fbpx
Wednesday, September 24, 2025

OP-ED: Why isn’t the legacy media reporting the truth about unmarked graves narrative?

Source: Wikipedia

Led by its compulsively woke Pied Piper, the CBC, Canada’s mainstream media continues to trumpet the evidence-challenged notion that thousands of missing indigenous children forcibly sent by the government to the country’s Indian Residential Schools (IRS) lie buried in unmarked graves, some of them mass graves, across the land where their remains have been discovered by the inconclusive and fallible technique called ground penetrating radar (GPR).

These near axiomatic assertions began with the May 27, 2021, announcement from the Kamloops BC Indian Reserve that “This past weekend … the stark truth of the preliminary findings came to light – the confirmation of the remains of 215 children who were students of the Kamloops Indian Residential School.”

No such “confirmation” has ever occurred at Kamloops or the many other communities where similar results have been announced, all based on uncertain GPR soundings.

The only legacy media willing to challenge these announcements, albeit timidly, has been the National Post.

But a much larger unfunded chorus of evidence-based commentators, most of them scholars or lawyers, were skeptical of the Kamloops findings from the start, even though their deep-pocketed Indian Industry opponents immediately pilloried them as “residential school denialists.”

Because our close neighbour, the United States, has been somewhat less captured by the left on indigenous issues, its legacy media began challenging the established narrative early on. Two other respected media houses, the Wall Street Journal and the National Catholic Register, have just jumped on a slow but steadily growing truth-telling bandwagon whose findings have been articulated in the book Grave Error: How the Media Misled Us (and the Truth About Residential Schools). Co-authored by C.P. Champion, editor of The Dorchester Review, and Tom Flanagan, a retired University of Calgary political scientist, the book is a collection of heavily footnoted chapters written mainly by academics and lawyers.

Grave Error and allied publications found here, here, here, and here have carefully debunked the mainstream media position on “missing children buried in unmarked mass graves” using a mountain of unbiased factual and logical evidence.

They have done so by highlighting the implications that no unmarked graves, let alone “mass graves,” containing missing children have been found to date at residential schools. The only way to learn whether this allegation was truthful was to excavate the soil anomalies revealed by GPR surveys. But the only completed excavation to date was conducted in 2023 at Pine Creek, Manitoba, where a ground-radar survey had identified anomalies in the basement of Our Lady of Seven Sorrows Catholic Church, located close to the former Pine Creek Residential School. No human remains were found during that excavation, yet such fruitless searches fully funded by the federal government have never stopped.

Moreover, except for orphans or children taken from abusive or neglectful reserve homes, the students who attended the schools did so voluntarily after receiving written permission from their parents. There were often more applicants than the schools could accommodate.

As for the schools being “houses of horror,” student living conditions, including the provision of food, clothing, shelter, learning, recreation, and supervision, were generally better than they experienced in their poor, hungry, and alcohol-devasted home communities.

The statement by Murray Sinclair, chief commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, that “for roughly seven generations nearly every Indigenous child in Canada was sent to a residential school” is grossly untrue because only one-third of eligible students attended for an average of 4.5 years. Sinclair also tied residential schools to “unacceptably poor education results” and “runaway rates of suicide, family violence, substance abuse, high rates of incarceration, street gang influence, child welfare apprehensions, homelessness, poverty, and family breakdowns,” thereby ignoring that residential schools achieved better results than day schools, which had high rates of absenteeism.

Likewise, because only a minority of Indian children voluntarily attended residential schools for a few years, the system can’t explain the broad social breakdown in indigenous Indian communities in the past and present.

While Grave Error has been a Canadian nonfiction best-seller since it was published in December 2023, its arguments received virtually no coverage from Canadian media outlets until a controversy erupted after the wife of the mayor of the British Columbia community of Quesnel distributed some copies of the book. Highlighting the book’s condemnation by local First Nations representatives as “absolute bigotry and hatred,” a CBC account of the controversy suggested Grave Error was a clear example of residential school “denialism.” 

