Why hasn’t the government done anything about hospital capacity?

Albertans are in yet another lockdown and are being told the reason for this is because of hospital capacity.

Canadians across the country have been told that the lockdowns are justified because our hospitals are overrun by COVID patients. It’s been almost two years of dealing with COVID-19 – why haven’t they done anything to increase hospital capacity?

Anthony Furey discusses in his latest video.

Western Canada can’t afford more of Justin Trudeau

As Canadians go to the polls Monday, the stakes are high for western industry, especially in the oil and gas sector. True North’s Andrew Lawton sat down in Calgary with entrepreneur and investor W. Brett Wilson to chat about western alienation, the energy sector, and what next week’s election means for both.

TERRAZZANO: Don’t want to tax our home? Remove reporting requirement

Actions speak louder than words. That’s especially the case with politicians’ promises.

Politicians say they won’t send the taxman after Canadians’ homes. But let’s be honest, Canadians don’t believe them. If politicians truly want to reassure taxpayers that there is no home equity tax coming, they’ll remove the requirement for Canadians to report the sale of their home with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).

Through a home equity tax, the federal government would take a chunk of the proceeds from the sale of principal residences. MoneyWise estimates that a Quebec family that bought its home for $500,000 and sold it for $600,000 would pay a $20,858 home equity tax. That’s $20,858 that a retiring couple couldn’t use to fund their golden years and a young couple couldn’t put towards a family home.

There’s currently no home equity tax in Canada. But homeowners need to stay on guard.

In 2016, Ottawa made it mandatory for Canadians to report the sale of their primary residence even though it’s tax-exempt. If you sell your home, the CRA wants to know how much money you received from that sale. But, if the taxman isn’t taxing it, then why is the taxman asking that question? Is the CRA just curious?

Politicians say they won’t impose a home equity tax while they sing for their supper during the election.

Trudeau denied that a Liberal government would impose a home equity tax during the last leaders’ debate. Liberal candidate Mark Gerretsen even posted a graphic to social media that says, “the Liberal’s are not going to implement a home equity tax.”

Taxpayers shouldn’t trust them until they delete the reporting requirement.

The Liberals are already sniffing around Canadian homes. Last budget, the Trudeau government announced a tax on foreigners who own vacant homes. Now, the Liberals want to send the taxman after you if you sell your home earlier than they think you should. And we already know that the feds spent $250,000 of our tax dollars studying home taxes.

Trudeau and the Liberals have misled taxpayers before.

In the lead-up to the last federal election, former environment minister Catherine McKenna told Canadians the Liberals had “no intention” of raising the carbon tax beyond $50 per tonne. After the election was over, Trudeau announced he would hike the carbon tax to $170 per tonne by 2030. That would soak a family for about $30 every time they fuel up their minivan.

Last year, Trudeau promised Canadians he wouldn’t raise taxes.

“The last thing Canadians need is to see a rise in taxes right now,” said Trudeau. “We are not going to be saddling Canadians with extra costs.”

Despite that promise, Trudeau raised the carbon tax and booze taxes months later. His 2021 budget also included a raft of tax increases such as higher tobacco taxes, a vaping tax, sales taxes for digital services and a luxury goods tax.

On the other side, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole’s platform says “Canada’s Conservatives will never tax Canadians’ capital gains on the sale of their principal residence, something many within the Liberal party are threatening to do.”

That’s a pretty strong rejection of a home equity tax. It’s almost as strong as O’Toole’s pledge to fight carbon taxes:

“I, Erin O’Toole promise that, if elected Prime Minister of Canada, I will: Immediately repeal the Trudeau carbon tax; and, reject any future national carbon tax or cap-and-trade scheme.”

O’Toole is now breaking his pledge and will hammer families with a carbon tax of his own.

The moral of the story: political talk is cheap.

If politicians want to prove that they won’t tax the sale of Canadians’ principal residence, then they must remove the requirement for taxpayers to report the sale of their home to the taxman.

Franco Terrazzano is the Federal Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

The legacy media regurgitates Liberal talking points again and again

It’s Fake News Friday on The Candice Malcolm Show!

While there was plenty of fake news to cover during the CBC’s election town halls this week, the state broadcaster was not alone when it comes to spreading misinformation and misleading Canadians.

This week, CTV helps the Liberals market their campaign pledge to make it a criminal offence to block health care buildings. There’s only one problem – it’s already a criminal offence to block health care buildings.

Also, the government-funded Toronto Star misleads Canadians about our immigration laws, claiming it’s perfectly legal to illegally cross into Canada.

These stories and more on The Candice Malcolm Show. Tune in now!

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O’Toole blasts Trudeau after Canada is left out of US-led intelligence alliance

Conservative Party Leader Erin O’Toole slammed the governing Liberals after Canada was left out of an international alliance between its traditional allies the US, the UK and Australia. 

The new defence pact entitled Australia-UK-US alliance (AUKUS), which was announced on Thursday, aims to counter communist China. The newly formed pact could leave Canada in the dark on vital intelligence-sharing operations and provides both countries access to nuclear submarines. 

