Hajdu Made Up Organ Story

Labour Minister Patty Hajdu made up a story about organ donations in attempting to justify a 2025 cabinet order quashing an Air Canada strike, Access To Information records show. It marked the second time Hajdu misled media over a strike ban: "Shipments of critical goods such as pharmaceuticals and organ tissue should continue." READ MORE

Dailies Gobbled Rural Grants

A federal program to subsidize news media in “underserved communities” instead paid millions to city newspapers operated by conglomerates, records show. Recipients of aid earmarked for poor, rural weeklies included the Toronto Star, Globe & Mail and two Winnipeg dailies: "I think the Local Journalism Initiative is absolutely critical for rural coverage." READ MORE

Want Bitcoin-Free Elections

MPs have given quick Second Reading to a cabinet bill that would ban bitcoin financing of political campaigns. Approval in principle came Friday, just a month after the bill’s introduction: "There is a high sense of collaboration on this." READ MORE

$3.2B Internet Plan Falls Short

A $3.2 billion telecom subsidy launched on a promise of high-speed internet for every home in Canada is not close to meeting its target, Department of Industry figures show. Auditors blamed cost overruns and slow processing of paperwork: "These projects target areas where there is currently no business case for the private sector." READ MORE

Call Egg Quotas Nt’l Security

Protecting egg quotas is a matter of “national security,” says a farmers’ lobby. The Egg Farmers of Canada in a Senate submission said defence of their quota “is critical.” READ MORE

Review: The Trek

There were two Franklin Expeditions. One is acclaimed by Parks Canada which spent millions scanning the floor of the Arctic Ocean in search of 19th century English shipwrecks. The other is documented through the passion and extraordinary research of a lone anthropologist, Alison Brown of the University of Aberdeen. The resulting First Nations, Museums, Narrations is intriguing and profound. In June 1929 a band of researchers left Winnipeg to document what they believed were the vanishing First Nations of the Prairies. Canada’s Indigenous population had been decimated by disease and misfortune and numbered some 107,000 people. “Now or never is the time in which to collect from the natives what is still available for study,” noted a director of the Geological Survey of Canada. Anthropologists believed the end was near. “Indigenous people were thought to be assimilating or dying out,” writes Brown. READ MORE

Guest Commentary

Jamie Nicholls

Whatever Happened To Dennis?

I often wonder what became of Dennis. He was known to neighbours in the North Park district of Victoria where I lived in 1997. It was a rough-and-tumble neighbourhood. Dennis had a wife and baby. I had seen them going to the welfare office down the corner. He was violent, and he could get very drunk. I don’t think he ever finished high school. I can’t say if restorative justice would have done Dennis much good.  Afterward I wondered, what brought Dennis to the point in his life that he was so hateful, so angry, he would shave his head and wear a “White Power” t-shirt and look for someone to hurt?