The CBC article noted that any questioning of the claims made against residential schools has been publicly condemned as “denialism” by Kimberly Murray, who was appointed as the federal government’s “special interlocutor” in the wake of the 2021 allegations regarding graves. 

In the interim report she submitted to the government in June 2023, Murray characterized “denialism” as “the last step in genocide.” He recommended that the federal government make it a criminal offence. David Lametti, who was then serving as Canada’s justice minister, responded to Murray’s recommendation by saying that he was open to applying the same criminal and civil measures as those that are now in force in Canada against those who deny, minimize or condone the Holocaust, the CBC reported

With Murray’s final report set to be released on October 29, Trudeau’s Liberal government has not yet taken any action concerning her recommendation that “denialism” should be criminalized; the bill that The Wall Street Journal commentary referenced was introduced into Parliament in September by another party member. But Murray doubled down on her claims in another unauthorized interim report titled “Sites of Truth, Sites of Conscience” that she released in July 2024 “as an antidote to denialism.” 

“The histories of the cemeteries that were located at former Indian residential school sites are evidence of genocide and mass human rights violations,” the report states without providing the necessary evidence that this genocide ever occurred.

On the contrary, the “progressive” view that the residential schools engaged in genocide is a ludicrous blood libel simply because it fails to meet any of the requirements of the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide such as “killing members of the group” or “forcibly transferring children of the group to another group” “with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.”

Separating fact from fiction on this issue requires open and honest debate. Attempts to stifle speech by prosecuting so-called denialism won’t lead to reconciliation and won’t restore the well-being of Canada’s indigenous communities.

Hymie Rubenstein is editor of REAL Indigenous Report, a retired professor of anthropology, the University of Manitoba, and a senior fellow, Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Nova Scotia provincial tax cut follows taxpayer group’s advocacy, earning applause

Source: Facebook

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston’s decision to reduce the provincial harmonized sales tax by 1% has resulted in applause from a taxpayer advocacy group. 

Devin Drover, general counsel and Atlantic director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation told True North that the tax cut follows 14 years of the HST being at 15% after the former NDP government hiked it from 13% to 15%, which the successive Liberal government did not touch. 

The federal portion of the HST is 5%, and the provincial portion is currently 10%, set to drop to 9% on Apr. 1, 2025.

“We are very pleased to see action from Premier Houston on cutting the HST by one percentage point, which will save the average Nova Scotian over $350 per year,” said Drover.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation had called for a tax cut in its pre-budget proposal, part of a broader set of recommendations to reduce tax burdens for Nova Scotians. 

However, Drover said that the tax cuts shouldn’t end here.

“We think Houston should keep his commitment to cutting HST by one percentage point on April 1, 2025, but commit to a second percentage point cut on April 1, 2026,” said Drover. “This will double the savings for average Nova Scotia families to over $700 annually.”

Drover said that some people might argue that the government needs the tax revenue, but he said that it could be found elsewhere. 

“Houston could focus on reducing non-healthcare spending to 2022 levels which would provide them enough savings both to send money back to taxpayers through HST cuts while also reducing the deficit and returning the province to balanced budgets,” said Drover. 

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation’s pre-budget proposal also included calls for eliminating bracket creep, which occurs when governments don’t move tax brackets, and inflation pushes taxpayers into higher brackets despite their purchasing power remaining unchanged.

The taxpayer advocacy group also called on Nova Scotia to cut income tax bills by 5% and to replace corporate welfare with business tax relief. The CTF also called for government compensation to be brought in line with Nova Scotia’s labour market and for spending levels to be reduced.

Following the tax cut, Nova Scotians will have the lowest sales tax burden in Atlantic Canada.

“Where families are struggling to replace an old appliance, or looking to buy a new car, this HST cut will have a huge impact on the lives of Nova Scotians,” said Drover.

