Postal unions yesterday asked MPs to beware of steep service cuts contemplated in Department of Public Works in-house research. The department commissioned surveys on closure of post offices and elimination of doorstep delivery: "You have got this tremendous amount of pressure on Canada Post."
Promises Homes For Millions
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tomorrow will expand a billion-a-year GST holiday on new rental construction to include student housing. Freeland said she was “unlocking the door to the middle class for millions.”
I Warned PM, Says Spy Chief
Canada’s spy chief David Vigneault testified under oath he repeatedly warned Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and political aides that Chinese agents were targeting Conservative MPs. Vigneault’s testimony contradicted the Prime Minister: "It is indeed something I communicated."
Police Like Foreign Registry
A publicly accessible registry to name names of lobbyists acting for China “would be valuable,” says an RCMP briefing note. A federal review of a foreign agents' registry has been underway for more than a year: "A foreign agent registry would be valuable."
China Spy Hunt Hurtful: Woo
Chinese Canadians face new “nativist and xenophobic” discrimination, claims Liberal-appointed Senator Yuen Pau Woo (B.C.). The Senator was granted standing at the China inquiry but did not participate in hearings that exposed illegal activities by Chinese Communist Party agents: "Do you have any ties with the Chinese regime?"
Paid A Third Of Dairy Farms
A third of dairy farmers received direct subsidies under a 2017 trade pact, says a Department of Agriculture audit. Milk producers were promised federal aid after cabinet increased imports of tariff-free European cheese: "Supply management is the system the dairy sector has chosen for itself and the government respects and supports this choice."
Poem: “Chilly This Morning”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “There are many ways to tell someone that you have absolutely nothing to tell him…”
Book Review: The Unfrozen
Ottawa has more statues than any city in the land. As public art and political statements they run the gamut: haunting, contrived, tiresome, outrageous and wonderful, like the exhausted figure of Harold Fisher, head bowed, that’s survived a hundred winters on Carling Avenue.
Fisher as mayor built one of Canada’s first municipal hospitals in 1924, an era when surgery meant charity wards for the poor and spas for the wealthy. Ratepayers placed Fisher and his free public hospital in a cornfield where land was cheap. Surrounding acres over time became one of the prettiest collections of pre-war bungalows in a neighbourhood still called Civic Hospital. Fisher’s inscription reads: “If you would see his monument, look around you.” Beautiful.
Tours Inside the Snow Globe is fresh and intriguing, an investigation of statuary written at the close of an era that saw street protestors decapitate John A. Macdonald. Only a sociologist could explain what happened. Luckly, author Tonya Davidson is one of those.
Says Newsrooms Will Vanish
Canadian news will vanish if private TV networks fail, the CEO of Bell Canada Enterprises yesterday told the Commons heritage committee. “Without a Canadian broadcasting system there will be no news except maybe the CBC,” testified CEO Mirko Bibic: "We need to figure out how to keep Canadian news alive."
CEO Defending $8M Bonuses
The Canada Infrastructure Bank “has really hit its stride,” Ehren Cory, the Bank’s $600,000-a year CEO, told the Commons transport committee. MPs questioned why bonuses ate up a fifth of the Bank’s operating revenues last year: "Do you think that’s justifiable?"
Critics Ridicule Spanking Bill
Critics on the Commons justice committee yesterday ridiculed a New Democrat bill to regulate parents’ discipline of children in the home. Conservative MP Frank Caputo (Kamloops-Thompson, B.C.), a father of three and former Crown prosecutor, questioned whether a tap on the wrist would be criminalized: "When should a parent be subject to criminal law?"
Fear Labour Bill Goes Too Far
A proposed ban on replacement workers in the federal private sector will give small union locals disproportionate control over the Canadian economy, employers yesterday told MPs. Business and farm groups asked the Commons human resources committee to repeal or rewrite Bill C-58: "This is a bad idea."
Waffen SS Ovation Horrifying
The Commons’ standing ovation for a Nazi collaborator was horrifying, the Canadian Polish Congress yesterday told the House affairs committee. MPs continue to investigate the September 22 incident that saw VIP treatment for a member of the Waffen SS, a criminal organization: "There is no ambiguity."
‘Inappropriate’ To Expel MP
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday testified it “wasn’t appropriate” to expel MP Han Dong (Don Valley North, Ont.) from the Liberal caucus though he was under security surveillance. Trudeau said he assumed it was up to Elections Canada to determine whether Dong had contacts with foreign agents: "Did you ask for further investigation?"
Don’t Mention China: Memo
Cabinet aides in a secret 2017 memo told Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to avoid public criticism of China despite evidence Communist Party agents were committing crimes in Canada. Cabinet was attempting to negotiate a Chinese free trade pact at the time: "This could be deemed illegal by Canadian courts."