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Showing posts with label Parliament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parliament. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Canadian Convulsions > Rachel Marsden Nails Trudeau Right-on

 

Trudeau’s term as PM was a boon for Canada, but not the way he expected


The outgoing leader managed to unite his nation, most of which now hates him
Trudeau’s term as PM was a boon for Canada, but not the way he expected











Another one bites the dust. Before he can get pushed into it. 

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau came back from a rough Christmas break and promptly resigned. During his holiday downtime, he headed over to the westernmost province of British Columbia for some skiing, where he was caught on camera being welcomed by a local, who said as he went over to shake her hand, “Mr. Prime Minister, please get the f**k out of BC. You suck!” A growing chorus of homegrown profanity has followed Trudeau wherever he ends up going.

Merely days later, on January 6, he stood in front of the press at his Rideau Cottage residence and announced that he was stepping down, citing the desire to offer Canadians a “real choice.” Like he was sacrificing himself for the greater good of the country. In reality, he was just battering himself up and tossing himself on the barbecue before his own party did – which they were expected to do just two days later at a caucus meeting.

During his announcement, Trudeau demonstrated that he’s suffering from an incurable case of woke mind virus. He underscored his commitment to Ukraine, to “truth and reconciliation” with natives, and to climate change. Meanwhile, Canadians of all political stripes and backgrounds are more focused now on how to save their own behinds from impending economic doom, exacerbated by the carbon tax imposed by Trudeau, than they are with the abstract notion that by slitting their fiscal wrists for the planet, they can control its temperature.

Immigration has exploded under Trudeau to the point where it’s affecting housing and jobs, while also treating Canadians to a taste of various global conflicts right at home. You used to have to actually go abroad for that, but now you can have it Ubered right to your door. Literally. “Why do so many ‘skilled’ Indian migrants work as drivers in Canada?” someone asked on Quora, for instance.

There’s also the ongoing traveling roadshow of gunplay between Khalistani Sikh separatists and their opponents. And the Israel-Palestine protests and counterprotests, one of which saw a participant threaten her opponents with another Holocaust, then asking if they needed clarification on what that was because she’d gladly explain it. Canadians – always polite and helpful.

The NATO-backed Ukrainian conflict with Russia also culminated at home in Team Trudeau celebrating an honored Canadian guest during a visit from Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky – who also happened to be a bona fide World War II-era Ukrainian Nazi who had served in Heinrich Himmler’s Waffen-SS.

If Trudeau wanted to bring the country together, he’s finally succeeded. Not through any contrived “truth and reconciliation” initiatives, but rather organically by virtue of the fact that Canadians now overwhelmingly agree that he sucks. All but 20 percent of the population, according to the latest polling. If that still seems like a lot, it is. Like, who are these people?

It’s worth remembering that there’s a significant chunk of the Canadian electorate that would reflexively vote for the self-styled “natural governing party” of Liberals even if they were lobotomized. Which they might be. After all, when Trudeau marginalized those who opted to pass on the Covid shots, they willingly fell into line and picked fights with friends and family.

“When people see that we are in lockdowns or serious public health restrictions right now because of the risk posed to all of us by unvaccinated people, people get angry,” Trudeau said three years ago, blaming the pro-choice for his own government’s draconian diktats.  And when Trudeau blamed Russian disinformation for the fact that everyone was laughing at him applauding a Nazi, some Canadians actually listened and complied, with all the power that their remaining functional neurons could muster.

But one could also say that these credulous Canadians are victims, too. After all, under Team Trudeau during the Covid fiasco, the military used social media to deploy weapons-grade propaganda honed on the battlefield of Afghanistan to enforce establishment narratives, as the Ottawa Citizen reported in 2021.

Then there are Canadians who fear the so-called scary “fascist” (but actually frustratingly centrist) Conservatives more than they do the guy whose party actually blocked bank accounts of honking Covid-era anti-mandate Freedom Convoy Protesters, and actually have to be told in a ruling by a federal judge that he overshot his authority.

But in announcing his exit, Trudeau has also joined the many other Western establishment leaders trying to save their shared establishment agenda from voter wrath, particularly of the populist kind, as they seek to purge their national leadership of anyone considered even remotely involved with the mess made.

Romania simply cancelled an election when a populist won the first round. Austria has tried (and failed) to form a coalition without the winning populist party. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, is impossibly trying to govern the country to the total exclusion from government of the right-wing populist party that won the most votes and the left-wing populists that won the most seats, even after colluding openly with the latter in a desperate attempt to block a right-win parliamentary victory.

Trudeau’s gambit now involves suspending the Canadian parliament rather than dissolving it in favor of an immediate election. With parliament prorogued until March 24, it gives the Liberals time to find a new leader and then simply plop him into Trudeau’s role when parliament resumes with a new throne speech and a new direction. Like nothing ever happened.

Hardly the “real choice” that Trudeau just said that “Canadians deserve.” That would require an election. Which has to be held sometime before the Fall anyway, but a new Liberal leader might buy the party some time to try clawing back some of that 24-point lead that the Conservatives now enjoy. A lead that could result in a landslide victory and a long odyssey across the political desert for the establishment Liberals who’ve long thought that they own the place.

