Scores Of Gov’t Autos Stolen

Government-issue Ford pickups and Toyota Highlanders are most popular among thieves targeting the federal motor pool, the largest vehicle fleet in the country, records show. The disclosure came as Attorney General Arif Virani yesterday suggested a Criminal Code crackdown on auto thieves: "This is truly a national issue."

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Say Israel Critics’ Claim False

Canada does not export weaponry to Israel, says a cabinet report. The document was requested by a New Democrat MP who repeatedly claimed Canada is selling armaments to Israel: "We haven’t exported arms to Israel in 30 years."

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Budgeted $199M For Mandate

Cabinet budgeted more than $199 million to enforce vax mandates on federal employees though 95 percent were already vaccinated, records show. Treasury Board President Anita Anand in a report to Parliament noted undisclosed millions were approved for “legal services.”

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Exec Stands By $100K Bonus

Catherine Tait, the $497,000-a year CEO of the CBC, yesterday declined to forego her $100,000 annual bonus even as the network issues layoff notices. "It is extremely difficult to not have the love," Tait told the Commons heritage committee: "This is performance pay."

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Lavalin Storage A Fed Secret

SNC-Lavalin Group pandemic field hospitals delivered by rush order two years ago under a $150 million contract remain warehoused at a secret location, records show. The Department of Public Works has estimated storage of the little-used units is costing taxpayers an additional $135 million: "The exact location of the warehouse cannot be shared."

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Foreigners May Add Pressure

Record immigration “may exacerbate existing pressures” on the housing market, says a Department of Employment memo. It noted requests for migrant labour work permits jumped 66 percent: "What is the department doing?"

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“Friend” Clause Questioned

A “friend” exemption allowing MPs to accept costly free gifts should be narrowed under the Conflict Of Interest Act, legislators said yesterday. Debate at the Commons ethics committee followed the Prime Minister’s $84,000 expense-paid Christmas holiday in Jamaica: "We should have a cap."

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Not So Fast On Freeland’s Bill

The Commons Speaker yesterday ordered Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's latest omnibus budget bill to be split up into nine separate votes. The order sought by Conservative MPs followed Freeland’s appeal to pass the mammoth bill and “do so quickly.”

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Won’t Say If $42.4M Was Lost

FinDev Canada yesterday had no reply when asked if its $43.4 million worth of shares it purchased in a Kenyan phone company are lost. The company M-Kopa has never turned a profit since FinDev bought shares at taxpayers' expense: "Did any cabinet member approve the M-Kopa investment?"

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Judge To ‘Uncover The Truth’

Justice Marie-Josée Hogue yesterday opened a year-long federal inquiry into election meddling by Chinese agents with a pledge to “uncover the truth whatever it may be.” Evidence uncovered by parliamentary committees to date shows authorities knew foreign agents were targeting Opposition MPs but took no action: "Get to the bottom of this."

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Got Millions Without Bidding

ArriveCan supplier GC Strategies Inc. of Woodlawn, Ont. landed millions in sole-sourced contracts with no record it even complied with procurement rules, a federal report said yesterday. Kristian Firth, a company partner, earlier denied any favouritism in federal contracting: "I wasn’t prepared for that question."

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Promises To ‘Fix The Budget’

Any future Conservative cabinet would curb federal deficits with a one-to-one rule mandating every dollar of excess spending is offset with corresponding cuts, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. A similar Balanced Budget Act passed in 2015 was repealed a year later: "We want a dollar of spending to match a dollar of saving."

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Veto Crash Cuts To Red Tape

The Commons government operations committee yesterday by a 6 to 4 vote rejected a Conservative motion for crash cut to red tape. An earlier 2015 law to repeal obsolete regulations achieved little, according to the Treasury Board: "Get out the chainsaw."

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MPs Misled On Kenyan Deal

A federal agency FinDev that spent $15.4 million with a Kenyan cellphone company on a promise it would sell its shares in 2024 instead spent millions more, records show. The phone firm M-Kopa Holdings of Nairobi has never turned a profit: "FinDev Canada has not deliberately or inadvertently misled Parliament."

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Chinese Wouldn’t Take Calls

The Department of Foreign Affairs says it suspected Chinese agents used WeChat to meddle in the 2021 federal campaign but didn't act since the media platform wouldn’t take questions. WeChat is owned by a Shenzhen conglomerate: "It was not interpreted to be our job."

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