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Saturday, June 28, 2025

Pastor fined $80K for denying Covid inspectors entry into church

An Edmonton church has been fined $80,000 by an Alberta judge for denying entry to Covid public health rule inspectors on several occasions. 

Judge Shelagh Creagh of the Provincial Court of Alberta said that Pastor Tracy Fortin blocked public health officials from entering her church to ensure compliance with mandates. 

“These were deliberate and intentional acts,” wrote Creagh. “These offences are very serious. Laws dealing with public health are of fundamental importance.”

Fortin’s church, the Church in the Vine, has been found guilty of obstructing public health officers before. 

Lawyer James Kitchen called the judge’s ruling a “very standard” view of the Covid pandemic. 

“I think it’s pretty safe to say that the Church in the Vine questions or rejects that narrative. The judge obviously subscribes to a very standard narrative view of COVID,” said Kitchen.

“You know, they weren’t shocked or dismayed or surprised. From their perspective, and from the perspective of those who would agree with them, this is really a travesty that this type of thing is happening.”

Kitchen said it was absurd there was any fine at all. 

“Whether it’s eight thousand or 80 thousand … the idea that we’re paying fines for this is a travesty for them and those who agree with them,” said Kitchen. 

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Fortin plans on appealing the decision, claiming a breach of religious freedom rights.

The Fortin case is one among a string of incidents where church pastors were targeted because of public health measures. Calgary-based pastor Artur Pawlowski was ordered by a judge to do community service and only cite “medical experts” when talking about Covid-19 after being found guilty of violating mandates. 

Canada’s mandates targeting churches and places of worship have spurred international condemnations. 

Several US lawmakers have called on the Canadian government to be added to a list of global religious freedom rights abusers. 

A bill recently passed by the Ohio legislature called the mandates in Canada “overly burdensome and unjustified.” 

“All of the Canadian provinces have at times prohibited religious gatherings outright, or have limited the size of religious gatherings, and many provinces still have severe size limitations on religious gatherings either held indoors or outdoors, punishable by harassment, fines, and jail time of faith leaders, thus limiting the parishioners’ or members’ ability to attend the assembly of their choice, and generally limiting religious liberty,” the bill claimed.

PPC Quebec Lieutenant says party offers a “common sense vote”

The People’s Party of Canada’s (PPC) Quebec Lieutenant Daniel Brisson says his party is reaching more Canadians, and not just conservative voters.

“The PPC is not just a conservative vote. It’s a common sense vote. And we reach people from the NDP, the Green Party, even the Liberals,” Brisson told True North’s Elie Cantin-Nantel at a PPC Canada Day event in Ottawa.

Brisson also touched on Conservative Party leadership candidate Pierre Poilievre and the monumental march of Canadian Armed Forces veteran James Topp.

Campaign sources say Danielle Smith has sold over 7,000 memberships in 10 days 

The United Conservative Party (UCP) leadership candidate Danielle Smith’s campaign has sold over 7,000 memberships in 10 days, True North has learned. 

Two Smith campaign sources confirmed the numbers to True North. The sources are not being named because they were not authorized to speak about the matter publicly.

The sales indicate that Smith is far ahead of her other eight competitors in the race for Alberta’s premiership.

Smith’s 7,000 membership sales reflect sales that occurred after July 4-5, meaning the campaign’s actual sales are likely higher. Smith was the first candidate to jump into the UCP leadership race on May 19 — less than 24 hours after Premier Jason Kenney announced his intentions to resign. Her campaign began selling memberships much earlier than July 4, but were unable to accurately track sales.

The 7,000 sales True North is reporting seem “quite low” compared to Smith’s actual membership sales, said campaign manager Matthew Altheim.

All UCP leadership candidates have access to membership sales purchased through their candidate-specific portals, referring to a URL where Albertans can purchase a membership directly from a candidate’s campaign.  But as True North previously reported, the Smith campaign did not have their portal setup until July 4-5. The campaign instead sold memberships on the general UCP website which doesn’t allow candidates to accurately track sales.

Campaigns can estimate sales sold through the general UCP website. Once a campaign email is sent, the campaign can track which users click a link to visit the UCP site to purchase a membership. From there, the campaign can make an educated guess on what percentage of those users completed a membership purchase.

By tracking membership sales, candidates can gauge their support — it’s probable but not guaranteed that party supporters who purchase a membership through a candidate’s website will also vote for that contestant in the leadership race. 

Smith’s membership sales can in part be attributed to her large online presence and reach, which far exceeds that of her opponents. A video she posted promising never to lockdown Alberta again has almost 200,000 views on Twitter. Another video pledging to introduce the Alberta Sovereignty Act as her first act as Premier — legislation which would bar federal bills deemed harmful to Alberta — has over 200,000 views on Twitter and Facebook.

