For my Canadian friends

I think this will be my last post on this topic until tomorrow when we've got the results

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Kathleen Smith

odsroSntep5thml02tmmf12u7utc21f7hff16ta117161i920a97c473g665 ·

The images that will stay with me - nay, haunt me - long after this election is over: Mark Carney standing silently with Vancouver’s Filipino community, at a vigil for the victims of yesterday’s horrific event, juxtaposed against the images of Pierre and Anaida Poilievre, celebrating on stage at a rally in his home riding.

One of these men rearranged his final campaign stops, cancelling 3, rescheduling 1, so that he could be where he should be tonight.

The other immediately referred to the event as an “attack” (before police had even held a news conference), then used the horrific events of yesterday to push out a disgusting video that makes what happened about “catch and release”, when the suspect is known to police thru mental health issues - not criminal activity - and after all that politicizing of lives lost in Vancouver, he chose to go to a rally as opposed to standing with those who are mourning

One of these men knows the seriousness of the moment, in every serious moment.

The other has failed to meet the moment, time and time again.

This shouldn’t even be a contest. But for those who still haven’t made up their minds, this moment should be the tipping point for you.

Barring any huge developments, this wiil serve as my last post about these two campaigns. Because if a picture is worth a thousand words, these two images are a dissertation on the choice Canadians had to make in this election.

I have faith we got it right.
 
Liberal minority:

Liberals: 168
Conservative: 144
Bloc: 24
NDP: 7
Green: 1

Carney won his seat and is PM. Poilievre lost his seat. So did Singh (leader of the NDP) who said he will step down.
 
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Canadians Against Pierre Poilievre

Mxty Boivin ·

BREAKING: MASS EXODUS OF FAR-RIGHT CANADIANS BEGINS

“We came here looking for a place where we could be racist and implement policies of fascism. Now we’re being told everyone has rights?”

As the final election results rolled in, panic erupted among Canada’s far-right. Sources confirm a mass exodus is now underway, with caravans of disillusioned patriots fleeing a country they claim has been “taken over by facts, empathy, and minorities with opinions.”

“I saw a pride flag next to a Treaty Land Acknowledgment and I just screamed,” said one man, tearfully zip-tying a Canadian flag to his snowmobile. “This used to be a place where I could yell about freedom while trying to take it away from everyone else.”

Leading the U-Haul convoy is disgraced former candidate Bierre Polimere, who broke down mid-rant outside a Florida-bound Esso:

“My best friend whose name I cannot share — the guy who once got kicked out of a curling bonspiel for yelling ‘go woke, go broke’ at the ice — just lost his seat in the election to a guy so fruity his last name has joy in it. Joy!

What’s next? Banning the Canadian Tire catalogue for not being inclusive enough? I didn’t sign up to lose to someone who smiles with their whole face. This is a national emergency.

We warned you. First they came for the slurs, then for the statues, and now? Now they’re using inclusive language and making eye contact in public. I’m done. I’m going where real men cry only during UFC entrances — Florida.”

The so-called “Freedom Convoy 2: Bye Now” has been spotted across provincial borders, armed with rage, expired passports, and the firm belief that they are the real victims.

Economists say Canada’s main losses from the exodus will be:

– Facebook rants
– Confederate flags repurposed as window curtains
– And long, meandering stories that begin with “I’m not racist, but…”
 

Canadians Against Pierre Poilievre

Art Covey · drpotesSonu08085705u0c615mh43fgamih24u991utt65710m04592u088m ·

From Alberta Politics David Climenhaga May 5, 2025

Danielle Smith tries in ‘Alberta Next’ video address to bluff her way out of a bad hand she dealt herself

“I have repeatedly stated I do not support Alberta separating from Canada,” she assured". BUT I will pass a Bill so that you can (my loyal base) She condemned those “who will try and sow fear and anger among us,” then she sowed fear and anger. Albertans are starting to say "Enough is enough Danielle.

Alberta premier’s video speech was a snake pit of contradictions, misinformation and gaslighting

After dealing herself a weak hand by making assumptions that turned out to be disastrously wrong, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith sat down for her weirdly timed mid-afternoon video address to the province yesterday and tried to bluff her way out of a predicament of her own creation.