In response to the decision, O’Toole told reporters that it was indicative of Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau’s reputation as an unserious leader. 

“This is another example that Mr. Trudeau is not taken seriously by our friends and allies around the world. Canada is becoming more irrelevant under Mr. Trudeau,” said O’Toole.

O’Toole also pledged that if elected leader, he would urge the alliance to admit Canada to the partnership. 

Meanwhile, Trudeau called the pact a “deal for nuclear submarines” for Australia while downplaying the significance of Canada’s exclusion. 

“This is a deal for nuclear submarines, which Canada is not currently or any time soon in the market for. Australia is,” said Trudeau. 

Other nations including France and Germany were also left out. To date, France has announced that it will be removing its ambassadors from Washington DC and Australia over the exclusion. 

Despite the move, Canada remains a member of the Five Eyes partnership which includes the US, the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. 

This is not the first time that Trudeau has failed to gain access to international organizations that his government has coveted. 

In 2019, a failed bid by Trudeau to join the UN National Security Council cost Canadians over $8.6 million.

Gerald Butts mocks story of Chinese officer’s access to top-secret virus research

Former senior liberal strategist Gerald Butts mocked journalists on Twitter over a breaking report which revealed that ex-federal scientists collaborated with a top Chinese military officer on highly contagious virus research. 

“We’re getting so close to the point where Bob Fife and Steve Chase could see someone having Dim Sum and turn it into a @globeandmail front,” tweeted Butts.

Butts made the comments shortly after the Globe and Mail published its story exposing how People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Major-General Chen Wei worked on two Ebola studies with former National Microbiology Laboratory scientists Xiangguo Qiu. 

According to the outlet, Chen’s identity as the PLA’s chief military virologist was hidden from the publication which only referenced the individual as a PhD holder with the Academy of Military Science. 

Additionally, the Public Health Agency of Canada is refusing to reveal whether Chen visited or had access to the top-security facility which houses some of the deadliest viruses available for scientific study.

While in government, Butts worked with Trudeau to develop closer relations with China. 

In 2017, the former principal secretary accompanied the prime minister and a team of diplomats to travel to Beijing with the hopes of securing a coveted trade deal with the communist nation. 

Following a disastrous display by Trudeau and his diplomats, which the Chinese leadership perceived as presumptuous, Butts and Trudeau returned to Canada virtually empty-handed.

Less than a year later, the chilled relationship between the two nations would erupt following the December 2018 arrest of Huawei CFO and Chinese heiress Meng Wanzhou and China’s retaliatory detentions of Canadian Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig. 

The Liberal government has since refused to disclose information to opposition parties regarding Qiu’s and her husband Kending Chang’s firing from the Winnipeg-based laboratory.

Crown drops COVID tickets against Ontario pastor

Prosecutors have dropped two Public Health Act tickets issued against Woodstock, Ont. pastor charged with allegedly breaching Ontario’s strict lockdown orders.

Pastor Rene McIntyre and her church, Trumpet of Truth Christian Ministries, were charged for services they held Dec. 27 and Jan. 11, which ensured social distancing, mask-wearing and hand-washing.

According to the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, which represented McIntyre and her church, police interrupted the service and took video recordings of parishioners at worship through the door. There were approximately 60 congregants in attendance, with only five chairs per row.

The Crown dropped the two charges after extensive negotiation with McIntyre’s lawyer, the JCCF says. The legal charity also represents many other pastors hit with charges after gathering to worship amid COVID health restrictions. 

“It’s troubling to see Canada persecuting pastors exercising their Charter rights and freedoms to practice their religion,” says Sayeh Hassan, an Ontario-based staff lawyer with the JCCF.

Despite this victory, many other pastors are still fighting an uphill battle. One such man is Pastor Artur Pawloski, who first became prominent after a video of him kicking Calgary police out of his church over Easter went viral. 

Pawloski compared government-mandated church closures during the pandemic to the measures taken by authorities in his native country Poland when it was under the Communist regime. Pawlowski was arrested in May for violating public health orders by holding an in-person church service. Pawloski has also been issued dozens of COVID-19 related tickets for feeding the homeless without wearing a mask. 

“Pastors have been instrumental in keeping their congregations hopeful and mentally strong during these difficult times. Sadly, Canada is the only democratic country where pastors have not only been charged but arrested and even imprisoned for exercising their Charter rights to practice their religion. We are now starting to see similarities between the treatment of pastors in Canada and less tolerant countries like Iran and China where pastors are regularly persecuted for practicing their religion. This is a trend all Canadians should be very concerned about,” said Hassan. 

“The existence of a virus does not remove people’s fundamental freedoms to attend church and worship according to their beliefs.”

What does the election mean for the west?

Issues germane to western Canada have been all but ignored by most political parties and the media during the federal election, with little to no discussion about western alienation, which continues to grow as Alberta heads towards a referendum on equalization in October.

