daily Brief | Trudeau wants you to prioritize climate change over feeding your family

Source: Facebook

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lectured Canadians about prioritizing climate change over feeding their families ahead of the G20 Leaders Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 

Plus, after bungling Canada’s immigration system, Trudeau released a video on YouTube addressing the mismanaged immigration system, blaming “bad actors.” 

And the RCMP has thwarted an Iranian plot to assassinate the former attorney general of Canada and minister of justice, Irwin Cotler. 

Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and Noah Jarvis!

David Eby’s new cabinet is a continuation of radical left policies: BC Conservatives

Source: X

British Columbia Premier David Eby has sworn in his new cabinet following his razor-thin victory in the October provincial election. B.C. Conservatives say the new government is a continuation of Eby’s “radical” left-wing policies.

The cabinet was sworn in on Monday, with veteran MLAs and some fresh faces filling its ranks.

One of the most notable changes to the structure of Eby’s inner circle was Adrian Dix who was shuffled to the Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions, leaving behind his post as the former Minister of Health.

Dix, who oversaw British Columbia’s COVID-19 response, left the department plagued with several issues, including staffing shortages, long wait times and high volumes of drug-related hospital visits.

According to pollsters, healthcare was among the top issues for B.C. voters in the last election, along with housing prices, affordability, inflation and rising interest rates.

“Dix in Energy doesn’t exactly build confidence for investment in our province,” Angelo Isidorou, the Conservative Party of British Columbia’s executive director, told True North. “He failed as health minister and will fail as energy minister.”

Dix switched roles with former Energy Minister Josie Osborne, who will now be B.C.’s Health Minister.

As environment minister, Dix will head the CleanBC project, with the mandate to lower “climate-changing emissions” by 40% by 2030.

Isidorou pointed to rookie MLA Christine Boyle, a former Vancouver city councillor and reported friend of the Eby family, among others, as a source of future issues for the province.

Boyle is the B.C. NDP’s new Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation Minister. The new minister will likely be kept busy, including with relations with the Haida Gwai Indigenous community, to which the government has agreed to grant land titles over Crown-owned land.

“David Eby’s cabinet is a sign he is going to continue down this radical path,” Isidorou said.
“Promoting people like Christine Boyle, who publicly called for the police to be defunded, is incredibly irresponsible. British Columbians deserve better.”

Boyle was among five Vancouver city councillors who called for the Vancouver Police Department’s budget to be cut by 1% in 2020 amid pressure from the Black Lives Matter movement. The move resulted in a $5.7 million loss in taxpayer funding for the VPD.

Other rookie MLAs found themselves jobs in Eby’s cabinet, too. The newly elected NDP MLA Tamara Davidson was appointed Environment and Parks Minister, and Diana Gibson is the new Minister of Jobs, Economic Development, and Innovation, which is another key file.

BC NDP MLA Niki Sharma will remain as Attorney General but will now also serve as B.C.’s deputy premier, taking over for Mike Farnworth, who won his seat in Port Coquitlam.

Brena Bailey, the former Jobs Minister, has been shuffled in as B.C.’s new Finance Minister. Bailey will inherit a massive budget deficit of over $60 billion. When Eby took office, the late Premier John Horgan handed him a $704 million surplus, which he flipped into one of the worst deficits in the province’s history.

According to the B.C. government, the annual deficit spending for the fiscal year 2024 / 2025 is slated to be $9 billion. By 2026 / 2027 that deficit is projected to be $126.8 billion.

As the former Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions will now be under the purview of the Ministry of Health, its former minister, Jennifer Whiteside, has been given the leadership over the Ministry of Labour. Whiteside previously served as the head of the Health Employees Union.

A former RCMP officer, Garry Begg, will be the new Public Safety and Solicitor General of B.C. Begg’s riding of Surrey–Guildford narrowly stayed NDP by only 22 votes.

In addition to a historically high number of ministers, 27, Eby appointed 14 parliamentary secretary positions.

“The expansion of his cabinet to include 27 ministers, along with the appointment of 14 parliamentary secretaries, raises significant concerns about the size of the government and fiscal responsibility,” Rustad said on X. “This isn’t just government expansion; it’s a blatant misuse of taxpayer dollars — more salaries, administrative costs, and increased public funds being diverted from essential services.”

A house speaker has yet to be chosen, as BC Conservative Leader John Rustad has stated that he isn’t offering any BC Conservative MLAs for the role. 

If one of Eby’s MLAs chooses to apply for the role and is accepted, the BC NDP will lose its majority status and be forced to ally with either the Green Party, who won two seats or find common ground with the BC Conservatives to get anything done.

Poilievre blasts Trudeau, vowing to “fight fire with fire” on trade deals with the US 

Source: X

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said he would never have signed a US-Canada trade deal, which left the possibility of 10% tariffs open. He vowed that a future Conservative government would “fight fire with fire” when dealing with President Donald Trump on trade.

In an interview with Global News on Saturday, Poilievre blasted Trudeau for leaving Canada with a weak economy while the incoming Trump administration promised a more economically competitive America globally.

The United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement, which replaced NAFTA in 2020, is designed to allow tariff-free trade among North American countries. One clause of the agreement would allow up to 10% tariffs under certain circumstances, including issues over national security.

“We should be exempt from all these tariffs. I can’t believe that Trudeau signed a trade deal with Trump that leaves open the possibility of a 10% tariff,” Poilievre said. “I never would have agreed to that.”

He noted that Trudeau also signed a trade deal on softwood lumber which keeps US tariffs in place.

“Harper got those lifted in 90 days as Prime Minister Trudeau has had nine years and three presidents, and not only are the tariffs back in place, they’ve been doubled, killing forestry jobs right across British Columbia,” Poilievre said.