If only Pierre Poilievre and his MAGA Conservatives had won the federal election
, she must have been thinking as she pulled off the Red Dress Day pin she’d been wearing for Question Period in the Legislature and got ready to address the masses at an hour few tax-paying citizens were likely to be paying attention.

The resulting 3,000-word bloviation was a snake pit of contradictions, misinformation, gaslighting and childish assertions like “we just want to be free,” delivered in Ms. Smith’s inimitable style – which always seems to make sense, but only if you only listen for a few moments. Perfect, in other words, for 15-second news clips and Internet videos.

The 3 p.m. broadcast time with no reporters permitted to ask impertinent questions ensured most Albertans wouldn’t hear the entire speech or see the transcript posted on the Government’s website. But they would get to view a few colourful clips on the evening news and social media that would make Ms. Smith look decisive.

“I have repeatedly stated I do not support Alberta separating from Canada,” she assured. But “if there is a successful citizen-led referendum petition that is able to gather the requisite number of signatures requesting such a question to be put to a referendum, our government will respect the democratic process and include that question on the 2026 provincial referendum ballot as well.” Never mind that her government has created the legislation intended to make this easy.

“As premier, I am entirely committed to protecting, upholding and honouring the inherent rights of First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples,” she averred. But the referendum she vows “must uphold and honour Treaties 6, 7 and 8” will by its nature do the opposite.

She condemned those “who will try and sow fear and anger among us,” then she sowed fear and anger about how “successive Liberal Governments in Ottawa – supported by their New Democrat allies – have unleashed a tidal wave of laws, policies and political attacks aimed directly at Alberta’s free economy.”

Hilariously, she insisted, “it’s not that our preferred candidate and party lost. It’s that the same Liberal government with almost all of the same ministers responsible for our nation’s inflation, housing, crime and budget crisis, and that oversaw the attack on our provincial economy for the past 10 years have been returned to power.” In other words, it is that our preferred candidate and party lost!

She said she wants her “Special Negotiating Team” to negotiate with the Government of Canada, but if it won’t immediately give in to her list of non-negotiable demands, there will also be an “Alberta Next Panel” that she will chair herself to gin up more demands. “It is likely we will place some of the more popular ideas discussed with the panel to a provincial referendum so all Albertans can vote on them sometime in 2026.”

“I will in good faith work with Prime Minister Mark Carney on unwinding the mountain of destructive legislation and policies that have ravaged our provincial and national economies this past decade,” she said, tendentiously. But, “until I see tangible proof of real change, Alberta will be taking steps to better protect ourselves from Ottawa.”

This point seems intended to throw a lifeline to her much admired ally, U.S. President Donald Trump, in his meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney today.

Her immediate goal? Ottawa “must refrain from imposing export taxes or restrictions on the export of Alberta resources without the consent of the Government of Alberta.” No matter what Mr. Trump does.

Team Canada? Ms. Smith is not on it.

“Alberta requires guaranteed corridor and port access to tidewater off the Pacific, Arctic and Atlantic coasts for the international export of Alberta oil, gas, critical minerals and other resources,” she also said, a demand that seems to be designed to be impossible for Ottawa to impose on other provinces. (Emphasis added.)

There’s more – including a misleading description of the equalization formula and claims of trillions of dollars in costs of federal policies with no evidence provided – but readers will get the idea.


I don’t know how Mr. Carney will respond to this nonsense, but he would certainly be within his rights to ignore whatever unsuitable allies Ms. Smith decides to put on her negotiating team or her “Alberta Next Panel” – Preston Manning? Gary Mar? Jack Mintz? W. Brett Wilson? Who knows?

She has wound up her party’s extremist base, just as her predecessor Jason Kenney did, and risks the same fate if she disappoints them. At the same time, she has frightened and alienated the larger group of Albertans who have no time for separatist threats of the chaos they would bring. And Mr. Poilievre isn’t the PM as she expected, willing to help her look good while together they dismantle the country’s social safety net.


Mr. Carney owes her nothing. If he of his party, which she she obviously assumed would lose the election, don’t rise to the bait, what’s she gonna do about it?

NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi, fresh off his overwhelming performance review vote at the party’s convention last weekend, tore into the premier’s remarks. “She lied, she deflected, she blamed, she refused to take responsibility, and she tried to pick a fight,” he said. “That’s what she does. It’s what she’s always done.”

“She didn’t say, ‘I’m proud to be a Canadian,’” he noted. “She didn’t say, ‘I’m sorry.’ She didn’t say, ‘I take responsibility.’ She didn’t say, ‘I denounce separatism.’ She only said she was going to pick yet another fight. She only said she will have another endless panel, stacked with endless cronies, spending endless taxpayer dollars on an endless fight that she will never win.”

Travel costs exposed; measles vaccinations advocated; and weeks, lots of weeks!


The day didn’t start particularly well for the premier, with a stoty by the CBC revealing that her 48-hour junket to Florida in January to pose for a photo with Mr. Trump at his Mar-a-Lago golf resort cost $10,101.87. This prompted unfavourable comparisons to Ms. Smith’s overwrought reaction to PC Premier Alison Redford’s travel costs in 2014.

That story included the interesting tidbit that her chief of staff Rob Anderson, who accompanied her on the trip, “has a doctor’s note about a blood condition that requires him to travel business class.”

We will probably never know if that revelation accounted for the unusually long list of nine government news releases published by the government through the day.

The most important was in response to the continued spread of measles throughout the province. In the release, quotes from Health Minister Adriana LaGrange and interim Chief Medical Officer of Health Sunil Sookram urged Albertans to get vaccinated against the highly infectious disease.

“Getting immunized against measles is the single most important thing you can do to protect yourself, your loved ones and your community,” Ms. LaGrange said.

“Get immunized against measles now and help prevent the spread,” Dr. Sookram said. “Help protect your communities.”


This is sound advice. But it is also a major break from past UCP practice, which was to say as little as possible about vaccinations for fear of outraging the party’s MAGA base.

The other topics were organ and tissue donations, school bus drivers, construction of new facilities including a mandatory drug treatment centre at Alberta Hospital Edmonton, Red Dress Day, Alberta Forest Week. Mental Health Week, and Emergency Preparedness Week.

Not announced was the fact, noted in a list of recent Alberta Labour Relations Board applications, that the government of Alberta has applied to lock out employees of the provincial public service represented by the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees in the event of a breakdown in contract negotiations.
 

Canadians Against Pierre Poilievre

Anonymous participant
· oetsrSopndgu829l9igig36cfut66c4m9a2g9lui319g7fh2370f9u55u2mi ·

By Cy Hoffman

What's on my mind?...Well today, it is how Prime Minister Mark Carney is proving he was the right choice, at the right time.

So, apart from the exceptional way he handled the Man-child's rants and demented bluster, during his meeting in the Oval Office, and how he told the Orange Asshat in no uncertain terms, that Canada was NOT for sale, we are seeing the results of his handling of the Canadian economy in real time, and believe me when I say it is a refreshing change having an adult in charge.

So the statistics for March have been released, and thanks to Trump's tariffs, trade with the U.S., in the first full month of this economic realignment, is down 6.6%... Now, normally this would be an unmitigated disaster for the Canadian economy, akin to Pandemic numbers in lost revenue...But thanks to Carney, (and it is rare that a single individual can take this kind of credit), Canada's net export revenue dropped a mere 0.2%. So how can it be that we are weathering the Trump imposed economic storm?

Well, Carney has used his world connections behind the scenes, and here are the results...According to Stats Canada, trade with nations other than the U.S. are:

Mexico - +4.1%
Japan - +3.4%
Germany - +52.3%
United Kingdom - +93.7%
South Korea - +27%
Netherlands - +74.8%

Now, while each of these nations are a mere fraction of our trade with the U.S., combined they basically match the numbers of our exports with our southern neighbor...and he is just getting started.

So for those that are bemoaning the Conservative loss in the Federal election, and think that Poilievre's (and Danielle Smith's) policy of appeasement was our only chance to maintain our economy...well I guess it may be time to examine the rhetoric of a "Broken Canada" vs the reality what our country can actually be, and admit that "standing tall", and on our own, is the path we need to follow.

Anyway, it's just a thought.
 