OP-ED: Powell River’s nasty name change debate

Source: Wikipedia

Today in Canada, it is common to hear that truth and reconciliation are necessary to mend indigenous-non-indigenous relations. Unfortunately, the notion of objective truth is being replaced by subjective beliefs, and attempts at reconciliation quite often result in discord and misinformation.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in Powell River, a picturesque coastal city on British Columbia’s Sunshine Coast. Powell River was once lauded as a model of collaboration between aboriginal and non-aboriginal people. Now, it is the scene of a divisive fight over changing the name of the city.

A name change for Powell River was tentatively proposed in May 2021 by the local Tla’amin Nation as an effort to further reconciliation in the area. At the time, city officials said they were skeptical. A month later, after allegations surfaced about the “remains of 215 children” buried at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School, the name change demand became more dogmatic. “The prospect of changing the name must not be a matter of ‘if’, but a matter of ‘when’”, stated Tla-main chief (or ‘Hegus’) John Hackett in June 2021.

Hackett argued that the town’s current name had to go because of the legacy of its supposed namesake, Israel Wood Powell. From 1872 to 1889, Powell was the federal superintendent of B.C.’s Indian Affairs. As such, he stands accused of being “instrumental” in the creation of residential schools in the province and for outlawing the potlatch, a native gift-giving ceremony. But like the false claim about the 215 children allegedly found at Kamloops, this continues to be unproven.

According to local historian Arthur Richards, Powell had little role in developing residential schools; he was far more interested in creating Indian day schools. Only two of 18 residential school in the province were even open during his term. As for the potlatch ban, Powell was actually responding to a petition from several native leaders in the province who wanted the expensive and poverty-inducing ceremony “put down” because it was harming their tribes. According to the authoritative Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Powell was “more sympathetic to native people than most of his contemporaries were.”

It is not even clear the city is actually named after Israel Wood Powell. According to extensive research by amateur historian Robin Tremblay, it could be named for Edward J. Powell, the Chief Cartographer of the British Admiralty’s Hydrographic Office. Tremblay points to several other geographic features in B.C. that are provably named for mapmaker Powell, rather than civil servant Powell.

Despite repeated attempts by resident researchers to correct this misinformation, several Powell River city councillors have worked hard to push through a name change. A Joint Working Group was created to consult with local residents. When it quickly became apparent that a majority opposed the name change and wanted a referendum to settle the matter, this group declared that a vote would be “divisive” and “more conversations” were required.

In response to the refusal of civic officials to listen to the will of the people, residents formed their own group “Concerned Citizens of Powell River,” to mobilize support in favour of a referendum. For seeking a democratic solution to this issue, Tla’amin leadership attacked them as an “extremist group”.

At least two members of Concerned Citizens of Powell River – paramedic Ted Vizzutti and Brian Burroughs, a school board employee – faced false accusations of racism from their employers. Vizzutti was forced into early retirement and prohibited from working part-time. Burroughs was subjected to disciplinary procedures and then ostracized by his colleagues before retiring. All because they made their feelings known about the name change debate on social media. Today, a veritable reign of terror exists in Powell River, with neighbours shunning neighbours and many citizens fearful of speaking out in case they might lose their jobs too.

As the Powell River name-change debacle reveals, “truth” no longer means a reliance on verifiable facts and evidence. The true historical record of Israel Wood Powell – which reveals him to have been an enlightened and liberal administrator with broad sympathy for Indigenous people – is of no consequence. Further, no one even seems to care if Powell River is actually named for the man himself.

As for “reconciliation”, relations between native and non-native in Powell River have never been lower. What was supposed to be a healing process has metastasized into an attempt to impose the will of a minority on everyone else. And this is enforced through accusations of racism and job loss. Democracy depends on the unfettered right of citizens to speak their mind on the pressing issues of the day. Right now, democracy is at risk in Powell River.  

There is no question that Indigenous people have suffered terrible injustices throughout Canada’s history. Indigenous people live in isolated communities with high rates of violence, fetal alcohol syndrome, economic dependency and educational deficiencies. They need emergency interventions and access to high-quality services. But all this is being ignored in favour of pushing through a name change against the will of local residents. This isn’t progress. It is the opposite.