The UCP has seen an increase of approximately 11,000 memberships since the leadership race began. That spike represents memberships sold from the time the leadership contest began — when Kenney announced his intentions to resign on May 18 — to when Toews was approved as the first official candidate on July 5.

Smith’s sales indicate that total memberships sold is now likely far higher than the 11,000 new members the party had as of July 5, because her 7,000 sales began when the last membership was printed revealing the 11,000 increase.

UCP executives told True North that campaigns sometimes overestimate how many memberships they’ve sold to create momentum for their candidate. They pointed to the ongoing federal Conservative party leadership race as an example. Pierre Poilievre claims he sold 312,000 memberships, now-disqualified Patrick Brown claimed more than 150,000 sales and Jean Charest said his team sold “in the tens of thousands.”

Smith officially handed her leadership package in last week with 4,500 signatures — over four times the amount required by the party — and her entire $175,000 contest fee. She’s the first candidate to submit all required funding.

Poilievre favoured by Conservative voters: poll

A new poll shows Conservative leadership candidate Pierre Poilievre has a strong lead among Conservative supporters.

The Leger-Postmedia poll conducted between June 30 and July 3 saw 48% of Conservative supporters choose Poilievre as their top choice.

It is important to note that this poll measures the support of likely Conservative voters, not Conservative Party of Canada members, who are the only people eligible to vote in the leadership race.

Rival candidate Jean Charest received 14% support among respondents. Leslyn Lewis received 3%, while Roman Baber and Scott Aitchison both received 1%.

Twenty-six percent of those surveyed said they were undecided, while 3% said they supported none of the candidates.

The poll was conducted before the disqualification of Patrick Brown over allegations his campaign broke financing rules. Brown, who claimed to have sold over 150,000 memberships, came third in the poll, with just 4% support.

Poilievre’s support increased by four percentage points from the last Leger poll conducted in mid-June. The support level for the other candidates did not increase.

“It is interesting that the results for the candidates have been very consistent over the course of the campaign. Charest, Brown (still in it when we polled) and Lewis, have not moved since we last asked the question in June and they did not move much from May,” Leger executive vice-president Andrew Enns told the National Post.

“It would suggest that opinions among supporters formed early in this race and have been fairly locked-in since.”

Poilievre has placed first in every leadership poll conducted among Conservative Party of Canada supporters, including a straw poll by True North of active members.

True North’s survey saw Poilievre receiving 78.5% support among respondents. Lewis placed second with 11.8% and Baber placed third with 8.7%

Meanwhile, 0.7% of respondents picked Charest as their first choice, while 0.2% chose Aitchison and 0.1% picked Brown.

Polling done based on popular vote may not provide an accurate prediction of the final results, given that the winner is the one who gets the majority of riding points based on a ranked voting system that weights each riding with 100 points, irrespective how many members are in that riding.

In the 2020 Conservative leadership race, the polls hinted at a Peter MacKay victory, and while he won the first ballot, Erin O’Toole was elected leader on the third. Meanwhile, polls during the 2017 leadership race predicted Maxime Bernier had the best shot of winning. Bernier ended up being in the lead all the way to the 12th ballot, but Andrew Scheer narrowly won in the 13th round.

The Conservative Party leadership election is being conducted via mail-in ranked ballots, with a candidate needing to receive over 50% of riding points to win the race. 

More information about how the election process works can be found here

Conservative Party members have already begun getting their ballots. They must be filled out and received by the party before September 6 at 5pm ET.

The Conservative Party is set to announce the winner of the leadership race on September 10.

PECKFORD: A Magna Carta for Canada

Former Newfoundland premier Brian Peckford, the last surviving first minister from the constitutional process that gave us the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, spoke at the George Jonas Freedom Award dinner in Burnaby, British Columbia on July 13, 2022. The Freedom Award was to be presented to Freedom Convoy organizer Tamara Lich, but she was unable to attend as she remains behind bars in Ottawa. Below is the text of Peckford’s remarks, which is being republished with permission and has only been edited for the purposes of formatting.

It is a real honour to be asked to speak to you on this very important occasion for freedom. Especially to honour someone I have met and with whom I participated at the Trucker Convoy in Ottawa. And most particularly, our participation at the impromptu press conference to foreshadow a dark day in our constitutional history when our elected representatives invoked the unconstitutional Emergencies Act. Equally momentous was meeting Tamara’s Board of Directors: honest, hard working Canadians fighting for our rights and freedoms on the precincts of our federal Parliament.

Those days and hours will not be forgotten — by me or by many Canadians. It reminds us of just how fragile democracy really is.