"... the exceptional way he handled the Man-child's rants and demented bluster, during his meeting in the Oval Office, and ..." Hoffman #110
Appeasing a tyrant is nothing new. It's a negotiating skill practiced and improved for millennia.
Appeasing a tyrant that rests his thumb on the button may be like in kind, but not consequence.

You've seen pics from the Oval Office. Ever wonder why the portrait of George Washington has a stapler sticking out the forehead? Trump's onion rings got cold.

"the Orange Asshat" #110
The duly twice elected President of the United States of America Donald J. Trump,
the orange asshat.
 
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John Morrison

psnroodetS6m330i7hh21u0cf2lit992u376tuthic135i8c94fau20i431i ·

Back when Mark Carney was chosen by the Liberal caucus to become Prime Minister, Conservatives had a field day attacking the move, claiming it was undemocratic because he hadn’t been elected by the people.

Pierre Poilievre suggested Carney’s appointment was orchestrated by the Liberal elite and that his rise lacked democratic legitimacy.

But now that Poilievre himself is without a seat, Conservatives are preparing to parachute him into the ultra-safe Alberta riding of Battle River–Crowfoot where they just won over 80% of the vote. Funny how the outrage goes silent when the shoe’s on the other foot.

If Carney’s appointment was undemocratic because he wasn’t elected, then surely the same logic applies when you drop your leader into a guaranteed-win riding like it’s a corporate boardroom appointment.

And before my outraged Conservative friends jump in to say, “Well, the Liberals do it too” that doesn’t make it democratic, or right. I thought Conservatives were supposed to be the party of principle and reform? Seems like a great time to prove it.

Choose a leader who already has a seat and was actually elected by the people.

It’s time for change.
 
The people in Battle River-Crowfoot might want to take a closer look at him... I wonder if any of the right wing journalists that called for Carney to reimburse the cost of his flights to England and France as he went about the nation's business as "an unelected PM", will suggest that the Conservative Party reimburse the government for this unnecessary expense.

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Canadian Politics Daily - News for Working People

esSntrdoophl3g6hfahm37ul552t95gg0glmlmmfga778tgg53h63h8241a1 ·

This past week a small publication Niagara Now printed the most powerful takedown I have read on the lies, fabrications, and just plain toxic idiocy of Pierre Poilievre. Here is the editorial. It is well worth a read:

POILIEVRE IS GREAT - AT PANDERING

Pierre Poilievre made a stop in Niagara-on-the-Lake last Thursday. Here is a leader who at first might seem informed, capable of holding rational arguments and making good points.

But what he’s really the best at is pandering, lying and misleading.

He panders to a crowd that’s so anti-Liberal, they’re willing to eat up and digest anything he says. He’s hoping that voters so dislike Justin Trudeau that they won’t see beyond his simplistic, bumper-sticker rhetoric.

Here are a few examples of just how good Poilievre is at spinning webs of lies that sound, to the ill-informed, like truth.

And warning, there’s a lot of purposeful misleading and contradiction to unpack here, but it’s all closely related. So bear with us.

Firstly, we asked him what his party would do to ensure it supports local journalism.

His answer?

“Free speech.”

“I am going to repeal the censorship laws, make it possible for Canadian news to be visible again on Facebook, Instagram and all other social media platforms,” he said.

“And get rid of the terrible censorship laws that have taken those news stories down from the internet and deprived independent local media to have a voice.”

OK, let’s digest this: there’s no such thing as a censorship law. Full stop.

We assume he’s referring to the Online News Act (Bill C-18), which is aimed “to ensure that dominant platforms compensate news businesses when their content is made available on their services.”

In other words, when big players like Google or Meta share news content created by Canadian media companies, and benefits from the billions of views those stories produce, then companies like Google must pay for that privilege.

The law is simple, fair and in the best interests of Canadian journalism organizations — and something Google has agreed to, by the way.

The only “censorship” being done is solely by Meta (which runs Facebook and Instagram).

The company has not agreed to pay its fair share and in response to the laws Canada passed to help ensure journalism organizations get paid, it has banned Canadian news on its platforms.

This show the core values of companies like Meta are not to help you, but to exploit you.

So recap: Poilievre calls Bill C-18 a censorship law, which it absolutely is not. He’s being blatantly misleading. And to the average, uninformed voter who doesn’t understand it, it could seem true.