In this edition of the Andrew Lawton Show, True North’s Andrew Lawton spotlights western voices, including entrepreneur and investor W. Brett Wilson, Maverick Party interim leader Jay Hill and Banff–Airdrie Maverick candidate Tariq Elnaga.

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Trudeau evades question on candidate charged with sexual assault

After a Liberal candidate in Toronto was revealed to have been charged with sexual assault in 2019, Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau evaded questions from reporters on why he is continuing to let him run in the 2021 election. 

According to a report by the Toronto Star, Spadina-Fort York Candidate Kevin Vuong denies the allegations and has stated that the charges were later withdrawn. According to the Liberal Party, Vuong’s campaign has been paused but no commitment has been made to fire him. 

“How is it that your team failed to learn this until the Toronto Star told you about it and will you let that candidate, Mr Vuong, sit as a Liberal if indeed he wins his seat since it’s too late to change any ballot?” a reporter asked Trudeau.  

“We are a party that always takes any allegations or reports of sexual harassment, intimidation or assault. That has been clear from the very beginning. As you also pointed out, we only learnt about these serious investigations yesterday, we are looking into it very carefully and we have asked the candidate to pause the campaign,” said Trudeau. 

When pressed further by the report on why the Liberal Party hasn’t told Vuong to step down, Trudeau smirked as his staffers called for the next question. 

Opposition parties responded to the Liberal decision by calling for the removal of Vuong. 

“This pattern of cover-ups by Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party must stop. Once again Canadians are left wondering how they can trust the Liberals,” the Conservative Party said in a statement on the matter.

“Justin Trudeau must do the right thing and immediately fire this candidate and confirm that if elected, this candidate will not sit in the Liberal Caucus.”

The allegations against Vuong come only weeks after Kitchener Centre incumbent candidate Raj Saini reportedly stepped down from his candidacy after reports alleged that he had sexually harassed a female staffer. 

Despite stepping down, Saini’s name will remain on the ballot since Elections Canada stated it is too late to have him replaced.

As a result of the withdrawal, Saini could be entitled to receive a $92,900 severance package for the decision.

For years, Trudeau has maintained that he has a zero-tolerance approach to sexual harassment despite the fact that he himself has been accused of groping a female reporter in 2000 while attending a music festival.

Trudeau once said he believed women who come forward with allegations of sexual assault must be supported and believed.

“When women speak up it is our duty to listen to them and believe them,”  said Trudeau in 2018.

Alberta UCP MLAs won’t be disciplined for opposing latest restrictions

United Conservative Party (UCP) MLAs are encouraged to represent their constituents’ interests as Albertans face a new wave of restrictions and implementation of a vaccine passport, according to the premier’s office.

Asked whether UCP MLAs would face any discipline or expulsion from caucus if they spoke out against these measures, a spokesperson for Premier Jason Kenney implied this wouldn’t be the case.

“Premier Kenney has always encouraged UCP MLAs to represent the views of their constituents,” the spokesperson said. “He also recognizes that Albertans have a wide range of views on how best to respond to COVID, and that includes members of the UCP caucus.”

On Wednesday, Kenney’s government reversed its longstanding opposition to vaccine passports, announcing a suite of restrictions that businesses can only avoid if they agree to enforce vaccination and testing requirements for their customers.

Restaurants that don’t adopt the vaccine passport program, which the province is calling a “restriction exemption program,” will have to close their doors for indoor dining. Entertainment venues and retail outlets the government deems non-essential will have to restrict capacity to one-third of fire code capacity if they don’t opt into checking vaccination status and test results.

The new measures also bar unvaccinated people from gathering with anyone who lives outside their household, and restricts vaccinated households to gatherings with members of just one other vaccinated household.

While no UCP MLAs have yet spoken out against these measures publicly, Calgary-Fish Creek MLA Richard Gottfried did criticize his government for not implementing them sooner.

“Nothing was done while we lacked any leadership at the helm,” Gottfried said on Facebook. “It will cost us lives and I am gutted by the lack of responsiveness to unequivocal advocacy and clear warning signals. I am frustrated, embarrassed and angry that such defensible measures weren’t taken 30 days ago.”

In April, 16 UCP MLAs signed an open letter criticizing Alberta’s pandemic restrictions as heavy-handed.

“We have heard from our constituents, and they want us to defend their livelihoods and freedoms as Albertans,” the letter said. “For months, we have raised these concerns at the highest levels of government and unfortunately, the approach of the government has remained the same.”

Two of its signatories, MLAs Todd Loewen and Drew Barnes, were ejected from caucus a couple of weeks later, with the UCP whip saying there was “no room in our caucus for those to continually seek to divide our party and undermine government leadership.” 

Barnes said to a local Medicine Hat newspaper that Kenney’s vaccine passport announcement does not respect civil liberties.

“I am not in favour of vaccination passports,” he said. “No, I believe that again the premier has totally missed the balance between our civil liberties and keeping us safe and also we’re in a situation where we’re dividing society.”