Individual Freedom is a hard fought idea but one that has remained active in human governance for millennia. Socrates, appearing before the Athenian jury over 2500 years ago, is a historic moment that captures us all when considering this idea, fighting for his right to free speech. The great Cicero, in the first century BC, fighting for the taxpayers of Sicily before the Roman Senate, and the English Magna Carta in 1215, individuals fighting for rights of redress, less power for the monarch.  

Then there is the American Declaration of Independence, its Constitution and Bill Of Rights and the Federalist Papers, and the early French Revolution of 1789 and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.  

And then there are the great western thinkers like Montesquieu, Locke, Voltaire, Mill, Paine, and Burke. And Americans like Jefferson, Jay, Hamilton and Madison. Later important political thinkers include Hayek, Popper, Hoffer, Arendt, Kirk and Sowell.

With the exponential growth of the administrative state in the later part of the twentieth century and the first decades of the 21st, the individual rights in America’s Bill of Rights and the more recent individual rights and freedoms in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada, have come under attack, culminating in the attempted wholesale slaughter of these rights during the past almost two and one half years of the so-called pandemic. Judicial activism was unleashed — and the intent, spirit, and even plain meaning of a Constitution was undermined. As American Judge Robert Bork exclaimed in his 2002 book ‘Coercing Virtue’:

“Increasingly, the power of the people to govern themselves is diluted, and their ability to choose the moral environment in which they live is steadily diminished.”

Bork quotes American James Madison’s famous statement:

“There are more instances of the abridgement of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations.”

In Canada, books like the ‘Charter Revolution and The Court Party’ by Professors F.L. Morton and Rainer Knopff highlighted the new judicial activism in our country where the authors state the courts ‘no longer just tell policymakers what they may not do but also what they must do.’

Canada’s Charter is a relatively new creature, just 40 years old this year. The American Bill of Rights was enacted in 1791.

I was a first minister barely 15 months, June 1980, when the national political conversation centred around the question of patriation and a first Charter of Rights and Freedoms document – involving a meeting of the Prime Minister and the Premiers. Earlier attempts had been made at patriation but ultimately failed with the federal government and the provincial governments unable to agree. Older members of this audience might remember the failed attempts like the Victoria Charter and the Pépin-Robarts Report in the 1970s.

As a result of this June 1980 meeting, a process was put in place to try again at patriation and to include a Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Of course, any potential opening of the Constitution would entail more than just these two items since there were numerous issues that required attention. Only two months later in August 1980, my administration issued a document under my signature as Premier and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs entitled ‘Towards The Twenty First Century — Together.’

It said among other things:

“The entrenchment of democratic rights and fundamental freedoms is a means of giving explicit constitutional recognition to values that have served Canada well. Newfoundland, therefore, supports a Charter of Rights which will entrench the democratic rights and fundamental freedoms of Canadians.”

But, in what can now be described as most prescient, it went on to say:

“While explicit constitutional reference will have a significant normative value, the ultimate guarantee of liberty rests with the vigilance of the citizen, the accountability of government, the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law.”

This rather good start was abruptly halted by the prime minister of the time, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, indicating that the premiers were too difficult, and that he and his administration could and would go it alone. He then had a bill passed in the Parliament to unilaterally patriate the Constitution with his version of a Charter of Rights and Freedoms. It was as a result of this provocation that eight of the provinces indicated that they opposed this federal move with two of the provinces, Ontario and New Brunswick, supporting the move. The eight provinces went to court saying that the federal action was unconstitutional.

In a groundbreaking ruling on September 28, 1981, the Supreme Court of Canada, many of its members friends of the then-prime minister, ruled that, indeed, the federal move by the prime minister was unconstitutional, and that a substantial number of provinces needed to agree for any such action. The Supreme Court members, then, were friends of the law first.

As a result of this Court decision, a substantial number of first ministers would have to be involved in any constitutional change, not just the prime minister.

Following this decision, it was agreed by all the first ministers that one final attempt would be made — a make or break session of three days on November 3rd, 4th, and 5th.

The November meeting was tense, and all knew the stakes. It was the night of the 4th, as a result of a written proposal by Newfoundland, that a consensus was developing which resulted in seven of the group of eight first ministers (Quebec objected) forging a deal on the morning of the 5th that was then presented by me, as agreed to by the seven provinces, to all first ministers at a final meeting later that day. With some additional amendments, The Partition Agreement was born, the next year to be known as the Constitution Act 1982.

Constitutional Attack

What is of great interest and is part of the historical record is that the ink was hardly dry when this historic achievement was undermined in two important ways:

A) The process by which the deal came together was dismissed and other unsubstantiated theories were advanced and remain to this day what some scholars think is the factual record.

Authors like Robert Sheppard and Michael Valpy, who wrote the book ‘The National Deal’ in January, 1982, proceeded to describe the process with blatant inaccuracies.

Later, Ron Graham wrote another book on the topic, ‘The Last Act: Pierre Elliott Trudeau, The Gang Of Eight And The Fight For Canada” which should have qualified as the best fiction book for that year.