We mean this with as little offence as possible, but he’s relying on his voter base to not be smart enough to know the difference.

It might sound good and pander to the right people to say he’s fighting for “free speech.” But in reality, in Canada we already have freedom of expression thanks to the Charter of Rights.

The next of his lies ties directly in with the lies we just discussed

We asked a question about the future of the Local Journalism Initiative — a government-funded program that pays salaries of many journalists across the country.

His response?

“It is terrible how … local journalism has done under nine years of Trudeau. He’s tried to take it over and basically wants everyone to work for the government so that he can have regurgitated propaganda paid for by taxpayers.”

This is completely false.

The Trudeau government has funded the Local Journalism Initiative, yes.

But let’s digest this, too.

As editors of a journalism organization, we can simply say it’s not “terrible” how local journalism has done under nine years of Trudeau. In fact, the LJI program is one of the reasons local journalism can thrive in small communities, often called “news deserts” because they have no local coverage.

They don’t have a big newspaper and often issues go uncovered because of a lack of reporters covering the area.

Secondly, the notion that Trudeau wants everyone to work for the government and has “propaganda” placed in newspapers is simply ridiculous.

Firstly, LJI reporters don’t work for the government. They work for the news organizations that receive the funding. The only person who ever tells reporters what to write about is their editor.

Notably, several conservative-leaning news outlets receive the same funding.

And secondly, the notion that any legitimate newspaper would simply print “propaganda” for any party is ludicrous.

We won’t even print a news release without as asking questions and vetting the information — as some local NOTL media organizations regularly do.

You will never find verbatim Liberal or Conservative news releases in our paper. Or from any party.

If we did, the majority of the paper would be Conservative MP Tony Baldinelli’s constant criticism of the Liberals, and the Liberals constantly tooting their own horns.

(Note how we just criticized Baldinelli’s approach, even though he advertises with us. That’s how journalism works. Advertising with us buys you an ad, not favourable coverage.)

The reality is local news is the least partisan news you’ll find anywhere because we report on municipal council and local politicos, who are not beholden to any political party.

Our ideals are our own. They are carefully thought-out, with the best interests of the whole community in mind, and have nothing to do with funding from a government program.

For Poilievre to suggest newspapers like ours are only Liberal-leaning because we receive funding from the LJI program is insulting, out of touch with reality and just another way to pander to people who lack critical thinking skills.

Does he think that if he keeps the program running, news outlets are going to magically turn Conservative because we’re so grateful?

It’s almost cute, how ignorant he must be.

He would like you to believe Justin Trudeau is funnelling orders to organizations like The Lake Report. It’s simply not true — and the worst part is that Poilievre must be smart enough to know it. He’s just hoping you buy his baloney.

Perhaps he is afraid that with a healthy media he will continue to be called out on his lies and misleading statements — exactly like what we’re doing here.

Next we asked him again point blank what he plans to do with the LJI program.

His answer was that media should be funding itself “and do what media have done for, I don’t know, 3,000 years?”

Simply, we have to ask, how out of touch can a person be, when from one side of their mouth they’re saying they would repeal laws that give media fair compensation from giants like Google and Meta, and on the other side he says those organizations should be funding themselves entirely?

With one hand he’s ....

CONTINUED
 
Part 2

With one hand he's cutting our income flow and giving it to billionaires, and with the other he’s criticizing media for not being able to make enough money and saying the government shouldn’t be helping keep an essential democratic function alive.

He goes on: “And now, of course, media and journalism is stronger than ever today because we have the internet, which allows for more voices to reach Canadians and that competition is positive. We can’t have the government try to shut down competition just to favour those who favour the political viewpoint of Justin Trudeau.”

Again, there’s a lot to unpack here.

Firstly, did he just say media and journalism is doing better than ever? We thought he just said how much we’re all suffering under Trudeau?

Can’t this guy make up his mind?

He’s just pandering again. So don’t take anything he says too seriously, people.

Secondly, the government isn’t trying to shut down anyone. The government is trying to help keep local journalism organizations alive, largely because real journalists are the only ones who will give you the whole story.

“Citizen journalism” like you see on TikTok and Facebook, created by amateurs who don’t really know what balanced journalism is, is often littered with untruths, accompanied by half-baked opinions and in general isn’t really news.