He vowed to end the softwood tariffs and gain exemption from the US “Buy America” program, which requires America’s federal agencies to prefer domestically produced materials and manufactured goods when using federal funds.

Poilievre said Trudeau’s policies have given half a trillion dollars of Canadian investments to America, and he would improve the economy and reverse the damage done.

“I’ll fight fire with fire. The Americans have taken a net half trillion dollars of our investment in the last nine years,” he said. “We were winning the investment war with the Americans before Trudeau, having more American dollars here than we had there.”

Poilievre said Trudeau’s NDP-Liberal government’s “rampant tax increases” have “pushed money out of our country,” leading to the average American worker making $22,000 more than Canadians.

As reported by True North, a recent Fraser Institute study noted the disparity as well. The study found that every Canadian province ranked lower in median per-person income than each of the 50 US states.

“I want our money back,” Poilievre said. “I will be axing the carbon tax, cutting income tax, cutting taxes on investment, to bring home those hundreds of billions of dollars and to bring home production and paychecks for our people.”

Despite the tough talk, Poilievre stated that he was committed to working with the Trump administration if elected as Prime Minister.

“We have no choice. It’s that we live next door to the biggest economic and military superpower the world has ever seen. Trump wants what’s best for American workers. I want what’s best for Canadian workers,” he said.

Poilievre vowed that Canada wouldn’t be “suckers anymore” under his leadership.

“Trump would love nothing more to keep than keep Trudeau in power because he can walk all over him, and he can take his money,” Poilievre said.

He said that if Trudeau’s plan to quadruple the carbon tax to 61 cents a litre comes to pass, Trump will easily convince Canadian businesses to move south of the border.

He said Trump would be on the phone urging companies to leave the “poverty, the hunger, the homeless encampments and food lines” behind and start a business in the US with its low taxes and no carbon tax.

“So that’s what you’re in store for with Justin Trudeau,” Poilievre said. “Trump wants our jobs. Trudeau wants to help him take them.”

The office of the Prime Minister did not respond to True North’s requests to comment.

Conservatives call for Boissonnault’s resignation following revelation that business shared P.O. box with cocaine bust suspect

Source: X

The saga of Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault’s former company Global Health Imports has taken yet another turn as corporate filings revealed it shared a post office box with a woman implicated in two major drug busts. 

The mailbox was rented from an Edmonton UPS store and appeared on the 2020 licence for Global Health Imports while Boissonnault was still actively involved.

According to Health Canada records obtained by the National Post through access-to-information legislation, the mailbox was shared with a different company’s registration and registered under the name of  Francheska Leblond.

Leblond is a woman who has a history of run-ins with the law dating back to 2008, according to Alberta Court of Justice records. 

This overlap has sparked concerns over security gaps in how the Trudeau government has vetted its cabinet ministers.

It also comes on the heels of Boissonnault’s latest scandal involving claims of Indigenous heritage while receiving federal contracts under a program reserved for Indigenous-owned businesses. 

The Indigenous heritage scandal was in addition to the already highly publicized “Other Randy” scandal regarding Boissonnault’s continued involvement in GHI business dealings after being elected as a cabinet minister. 

The culmination of these scandals has led the Conservative party to launch a petition calling for Boissonnault’s resignation. 

Boissonnault confirmed that he sold his GHI shares this year and is no longer associated with the company he co-founded in response to public backlash.

However, Global News reported that his co-founder Stephen Anderson and Leblond had registered a business together called 13560449 Canada Ltd. in Sept. 2021, while Boissinault was still involved with GHI. 

Boissonnault did not respond to True North’s request for comment. However, his spokesperson Alice Hansen, told the National Post that he is now at odds with his former partner, Anderson.

“Minister Boissonnault does not know, and has never met Ms. Lablond,” said Hansen, adding that she “had no involvement” with GHI.

Authorities in the Dominican Republic found over 200 kilograms of cocaine on a Toronto-bound charter plane in April 2022, while Leblond was on board as a passenger.

The discovery resulted in all seven passengers and flight crew being detained in the DR for months before eventually being released without charge.

It was later reported in March 2023 that an Edmonton drug-smuggling ring was responsible for chartering the flight.

Leblond was also arrested by the Edmonton Police Service’s Drug and Gang Enforcement Unit in 2013 along with two others in a cocaine bust. She was charged with several weapons offences and two drug possession offences, however, all charges were eventually withdrawn. 

Additionally, Leblond received a year of parole after being convicted of marijuana possession in 2008.

“Trudeau’s Minister from Edmonton Randy Boissonnault’s company connected with cocaine smugglers. Randy owned 50% of the company! Liars. Fraudsters. International drug smugglers,” wrote Conservative MP Micheal Barrett in a post to X.  “This is the company kept by a Trudeau cabinet minister.”

Boissonnault created GHI, a medical supplies company along with Anderson during an intermittent period when he was not in government as a result of losing his seat between 2019 and 2021. 

During this time, the company registered with the same P.O. box address as Lelond with Health Canada on its federal licence as an operating site.

According to Hansen, the decision was made on the advice of Boissonnault’s lawyer and he was under the impression that “this P.O box belonged to Mr. Anderson. This was the height of COVID and both individuals were working at distance.”

“Minister Boissonnault will be exploring legal action against Mr. Anderson,” added Hansen. 

It remains unknown how long GHI’s association with Leblond continued for.

“Be it resolved that we call on Randy Boissonnault, who lies about who he is and who he isn’t, and is a fake and a fraud just like his boss Justin Trudeau, to resign immediately,” reads the Conservative’s petition. 

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