And then there was the article in the National Post newspaper by University of Calgary Professors Morton and Cooper, ‘The Night of The Long Knives, Who Dunnit,’ describing fanciful theories based on nothing.

It is interesting that none of these authors or professors were at the patriation meetings, or produced any documents or credible evidence. I was there. And their non-factual statements are often given as much credence as statements by someone who was there. And I produced the evidence in my book of 2012 entitled ‘Some Day the Sun Will Shine and Have Not Will Be No More.’

To this day, almost a decade later, no one has questioned the statements and documents produced in that book.

Of course, these early false descriptions should have warned us all that this was a foreshadowing of what was happening in the judicial field.

Hence, my second point is:

B. Creeping into the legal, constitutional environment was this notion of a national constitution to be something more or less than what was actually written. And this to be determined by unelected judges ruling on matters constitutional. This ‘living tree’ theory has taken over most of the law schools of the country. Judges gave themselves license through the Charter to create all manner of new powers.

Note the words of Law Professor Lorraine Weinrib as quoted in the book ‘The Charter Revolution and the Court Party: “The Court’s policy making is mandated by the Charter itself.” And former Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, now with the Communist Chinese Hong Kong justice system, said in 1999 in a speech that “when politicians duck serious issues, courts ‘move in to fill the vacuum.’”

The court would decide what issues politicians actually ducked, and then it would determine what a new policy would be.

Where, in the Charter or in the overall constitution generally, are there such provisions that provide this power to the judges? Nowhere. These powers were created by these unelected people out of thin air.

In 2002, on the 20th anniversary of the Charter, I gave a speech to the Continuing Legal Education Society of BC and the Federal Department of Justice. I was asked the question — is what has happened what you expected regarding the Charter? My answer was no.

Here is what I said in that speech:

“I did not think that the Supreme Court of Canada would go as far as it has in many of the judgements. Being the guardian of individual rights and freedoms is one thing, but actively entering the field of lawmaking and/or policy making through the adjudication of provisions in the Charter is quite another.”

I quoted the prime minister’s advisor Eddie Goldenberg as saying, “I think it had a more profound impact than people expected.”

Most tellingly, the former Deputy Minister of Justice Roger Tasse’s reported comments on the decision in the British Columbia Motor Vehicles Act 1985 makes the point — “I don’t know if it was a mistake, but they certainly went beyond what was contemplated by the drafters.”

Then there is the late premier of Saskatchewan, Allan Blakeney, a fellow first minister who was involved in the Charter and the patriation process, and lawyer to boot, who said this after 20 years of watching the courts mangle the Charter:

“The fact that the Charter gave paramountcy to basic individual fundamental rights does not mean the judiciary was empowered to make incursions into the policy domain to the extent that has happened in the last twenty years.”

Mr. Blakeney went on to refer to the most egregious case where the Supreme Court took onto itself the power of the purse, overturning the legitimate authority of an elected legislature.

Judge William Marshall on the Newfoundland Court of Appeal, in a dissenting opinion, had this to say about this same case:

“However, it is safe to say without fear of contradiction, that there is no place under the democratically oriented separation of powers doctrine, whatever the system of government, for the judiciary to be invested with ultimate power over any aspect of the public expenditure.”

And Then The So-Called Pandemic Hit

The soil was sure fertile when the so-called pandemic came along almost two and a half years ago for the Canadian administrative state to cultivate this ground.

A government false narrative made more so by the questionable federal health officials’ connection to the Chinese-influenced WHO, perpetrated by a lame and publicly subsidized press. An out of control tech industry dominated by a few ego driven billionaire internationalists. A pharmaceutical industry that had already been found guilty of deceit around the world, but that had built up enough power to capture science and to control the public regulatory agencies. And finally, a judicial activism that has become a lawmaker, not just a law keeper, a supposedly independent agency of democracy appointed by a corrupt political system, producing opinions at the Provincial Supreme Court level that ignore provisions of the very Charter on which they are rendering life altering, momentous decisions.

And in my case, a Federal Court that delays a hearing already agreed to by the parties. The interests of the court participants apparently come before the rights and freedoms of the millions of Canadians still affected by the federal travel mandates.

And this was all aided and abetted by a failed parliamentary system – that obstructed justice, closed down parliamentary committees, was silent on the law-breaking of the prime minister, instituted an unconstitutional Emergencies Act, ignored the unsubstantiated, irresponsible, inappropriate opinions of our top judge, ignored the accusation of misogyny and racism leveled by the prime minister at some of his own citizens, and rendered members of parliament mere instruments of abuse by the party whip – making a mockery of the democratic principle of accountability.