Frances Widdowson, PhD, is a political scientist and an expert on Indigenous policy who was fired from Mount Royal University in Calgary for satirizing woke ideas. A longer version of this story first appeared at www.C2CJournal.ca.

Ford to impose international med student ban for Ontario universities

Source: X

The Ontario government proposed legislation that would ban medical school seats from going to international students to make room for students in Canada.

The aim of the policy is to close the gap of people who are without access to a regular healthcare provider. 

Premier Doug Ford made the announcement in Oshawa on Friday, telling reporters that the proposed legislation would see at least 95% of spots go to Ontarians first and have the remaining 5% be filled by students from elsewhere in Canada. 

“This has been gnawing at me for years, as my colleagues know,” said Ford, referring to the number of Ontario students who are currently studying medicine abroad. 

“What happens? They meet someone and they don’t come back home. There were 18% students from around the world taking our kids’ seats and then not even staying here and then going back to their country. It’s just not right.”

“So now it’s going to be 100% Canadian, 95% Ontario,” said Ford.

According to the Ontario College of Family Physicians, there were 2.5 million Ontarians without access to a family doctor as of July.  

Ford also announced several measures to entice Canadian medical students currently studying abroad to return to the province to finish their postgraduate training in Ontario. 

“These new actions are designed to ensure Ontario medical schools are training and graduating more doctors, including family doctors that are going to stay in Ontario,” he added. 

“We know that if you’re born in Ontario, you’re more than likely to stay and practice in Ontario. 

The proposed legislation also includes an estimated $88 million over the next three years to expand Learn and Stay grants for 1,360 eligible undergraduate students who commit to practice family medicine, starting next year. 

Ford said he was trying to “backdate” the changes for a year to help current medical students with their debts from medical school.  

Ontario is also planning to open two new medical schools, one at Toronto Metropolitan University and the other at York University, adding over 260 undergraduate and 449 residency spots.

Additionally, the government plans to review the visa trainee program responsible for training international students sponsored by foreign governments. 

Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones said that Ontario students “need to come first.”

“We are going to prioritize Ontario residents because those are our taxpayers that are paying those students to go to school,” said Jones.

The newly proposed legislation comes on the heels of the Ford government appointing former federal Liberal health minister Jane Philpott to a new role aimed at connecting every Ontarian to primary care over the next five years.

“She’s going to be on the ground fixing that gap,” said Ford.

Parents confused with B.C. schools’ new “descriptive” grading system

Source: Facebook

Most parents are left confused by a year-old change to how grades are represented on report cards in British Columbia.

In September 2023, the BC NDP government switched report cards for students in Kindergarten to Grade 9 from A to F letter grades to the “descriptive terms” “emerging” “developing,” “proficient,” and “extending.”

To gauge the success of this change, the Fraser Institute commissioned Leger 360 to conduct a poll asking parents what their thoughts were on the two grading forms and tested their knowledge of both.

According to the Leger survey, most Canadians, including parents in the province where it’s been implemented for over a year, cannot identify what B.C.’s new “descriptive grading” terms mean when gauging how well their children are doing in school.

Leger surveyed 1,200 Canadians; one thousand were conducted with a representative sampling of parents across Canada, and another 100 were conducted in Alberta and British Columbia. The survey occurred between March 25 and April 8, 2024, and June 27 and July 8, 2024. 

Though a non-probability survey reports no margin of error, for comparative purposes, a probability sampling of this size would have a margin of error of around 2.8%, 19 times out of 20 for the first interviews, and 3.7%, 19 times out of 20 for the second interviews.

The survey found that 98% of parents agreed that “regular, clear assessment of student performance” was important to them.  Around half said switching from the letter grades or percentage grades to “descriptive” grading would make their child’s academic progress clearer and easier to understand.

However, as the study went into more detail, probing the parents’ understanding of the two forms, it found that parents were confused by the descriptive terms the B.C. government billed as a “proficiency scale.”