Citizen journalism — a term that shouldn’t even really exist because it isn’t journalism — doesn’t usually cover council meetings. If it does, it often comes with bias.

It doesn’t continue to follow stories to the end. It often convicts people before a court can.

There are a litany of problems with citizen journalism and Poilievre’s mindset that journalism is doing just fine because every Bob and Sue can post on Twitter is not appropriate for someone who wants to run this country.

Run it into the ground is more like it.

We realize this is probably the longest editorial we’ve ever published. Yet, it might be one of the most necessary editorials yet.

Because one of Poilievre’s tactics is to throw out so much misinformation, that it’s almost impossible to fact check it all, especially on the spot.

It’s why he often appears to eat journalists and other politicians alive. Because he’s on another planet and it’s almost impossible to have a rational conversation with someone who just makes things up.

So it’s our duty as a free press — one that isn’t going to take anything at face value from any political party — to call out Poilievre’s dangerous lies. Or his inability to comprehend the truth.

Either he’s lying to you and knows it. Or he’s just incompetent.

And because he’s not a stupid man, it’s not hard to figure out. If you think critically about what he says.
 
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Serhiy Rafalyuk

is in Alberta.​

prsondoStec3f50c1thh047fih8chful7t3il24c3t7um1c096a85l7ilma3 ·

𝑹𝑪𝑴𝑷 𝑰𝒏𝒗𝒆𝒔𝒕𝒊𝒈𝒂𝒕𝒊𝒐𝒏 — 𝑫𝒂𝒏𝒊𝒆𝒍𝒍𝒆 𝑺𝒎𝒊𝒕𝒉’𝒔 𝑮𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒏𝒎𝒆𝒏𝒕 𝑼𝒏𝒅𝒆𝒓 𝑪𝒓𝒊𝒎𝒊𝒏𝒂𝒍 𝑺𝒄𝒓𝒖𝒕𝒊𝒏𝒚

This is not just political controversy — this is criminal investigation.

In March 2025, the RCMP confirmed they are investigating allegations of corruption and political interference involving Premier Danielle Smith’s government and Alberta Health Services (AHS).

This investigation stems from a whistleblower lawsuit filed by former AHS CEO Athana Mentzelopoulos, who says she was fired for investigating over $600 million in potentially corrupt health contracts.

Mentzelopoulos alleges that:

• She was pressured by Smith’s office to approve overpriced contracts;
• She raised concerns about “kickbacks” and was then dismissed;
• The AHS board told her to go to the RCMP — and days later, Smith’s minister dissolved the board itself.

These are explosive claims.

The RCMP is now actively investigating for:

✅
Conflict of interest;
✅
Political interference in procurement;
✅
Possible criminal misuse of public funds.

Smith denies all wrongdoing.

But the investigation — paired with a parallel review by former judge Raymond Wyant — has placed her government under unprecedented federal scrutiny.

Alberta has never before seen a sitting Premier’s office targeted by an active RCMP corruption probe. It raises the gravest question possible:

𝑰𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒔𝒚𝒔𝒕𝒆𝒎 𝒔𝒆𝒓𝒗𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒑𝒖𝒃𝒍𝒊𝒄 — 𝒐𝒓 𝒔𝒆𝒓𝒗𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝒊𝒕𝒔𝒆𝒍𝒇?

This scandal is not alone. It follows years of ethical violations, interference in justice (see Ethics Post), and hostility to press accountability.

Albertans — and all Canadians — deserve to know:

Are political allies being rewarded while whistleblowers are silenced?

Are tax dollars being funnelled into favoured pockets?

Is this governance… or is this grift?

𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑹𝑪𝑴𝑷 𝒊𝒔 𝒊𝒏𝒗𝒆𝒔𝒕𝒊𝒈𝒂𝒕𝒊𝒏𝒈. 𝑾𝒆 𝒔𝒉𝒐𝒖𝒍𝒅 𝒃𝒆 𝒕𝒐𝒐.