This is best reflected in the 2019 book by our own scholar on political governance, Donald J. Savoie, in his seminal book, ‘Democracy In Canada — The Disintegration Of Our Institutions.’  In his introduction he makes the point:

“Canadian representative democracy needs to be on guard against mediocrity, complacency, poor journalism, low regard for politicians, a debased public service, a sense that citizens have no control over their Government, and that the country’s national political institutions are unable to reflect Canadian society and its regions. People instinctively sense a problem with the state of Canadian democracy.”

Mr. Savoie’s polite scholarly language of 2019 might be a little sharper now after two plus years of unconstitutional, unscientific mandates by all 14 governments and legislatures of this nation. It is a plague upon our time that independent reports and scientific analysis outside of the government were deliberately ignored. Take, for example, our fellow Canadian professor, Douglas Allen of Simon Fraser University, right here in the city where we are now gathered, who published a report in April 2021 entitled ‘Covid Lockdown Cost/Benefits: A Critical Assessment of the Literature’ reviewing 80 studies examining government mandates.

On page 30 of that report the following is said: “…and we know that jurisdictions with limited to no lockdowns did not systematically have death rates that exceeded hard lockdown jurisdictions. Not only did they not exceed, but often they had equal or better performance.”

On page 43 the professor states from the data: “‘If lockdown only had a marginal effect on deaths, then by cost/benefit standards, lockdown has been a public policy disaster.”

What is most shocking (and no doubt why the report was not carried by the mainstream media) is that information was available very early about the negative effects of the lockdowns.

One could argue that the Covid-19 lockdown policy was only wrong ex post. Hindsight is 20/20, and looking back is unfair. In March of 2020, faced with an unknown virus and expert advice that millions of people would die without lockdown and isolation, politicians and public health officials made the correct decision at the time.

Such an argument is reasonable for March of 2020, and even possibly for April 2020. However, as noted in the literature review, by late April it was already known that i) the empirical predictions of the SIRS based models were wrong, ii) that the models made a number of questionable assumptions, iii) that the deaths were highly skewed to the elderly, and iv) that the costs were large.

The progression of understanding about the virus has improved over time, but it has not fundamentally changed. By August 2020, there was enough information available to show that any reasonable cost/benefit analysis would show that lockdowns were creating more harm than good.

It is unreasonable to suggest that a proper decision could not have been made in the fall when the second wave of infections hit.’

And then there was the Great Barrington Declaration, prepared by three of the leading researchers in the world and signed by tens of thousands of health professionals calling for a targeted approach, focusing on the most vulnerable and letting the rest of society remain open. One of those three authors, Dr. Sunetra Gupta, was maligned by the establishment. As we all know, the principles in this declaration have been proven to be valid.

And what of the work of Dr. Peter McCullough, Dr. Pierre Cory, the late Dr. Zelenko, the Doctors for Ethics Organization, the World Council of Health and the scores of other national and international organizations that have done legitimate research?

As if to rub salt in the wound, along comes ‘The Trusted News Initiative,’ a devious action to rid the public of an open and free press around the world. Of course, our 1.2 billion dollar publicly subsidized CBC was an eager participant. I am reminded of the statement by the modern day philosopher Hannah Arendt: “Only the mob and the elite can be attracted by the momentum of totalitarianism itself. The masses have to be won by propaganda.”

In British Columbia, the brave and highly qualified Dr. Charles Hoffe was harassed by his professional college of physicians and surgeons, denied hospital privileges, and maligned by the establishment for being a ‘vaccine skeptic.’

But then think of the ongoing harassment of Dr. Stephen Malthouse of BC, Dr. Francis Christian of Saskatchewan, Dr. Eric Payne of Alberta, and Dr. Byram Bridle of Ontario, all highly credentialed medical professionals.

And then the blatant avoidance of the valuable work of Lt. Col. David Redman in highlighting the Emergency Measures Organizations already in place in all provinces that could have been used in the very beginning to combat the so-called pandemic.

Future—A Magna Carta For Canada

What are we to do about the carnage that has been wrought?

Fortunately, we have the Justice Centre and courageous people like Tamara and her trucker heroes.  We must protect and support the work of such organizations and individuals. Anyone who has the privilege to be involved with the Justice Centre knows of the qualified professionals who work tirelessly to defend the rights and freedoms of Canadians.

But we must do more if we are to re-establish our democracy.

We must recognize and understand that bandaids won’t do, just like changing leaders of existing mainstream political parties. We have done that, and it’s this framework that has created where we are now. The parties must change, not necessarily the leaders.

We must get past this type of thinking — that tinkering will do.

The damage is immense. Major reform, now, is essential.

And It is not only the existing governments that are guilty, but our existing mainstream political parties, the press, big pharma, big tech and many of the institutions of civil society including our educational establishment.

Therefore, I have proposed what I call a Magna Carta for Canada—A First Step At Real Change.