Over nine in ten, 93%, of Canadian parents said the letter grade “A” is clear and easy to understand, and 68% could correctly identify what “A” means.  The majority of those who got the answer wrong said the letter grade “A” means the student demonstrated “very good” performance instead of “excellent.”

Over eight in ten Canadian parents, 84%, said the letter grade “C” is straightforward to understand, and 75% could correctly identify what “C” means.  Only 3% of parents said they were unsure what “C” means on their child’s report card.

Comparatively, 58% of Canadian parents found the descriptive grade “Extending” unclear and difficult to understand, with 26% correctly identifying what “Extending” means. Most parents, 40%, in Canada said they “don’t know” and were “unsure.” what the term meant.

A majority of Canadian parents, 57%, said the term “emerging” was unclear and difficult to understand, with only 28% correctly identifying what the term means. When asked to identify the term, parents most commonly said they “didn’t know or were unsure,” with 31% agreement.

“B.C. parents were less likely to say they were unsure of what the terms meant, but their ability to correctly select a definition for these terms was not consistently higher than that of parents in other provinces,” the Fraser Report on the survey said. 

Two-thirds of B.C. parents, 66%, could not correctly identify the meaning of the term “emerging.” And 64% were unable to identify the term “extending.”

“I think the message is clear (to the B.C. government): it was a mistake to move in the direction of taking away traditional grading. Students rely on understandable grades. Parents want grades or report cards that they can understand,” Michael Zwaagsta, a public high school teacher and senior fellow at the Fraser Institute, said in an interview with True North.

He noted the B.C. Ministry of Education conducted its own survey before the change, which found that more than half of teachers, 60% of parents and caregivers and 83% of students in B.C. disagreed with the “proficiency scale.”

“They shouldn’t be the least bit surprised that the feedback continues to be negative now that it’s been fully implemented. The report clearly conveys that it was a mistake to move in this direction in the first place,” Zwaagsta said. “There is no benefit to having report card comments that no one understands.

He said this study should be enough to dissuade any other province from emulating the NDP government on this issue. The government should reverse its decision and revert to a letter—or percentage-based grading system that everyone understands.
The B.C. NDP did not respond to True North’s request to comment before the deadline provided.

Canadians receiving EI benefits continues upward trajectory: StatsCan 

Source: Unsplash

The number of Canadians receiving Employment Insurance increased again in August by 1.5%, with an additional 7,400 people accessing the benefit and marking the third increase in recipients in four consecutive months.

According to Statistics Canada’s latest report on Employment Insurance, prior to this consistent increase, the numbers of Canadians receiving EI had held relatively steady from September 2023 to April 2024. 

The number of EI beneficiaries has increased by 26,000 on a year-over-year basis, up 5.6% in August. 

Additionally, Statistics Canada’s Labour Force Survey revealed that “in the four months to August, the unemployment rate increased 0.5 percentage points to 6.6%, as more people searched for work, while overall employment was little changed.”

“Compared with August 2023, the unemployment rate was up 1.1 percentage points and the number of unemployed people who had been laid off increased to 728,000 (+14.8%; +94,000) (not seasonally adjusted),” reads the survey. 

That number of regular EI beneficiaries rose for men in all age groups in August, led by the cohort of core-aged men between 25 to 54.

“Compared to August 2023, the number of regular EI beneficiaries was up for all major demographic groups. The largest increases were recorded among men aged 55 and older, core-aged men as well as young men aged 15 to 24 years,” reads the report. 

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievere’s office released a statement in response to the data, laying the blame with the Liberal government, claiming their coalition with the NDP has “created economic misery for Canadians.”

“This is the fourth consecutive monthly increase and an increase of 26,000 people from the same time last year. As a result of this, Canada reached a 25-month high in the number of people claiming EI,” reads the statement.

Provincially, Quebec saw the largest increase in recipients at 5.4%, amounting to an additional 6,000 residents receiving the benefits. 

Alberta saw the next largest increase, with an additional 1.9% of residents now on the dole, compared to this time last year. 

Smaller increases were also recorded in Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador. 