🚨
Sign the Petition
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https://www.change.org/.../danielle-smith-step-down-a...
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Sign the Petition
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𝑹𝒆𝒈𝒂𝒓𝒅𝒔,

Serhiy Rafalyuk

𝑷𝒐𝒍𝒊𝒕𝒊𝒄𝒂𝒍 𝑪𝒓𝒊𝒕𝒊𝒄 𝒐𝒇 𝑪𝒂𝒏𝒂𝒅𝒊𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒊𝒆𝒔
𝑪𝒐𝒏𝒔𝒕𝒂𝒏𝒕 𝑬𝒏𝒆𝒎𝒚 𝒐𝒇 𝑪𝒐𝒓𝒓𝒖𝒑𝒕 𝑮𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒏𝒎𝒆𝒏𝒕
#RCMPInvestigation
#PoliticalCorruption

#SmithUnderInvestigation
#HealthcareScandal
#EnquêteCriminelle
#JusticePourLAlberta
#GouvernanceÉthique
#TransparenceMaintenant
#РозслідуванняRCMP
#КорупціяВСистемі
#ЗахистПравди
#КанадаПротиЗловживань
 
And the conspiracy theories are coming out of the woodwork

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Democracy Inc.

ndpserStooui8ug1932aiu0t2t04u11falit55icl13h5l9u6gl49h0244tm ·

🇨🇦
CONSERVATIVES' CURRENT CONSPIRACY THEORIES


This is exactly why Canadians voted against Poilievre’s Reform/Conservatives, Trump-style politics. Now that the election is over the conspiratorial claims of voter fraud, the changing of electoral boundaries, immigrants flooding the riding with liberal votes, and the longest ballot in Canada are coming out from Conservatives like Stockwell Day and others on Twitter. Poilievre conceded that he lost but the party is not doing anything to stop the conspiracies. Liberal Bruce Fanjoy one by 4513 votes. There was not 100% turn out in the writing of Carleton but there was 81% turn out. Electoral boundaries in each province are redrawn every 10 years by an independent commission led by a judge and are based on The most recent census data. Also, immigrants did not flood the riding with Liberal votes and there is no evidence that all immigrants vote the same way. And last but not least the longest Ballot in Canada did have 91 candidates but 96% of the vote went to Bruce Fanjoy and Pierre Poilievre. This is a protest group called the Longest Ballot committee, they want proportional representation. The group has done this before and followed all the rules to get those names on the ballot. Take a good look at the picture on the right of PP, not hard to tell he was crying and rubbing his eyes the night of the election. Good on the CBC for fact-checking these claims.

Article by CBC News

Claims of fraud and unfairness continue to spread over Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's election loss in his Ottawa riding of Carleton nearly two weeks ago.

Poilievre lost to Liberal Bruce Fanjoy by 4,513 votes. Some have questioned how that was possible, considering how well the Conservatives did overall. Also, Poilievre held the riding for 20 years and in the last election, he won by more than 10,000 votes.

Poilievre conceded that he lost this time and the Conservatives have not made allegations that the vote was unfair, wrong or conducted improperly.

Here are the facts of what happened.

100% turnout? Really?

No, not really.

Some suggested the vote was illegitimate because they felt the numbers didn't add up. By their math, they estimated turnout was nearly 100 per cent, which doesn't happen in Canadian elections.

But the claim isn't true. According to Elections Canada, turnout in the riding was 81 per cent. That's considerably higher than the national overall turnout of 68 per cent, but it's not that unusual. Three other Ottawa-area ridings that are close to Carleton had turnout of 77 per cent, including next door in Nepean, won by Mark Carney.

It appears the people making the claims were using outdated numbers for how many people live in the riding based on the old boundaries and only accounting for part of the population.

Who's fiddling with the riding boundaries?

In 2023, the Carleton riding changed significantly. The physical size of it got a lot bigger compared to 2021, and the composition of people in it changed, meaning it was not the same group of people walking into voting booths as in the last election.

Some, including former Conservative cabinet minister Stockwell Day, have suggested the boundary change was the Liberal government's doing, in order to make it harder for Poilievre to get elected. But that's not how it works in Canada.

Every 10 years, electoral boundaries in each province are redrawn by an independent commission led by a judge and are based on the most recent census data.

As populations change and grow, the idea is to make sure each riding has roughly the same number of people in it.

The boundaries are not decided by political leaders or their parties. They do have input, as does any Canadian who wants to comment on proposed changes. But the independent panel makes the decision.