Some of the major points are:

  • A Citizens led National Inquiry into the actions of all the Fourteen Governments of Canada to determine the necessity and constitutionality of their various mandates and lockdowns. Those found guilty of wrong doing to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Accountability must be the hallmark of all reform moving forward.
  • All registered Political Parties in Canada must produce annual publicly-audited financial statements. None presently in the Parliament of Canada do so. If we don’t know how they manage their party funds, how can we trust them with taxpayers funds?
  • Legislation must be introduced to make it unlawful for an elected member of a Parliament in Canada to serve if they have broken a Canadian law as determined by a court or the relevant Conflict of Interest Commissioner.
  • Education from grade 8 to 12 must include in its curriculum a mandatory civics subject. We must know and understand how our country works in order to fully participate in it.
  • Parliament’s power must be re-established, the power of the Prime Minister’s Office must be reduced. Therefore, a law restricting the workforce of the Privy Council Office and the Prime Minister’s Office — combined, it must not exceed 500 people.
  • A law must be passed prohibiting the federal government from signing any international agreement that in any way reduces the country’s sovereignty.
  • A law must be introduced ensuring that parliamentary committees cannot refuse to hear testimony that witnesses want to present. For example, the SNC-Lavalin affair and Jody Wilson-Raybould.
  • The appointment process for Supreme Court, federal, and provincial judges must have to go through Parliaments, and Parliaments’ decisions are final.
  • A private members’ motion presented to a federal, provincial or territorial parliament must be heard and voted upon within 6 months (sitting days) of its introduction.
  • An annual federal, provincial, and territorial first ministers conference must be held where first ministers outline in writing what they consider are the national concerns for that year.
  • balanced budgets must be legislated in all the parliaments of the country, and can only be breached in times of war or insurrection.
  • The two principles that introduce the Charter of Right and Freedoms, the supremacy of God and the rule of law, must be considered in the written judgment of any case involving the Charter.
  • Integrity, parliamentary supremacy, and the people, must be the guiding principles if we are to restore our democracy. Nothing less is acceptable.

Conclusion

I leave you with a quote from American physicist Freeman Dyson as quoted by Thomas Sowell in his important book, ’ Wealth , Poverty and Politics: An International Perspective.’

“The worst political blunder in the history of civilization was probably the decision by the Emperor of China in the year 1433 to stop exploring the oceans and to destroy the ships capable of exploration and the written records of their voyages. The decision was the result of powerful people pursuing partisan squabbles and neglecting the long range interests of the empire. This is a disease to which governments of all kinds, including democracies, are fatally susceptible.”

This year is the 50th anniversary of my being elected to a Canadian parliament.

May I hope, with you, that it is also the year, that with heroes like Tamara, we can eradicate this real disease — and restore our rights and freedoms — before it is too late.

UCP sees 11,000 membership increase as leadership contest kicks off

The United Conservative Party (UCP) has seen an increase of approximately 11,000 memberships since the leadership contest began in May, True North has learned.

Three sources who viewed the membership list confirmed the increase in membership sales to True North. The spike represents memberships sold from the time the leadership contest began — when Premier Jason Kenney announced his intentions to resign on May 18 — to when former Finance minister Travis Toews was approved as the first official candidate on July 5. 

Each time a leadership candidate is confirmed, the party prints a new membership list and distributes it to approved candidates. Right now, only the Toews campaign has access to the list, as he’s the only approved candidate currently. 

The list provided to approved candidates includes names and phone numbers of UCP members. Contestants are not given access to the party’s email list. Candidates must send emails directly to the party to distribute to the list.

The number of members has undoubtedly grown since Toews was approved on July 5, but the new list won’t be printed until the next candidate is approved. 

Party executives told True North they’re in the process of reviewing former Opposition Wildrose Party leader Danielle Smith’s application. Both she and Toews will receive an updated copy of the membership list once Smith is approved. 

The nine UCP leadership candidates have access to membership sales purchased through their candidate portals, referring to a URL where Albertans can purchase a membership directly from a candidate’s campaign.  

By tracking membership sales, candidates can gauge their support — it’s probable but not guaranteed that party supporters who purchase a membership through a candidate’s website will also vote for that contestant in the leadership race. 

Two sources told True North the Smith campaign did not have their portal set up until July 4-5 and instead sold memberships on the general UCP website, meaning they were unable to accurately track membership sales until 10 days ago. Toews had his portal on May 31 and Jean had a portal a couple days later. 

Party spokesperson Dave Prisco told True North on Thursday all candidates now have portals. 

UCP memberships can also be purchased directly through the party’s website and through paper documents which are sent to the party for registration. 

UCP executive director Dustin van Vugt told True North most memberships are purchased through the party’s website, meaning campaigns don’t know the total number of memberships — except when a new list is printed for official candidates, but even that quickly becomes out of date. 