The other provinces remained relatively unchanged. 

The Industry and manufacturing sectors saw a 21.7% jump in EI recipients compared to the same period last year, adding an additional 7,400 people. 

The bulk of these jobs were lost in Ontario. 

This news comes in addition to Canada’s GDP per capita being on track to decrease for the sixth consecutive quarter. 

“This follows in the wake of September’s Labour Force Survey, which showed that year-over-year, employment had only increased by 313,000 while the working-age population surged by 1.2 million, leaving an enormous employment deficit,” reads the statement from Poilievre’s office. 

“This NDP-Liberal Government is not worth the cost. Only Common Sense Conservatives will fix the budget and bring home powerful paycheques for all Canadians.”

Brampton requests gov support to tackle international student human trafficking

Source: X

The City of Brampton is asking the provincial and federal government to support the city’s efforts to tackle human trafficking involving international students.

Brampton City Council approved a motion from the city’s Community Services Chair Rowena Santos, which advocated for “systemic change” at the provincial and federal levels to protect Brampton’s international student population from the threat of being exploited or human trafficked.

“Many (international students) face financial challenges, housing insecurity and a lack of adequate institutional support, making them prime targets for exploitation and trafficking,” a city news release said. “In particular, female students have been exploited by predatory landlords and traffickers, leading to cases of unwanted pregnancies, mental health crises and even suicide.”

In order to tackle the human trafficking problem, the motion recommends that the government raise the amount of hours international students are allowed to work in a week, remove deportation conditions for anyone connected to prostitution, and expand access to social services for international students.

Santos said that due to international students only being able to work 24 hours a week while studying here, many of them face financial difficulties which pushes them towards sex work.

Individual international students are required to prove that in addition to their tuition, they have access to at least $10,000 per year of their study and $833 per month to support themselves before being approved to study in Canada.

Due to immigration rules, any international student found to be involved in sex trafficking, even if forced, can be deported. Santos claimed that many instances of human trafficking go unreported by international students as there are no protections guaranteed for victims of the crime who want to report it.

“Many young women are coerced into dangerous situations, threatened with deportation and forced into prostitution, silently, fending for themselves and leaving them in very precarious and harmful circumstances,” she said. “This is not the Canada we know, and we are seeing too many examples of it.”

Mayor Patrick Brown said Brampton is home to Canada’s largest population of international students and as such Canada needs to step up to ensure they are not being exploited while they are here.

Since 2020 Peel Regional Police have charged 160 people with more than 650 human trafficking offences, Mayor Patrick Brown noted at a news conference about the issue on Wednesday. He said the human trafficking unit has conducted 110 investigations into exploitation and trafficking so far this year, while in all of 2023, they investigated a total of 127 incidents.

“It happens in plain sight, and obviously here in Peel Region we are more vulnerable. You know, with the international airport, with major highways, the intermodal hub, you know, we are at a nexus point for this cancer within our society,” Brown said.

A representative of PRP told True North that there have only been two cases of human trafficking involving an international student since 2022.

“Generally speaking, South Asian women are not over-represented in human trafficking or sex trade workers in Peel Regional Police occurrences,” the spokesperson said.  “It’s important to highlight that we’re not saying that this isn’t the case. What this suggests to us is that they’re very vastly unreported.”

The city will also look to expand its powers granted to them in the Residential Rental Licensing program which allows them to inspect and investigate living conditions in rental properties.

Brown said that through the RRL program, inspectors located 18 female tenants living in “precarious conditions” in a single housing unit. He said the investigation was now in the hands of the PRP.

“This motion is a vital step toward providing (international students) with the protections they deserve,” Brown said. “By strengthening our local programs and calling for legislative change, we are sending a clear message: Brampton will not tolerate the exploitation of its students.”

The city is also advocating for the federal and provincial governments as well as post-secondary institutions to adopt an international student charter.

“This charter sets out clear responsibilities for institutions to offer comprehensive orientation and support services, helping students navigate legal rights, housing and employment while preventing exploitation,” the city news release said.