It's designed to be non-partisan and not connected to the election cycle, so it's hard to manipulate it in favour of the governing party. Diya Jiang is a senior researcher at the Media Ecosystem Observatory, a group at McGill University that tracks election misinformation on social media.

"There is so much polarization, so people have distrust toward the political system," Jiang said. "This is the first time ever, really, social media is playing such a huge role in conveying news. So this kind of facilitates the process of claiming something that's not truthful.

“No, immigrants did not flood the riding with Liberal votes

A post on X claimed the riding had added 40,000 immigrants in the space of 10 years — and that 95 per cent of its population growth was due to immigration. These figures are misleading.

The 95 per cent figure likely refers to overall population growth in Canada, not Carleton specifically, which would also have people moving into and out of it from within Canada.

Next, if you look at the areas that make up the new Carleton riding, the total number of immigrants accounts for about 20-25 per cent of the population, according to Statistics Canada. Some are recent arrivals. Some have been in Canada much longer. And when you look at where they come from, no single country dominates.

There's no evidence that all immigrants vote the same way, especially those from different places.

The longest ballot in Canada

Others have questioned if it was too difficult for voters to find their preferred candidate on the ballot, since it was so long. Yes, it did have 91 candidates — the longest of any riding in the 2025 election. Most were candidates from a protest group called the Longest Ballot Committee that wants proportional representation.

The group has done this before. In each case, it followed the rules to get all those names on the ballot.

Out of 86,655 votes cast in Carleton, Poilievre and Fanjoy together received more than 96 per cent of them. Based on that, it would appear that people were able to find the name they wanted, despite the long ballot. None of the protest candidates got more than a few dozen votes.

Elections Canada also knew it would take longer to count the votes in Carleton. It granted permission for officials to start counting hours earlier than they normally would. Elections Canada was clear about this on voting day.
 
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We didn't want this

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Danielle Smith recently announced that Alberta added 15,000 new jobs in April, as seen above, claiming this as evidence of strong economic growth under her leadership but when you take a closer look, the reality is far less impressive — and her post is seriously misleading.

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Here’s what she didn’t tell you:

Alberta lost 20,000 jobs in March, and the 15,000 jobs gained in April are not new — they simply replaced a fraction of the lost positions.

Also, we should discuss the seasonal and temporary jobs too.

A large portion of these jobs were seasonal, such as recreational workers for spring and summer activities, which happen every year, regardless of the UCP.

Another major portion was in Public Administration — temporary positions for the federal election. These are not long-term or stable jobs.

Now, let's discuss the major sectoral declines next.

While some sectors gained jobs, others saw major losses, such as professional, scientific, and technical services, which was a loss of 7,300 jobs.

We also saw a decline in natural resources sectors, which lost 6,100 jobs due to our southern neighbors and their "decisions."

We also watched as wholesale and retail trade jobs were lost. Another 3,300 jobs.

So, let's call this what it is, shall we?

Misleading presentation, plain and simple.

By focusing only on the 15,000 jobs gained without acknowledging the losses or the temporary nature of these jobs, Smith's post creates a false impression of economic success.

So, what is the reality? Alberta’s job market remains unstable, with gains largely driven by seasonal factors and election staffing — not by strong, sustainable economic policies.

So let's remember... Always dig deeper than the headlines. Transparency matters. It's what we deserve from our Premier, no matter who they are or who they represent.
 

Is it effective to boycott U.S. products? Evidence is mixed, but here’s what you can do to shop more Canadian

Mariya Postelnyak Consumer Affairs reporter
Published January 24, 2025

Deb Nelson from Trail, B.C., has been spending a little extra time at the grocery store lately. When she grabs a ketchup bottle off the shelf, she will take a few seconds to turn it over in her hand, looking for the stamp that says “Made in Canada.”

She does the same with most items, though she already knows the origin of many by heart, including her tissues and paper towels (Canadian).

While Ms. Nelson has always been a conscientious shopper, she’ll be making more effort to steer clear of American-made goods in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s promises of a sweeping 25-per-cent tariff on Canadian imports.

“Canadian consumers are not voiceless, motionless witnesses to world events,” she said. “We can react to .....

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