Campaigns typically decline to share their membership sales for strategic reasons. 

However, party executives said campaigns sometimes overestimate about how many memberships they’ve sold to create momentum for their candidate. They pointed to the ongoing federal Conservative party leadership race as an example. Pierre Poilievre claims he sold 312,000 memberships, now-disqualified Patrick Brown claimed more than 150,000 sales and Jean Charest said his team sold “in the tens of thousands.”

Membership sales will likely spike in the days leading up to the August 12 cutoff, the last day to purchase a membership to vote in the leadership contest. The results will be announced on October 6.

Toronto continues to ignore the disastrous effects of its hotel shelter policy

The city of Toronto’s controversial plan to dump the homeless in three-star hotels during Covid was supposed to be a temporary measure only.

It was sold to Torontonians as a way of socially distancing the homeless during the pandemic and of providing those who were squatting in downtown parks a roof over their heads. But now more than two years later, the homeless hotels are still operating, many with a phalanx of security guards 24/7 to try to keep the residents from wreaking havoc on the surrounding neighbourhood.

In April, council quietly approved extensions to all of the hotels to next spring.

A significant number of residents in these homeless hotels are addicted to hard drugs and have mental health issues — but instead of receiving the counselling and support they so desperately need, are left to roam the neighbourhoods where they are located day and night.

One such homeless hotel is the Roehampton on Mt. Pleasant at Eglinton, which opened in July of 2020 to the surprise of this once quiet family neighbourhood. 

It’s lease, which was supposed to end in May, has now been extended at least until November and potentially until next April 30.

The initial negotiations for this hotel were handled secretively and in the three months following its opening, crime had skyrocketed in the vicinity of the shelter.

Police statistics showed that crime in the surrounding neighbourhood had jumped 30% compared to the summer before.

The Yonge-Eglinton and Mt. Pleasant East neighbourhoods — those two were most drastically impacted by the hotel shelter—saw increases in all major crime indicators except assaults compared to the summer before. The city responded by beefing up police presence around the shelter.

Two summers later, the crime appears to have moved to the Yonge-Eglinton neighbourhood where the homeless are able to blend in with the crowd. Reports of attacks, assaults and dangerous offenders with weapons are posted almost daily on the Community Safety Midtown Facebook page, which was started up when the Roehampton shelter first opened.

The Yonge-Eglinton neighbourhood, once known as Yonge and Eligible, is no longer single-friendly. It has completely changed.

Recently resident Melissa Cutler spoke exclusively to True North, about why she’s stopped running outside and the kind of assaults she’s both witnessed and experienced.

Cutler, a chiropractor and tennis instructor, was assaulted in March by a homeless man, who looked to be high on drugs. The police did nothing.

Mayor John Tory and the councillor responsible for bringing the shelter to the neighbourhood, John Matlow, have been absolutely silent on the impact. In fact, residents report that Matlow has tried to bully those who have said it’s unsafe.

70% of Canadians believe current airport situation is a national embarrassment

Seventy percent of Canadians believe the current situation at the country’s airports is a national embarrassment, according to a new poll. 

Canadian airports continue to be plagued with delays amid staffing shortages and remaining federal Covid mandates and restrictions.  

An Ipsos poll conducted for Global News saw that 58% of Canadians are currently avoiding airports, with that number being even higher (64%) among those over the age of 55.

Meanwhile, 23% of respondents said they recently experienced a delay while flying out of a Canadian airport.

In addition, 70% percent of Canadians surveyed say the ongoing situation at airports has become a national embarrassment.

While other airports around the world, including London Heathrow, have also been dealing with problems, 57% of Canadians do not think Canada is doing better than other countries when it comes to addressing its airport issues. 

Only 37% of respondents said the Trudeau government has done enough to address the ongoing flight delays and cancellations, while 35% said the airlines are doing enough. 

As for who is responsible for the current airport delays, 39% of Canadians blame the Trudeau government, airports, airlines and travellers.

Meanwhile, 22% of respondents placed the blame solely on the federal government, 18% placed it on airlines and 13% solely blamed airports. Eight percent said the responsibility is on “out of practice” Canadian travellers. 

As for the expected duration of the airport chaos, 55% of those surveyed believe that it is temporary and will be over by September, while 45% believe it will be a longer-term issue.

Many Canadians did, however, say that they are worried that the current airport situation is the “tip of the iceberg” of what’s to come in the post-pandemic world.

Sixty-six percent of respondents said they believe airport delays are “just the start” of more problems with basic public services that are to come.

Meanwhile, 67% said they believe governments have been focused on the wrong priorities and have neglected basic services such as ensuring that airports are functioning.