The Ontario Minister for Colleges and Universities did not respond to True North’s requests for comment.

Off the Record | How “strong and united” are the Liberals?

Source: Facebook

Despite an attempt by several Liberal MPs to oust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the prime minister insists the Liberal Party is “strong and united.” Is this really the case or is it just a matter of time before Trudeau is gone?

Plus, CBC CEO Catherine Tait shows how out of touch she is with Canadians. Appearing in committee this week, Tait defended the millions in bonuses to CBC executives and refused to say if she’ll accept a bonus this year as well. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again, it’s time to defund the CBC.

And the Trudeau government is rolling out a formal Indigenous apology tour at national parks across Canada beginning with the wildfire-ravaged Jasper National Park.

These stories and more on Off the Record with guest host Kris Sims, Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and William McBeath!

The Daily Brief | Trudeau gov scales back immigration levels

Source: X

In a surprise announcement, the Liberal government has pledged to reduce Canada’s annual immigrant intake to 365,000 people by the year 2027.

Plus, Quebec’s Ministry of Education has suspended the teaching licenses of 11 elementary school teachers for imposing their “Islamist” religious views on students in public schools.

And Toronto police have arrested two individuals alleging they wore medical masks to conceal their identity while taking part in anti-Israel demonstrations preventing employees from entering their places of work.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and William MacBeath!

Amid calls to resign, Trudeau affirms he will be the Liberal leader in the next election

Source: Facebook

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has declared that he will continue to lead the Liberal party into the next federal election, despite calls from party members and Liberal MPs for him to step down.

During a press conference on his party’s announcement to flip around his immigration policy in a move Liberals said would“pause population growth” over the next couple of years, Trudeau addressed the calls from some in his party asking him to resign.

“The Liberal Party has always had robust discussions about the best ways to tackle the issues facing Canadians. We are united in our desire to prevent Pierre Poilievre from cutting programs and services,” Trudeau said. “We’re going to continue to have great conversations about what is the best way to take on Pierre Poilievre, but that’ll happen with me as leader going into the next election.”

Trudeau said he and his caucus will continue to have “great discussions” on how he can best lead the party forward to counter the “growing misinformation and disinformation” he accused Poilievre of putting forward.

When asked about the divisions in his party, Trudeau responded that he doesn’t believe every Conservative MP is supportive of every other Conservative MP. 

He said they all likely didn’t agree with MP Jeremy Patzer having an all-expenses trip to an “extreme right-wing” pro-life church in Florida or members of caucus meeting with German politician Christine Anderson who he called a “Neo-Nazi.”

Each Conservative MP has since denounced Anderson and apologized for meeting with her.

“Unlike the Conservative Party of Canada, we have robust conversations within our ranks about the best way to move forward,” Trudeau said. “I have a really hard time believing that all Conservative members are perfectly fine with their leader politicizing issues around national security by refusing to get a security clearance to be able to actually deal with foreign interference.”

Poilievre has stated that he would not get security clearance to read the unredacted NSICOP report as it would force him to secrecy. Instead, he advocates for the names of MPs alleged to have wittingly abetted foreign governments, including by providing known intelligence agents of those countries with confidential information, to be made public.

Poilievre also said he received foreign interference briefings on Oct. 14 through the CSIS Act, allowing the government to offer information to Canadians about specific risks of foreign interference without forcing them into sworn secrecy.

Poilievre’s Chief of Staff has also received confidential briefings on the unredacted NSICOP report on foreign interference.

The Bloc Quebecois has threatened to help trigger an election if Trudeau’s Liberals do not support its private member’s bill, raising the income Canadians aged 65 and older receive from old age security pensions by 10%.

BQ Leader Yves-Fracois Blanchet said the Government will have until next Monday to support the bill as a deadline before the party starts to push for a non-confidence vote in the Liberal government. 

Trudeau said he planned to remain Prime Minister past the Bloc Quebecois’ Oct. 28 ultimatum deadline for Trudeau to support a rise in old age security funds.

Related stories