This is not the first poll to have found that the majority of Canadians are concerned about the current situation in airports. A Leger poll conducted earlier this month saw 53% of Canadians worried about airport delays, including cancelled flights and long lines. 

Despite airport delays that are concerning Canadians, the Trudeau government announced Thursday that it would resume random mandatory Covid testing for fully vaccinated air travellers.

The feds are also keeping their Covid mandates and restrictions at the border until at least September 30, leading to some critics accusing Trudeau of prolonging pandemic measures for political purposes.

Explainer: Everything you need to know about the UCP leadership process

Nine United Conservative Party (UCP) leadership candidates are vying to become the next Premier and inherit a $3.9 billion surplus — and the upcoming surplus is projected to be the largest in Alberta’s history.

However, it’s expected that less than 2% of Alberta’s population will participate in that process. In the 2017 UCP leadership race which elected Premier Jason Kenney, less than 60,000 votes were cast. 

Multiple campaign organizers told True North they expect less than 100,000 votes to be cast in the ongoing UCP leadership race. There are 4.4 million Albertans, around 59,000 of whom were members of the UCP at the start of the leadership contest. This number will spike before the election, as membership sales are integral to leadership campaigns.

There were 34,298 votes cast in Kenney’s leadership review, which he narrowly passed with 51.4% of voter support. He chose to resign anyway. 

This means just 16,669 votes turfed the man largely responsible for uniting Alberta’s Progressive Conservatives and the Wildrose Party under the UCP banner — and defeating Rachel Notley’s NDP government just three years ago.

The UCP leadership contest is an opportunity for voters to have a rare level of influence, said Vitor Marciano, campaign manager for UCP leadership candidate Brian Jean.

“Maybe once a decade you can have this level of influence on who is governing the province,” Marciano told True North. “That’s why it’s so important.” 

Who’s eligible to vote 

You must become a member of the UCP before August 12 to vote in the leadership race.

To be a member, you must be a permanent resident of Alberta who is older than 14 years of age. The membership costs $10 for one year, $20 for two years or $30 for three years. 

A membership holds the added benefit of enabling members to vote in local nominations, attend party AGMs and attend the provincial party’s AGM where the provincial board of directors is elected. 

How the process works 

After you purchase a membership, there are two processes in which to vote in the leadership contest. The first option is through a mail-in ballot process, the same used for Kenney’s leadership review which ultimately led to his impending resignation.

After the membership cutoff on August 12, mail-in ballots will be sent out. Members must return their ballots by October 3, meaning they must consider ballot transit time. 

Mail-in ballots are carefully verified. The submissions are checked against the party’s membership list and voters must include a photographed copy of their ID.

The second option is an in-person vote. On October 6, there will be five polling locations across the province’s five regions; Edmonton, northern Alberta, southern Alberta, central Alberta and Calgary. 

The leadership contest results will be announced on October 6. 

How your ballot works 

The leader will be determined through a ranked voting system.

In a ranked voting system, the winner must receive over 50% plus one of the votes. If there are more than two candidates on the ballot, it’s possible no one will receive over 50%. In such a scenario, the contestant with the least number of votes is eliminated. The losing candidate’s votes are then redistributed among the remaining candidates, based on which contestants were ranked next.

This process continues until a candidate meets the threshold of garnering at least 50% of first choice rankings of the remaining candidates.

For example, this is how Erin O’Toole beat Peter MacKay on the third ballot in the 2020 federal Conservative leadership race. In that contest, O’Toole received more second and third ballot support for candidates who placed Derek Sloan or Leslyn Lewis as their first choices. After Sloan, and then Lewis fell off, those voters placed O’Toole above MacKay on their ballots.

The Candidates

Nine candidates have put their names forward to be considered for the next UCP leader and Alberta premiership.

Eight candidates have experience as elected officials, ranging from local to federal politics. Six are sitting MLAs, including five UCP MLAs. Two are former Wildrose Party leaders and one is running even though he’s been disqualified by the party. Jon Horsman, a Calgary businessman, entered the race just last week. 

Find out more about the candidates here

The Toronto Star really hates the Canadian flag

It appears the Freedom Convoy and its use of the Canadian flag have broken the collective minds of journalists at the Toronto Star. In recent weeks, the Toronto Star has published several op-eds on how Canadians can “reclaim” the flag – suggesting that if you fly the flag on its own, you’re likely a “racist” or “extremist” or whatever the case is.

Plus, the legacy media gets caught pushing fake news after trying to convince Canadians that prime minister Justin Trudeau was mobbed by a group of “admirers” at the Calgary Stampede.

Patrick Brown’s campaign scolds True North after we try to tell their side of the story in a news report.

And finally, thanks to the CBC, Andrew Lawton can finally practice feminizing his voice!

Tune into Fake News Friday with Andrew Lawton and Harrison Faulkner!

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