The Western establishment has repeatedly proven that when faced with a democratic reckoning that risks rendering a verdict against their status quo, they’ll pull any and every lever they can in an attempt to prevent it. US President-elect Trump reacted to Trudeau’s announcement by suggesting yet again that Canada merge with the US.  No doubt in jest, but the Trudeau-led Canadian establishment trying to subvert democracy by sprinkling glitter on a dumpster fire in a last-ditch effort to cling to power sounds more like a typical justification for the kind of full-blown Western regime change that they love.

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Sunday, January 5, 2025

Canadian Political Scientist, who exposed the Neo-Nazi Azov gang, is on Ukrainian Black List along with Tulsi Gabbard and Tucker Carlson

 

Maidan shootings analyst placed on Ukraine’s state-linked

‘kill list’

Ivan Katchanovski says he has been added to the notorious Mirotvorets list for “launching a campaign against” WWII Nazi veteran
Maidan shootings analyst placed on Ukraine’s state-linked ‘kill list’











Canadian political scientist Ivan Katchanovski has been added to the notorious Ukrainian state-linked Mirotvorets ‘kill list,’ for his alleged involvement in Russian information operations, for “manipulation of socially significant information,” and for spreading anti-Ukrainian as well as Russian “propaganda myths.”

The scholar, who is a part-time professor at the University of Ottawa, described his inclusion on the list as “Orwellian” and linked the move to his study of the Ukrainian far-right.

According to Katchanovski, his post with US-based tech mogul Elon Musk “about Nazi SS Galicia veteran,” his tweet about a “neo-Nazi Azov leader, who gave Nazi salute in front of Nazi flag,” and his “academic study of far-right involvement” in Maidan “are posted by Myrotvorets as evidence of a ‘deliberate act against the national security of Ukraine, the peace, the security of humanity and the international legal order, as well as other offenses’.”

In a post on X on Sunday, Katchanovski wrote that he is “on Myrotvorets hit list for ‘launching [a] campaign against’ an SS Galicia Division veteran hailed as a hero in Canada parliament” – an apparent reference to Yaroslav Hunka. The 99-year-old came into the spotlight in 2023 when he appeared in the Canadian parliament as a guest during a visit by Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky, and received a standing ovation.

During World War II, he served in Nazi Germany’s Galicia Division, which was made up primarily of Ukrainian recruits, and is believed to have carried out atrocities against Jews and Poles.

Katchanovski also complained that his property in Ukraine had been “illegally seized” in retaliation for his research.

The Mirotvorets online resource, created in 2014, describes itself as a “non-government Center for Research of Elements of Crimes against the National Security of Ukraine, Peace, Humanity, and International Law.” The initiative was initially backed by Anton Gerashchenko, a former adviser to the Ukrainian interior minister, and the website appears to have partnered at some point with the country’s security and law enforcement agencies.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has described it as a hit list.

Over the years, the controversial database has published the personal details of foreign journalists and politicians. Among those on the black list are former US representative Tulsi Gabbard, who has been nominated by US President-elect Trump as Director of National Intelligence, as well as prominent American journalist Tucker Carlson.

The former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi were included in the database, until their passing.




Tuesday, December 3, 2024

South Korea's Frightening Night > Martial Law declared and revoked 6 hours later

 

I hope this doesn't give Justin Trudeau any ideas.


South Korea lifts martial law after

parliament, protesters reject it




The South Korean government on Wednesday formally lifted a martial law order that President Yoon Suk Yeol declared just hours earlier, after parliament voted to reject it and protesters and lawmakers called for the president’s impeachment.



The tense hours of martial law overnight plunged the country into its biggest democratic crisis in decades, harkening back to its authoritarian past and setting the stage for further political upheaval ahead, with Yoon’s future an open question.

Police and military personnel who had briefly taken over the grounds of the National Assembly were seen leaving following the bipartisan vote. The declaration was formally lifted around 4:30 a.m. during a cabinet meeting — about six hours after it began.

Yoon declared martial law in a televised address Tuesday night to thwart what he called “anti-state forces” among the opposition party that controls the country’s parliament, who he accused of sympathizing with communist North Korea.

But outraged lawmakers quickly passed a motion to reject the decree three hours later, as hundreds of protesters gathered outside the National Assembly. The motion passed unanimously with 190 members of the 300-seat legislature voting.

Under South Korean law, martial law can be lifted with a majority vote in the parliament.

After the order was lifted, protesters cheered and chanted “we won,” but continued to call for Yoon’s arrest and removal from office.

Yoon’s order was swiftly condemned by his own conservative People Power Party and the majority liberal Democratic Party, isolating a president already embattled by scandal and legislative roadblocks to his agenda.

After lifting the declaration, Yoon reiterated his demand that the opposition to stop using its majority to “paralyze” parliament, and did not address the growing calls for his removal.

“Even if martial law is lifted, he cannot avoid treason charges. It was clearly revealed to the entire nation that President Yoon could no longer run the country normally. He should step down,” senior Democratic Party lawmaker Park Chan-dae said in a statement.

Cho Kuk, head of a minor opposition party, met protesters outside parliament and said: “This isn’t over. He put all the people in shock.” He vowed to impeach him by putting together enough votes from other parties to meet the threshold of two-thirds of the legislature. Yoon’s party only holds 108 seats.

South Korean martial law soldiers leave the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (Kim Ju-sung/Yonhap via AP).
South Korean martial law soldiers leave the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (Kim Ju-sung/Yonhap via AP).

Troops, protesters in Seoul

The president’s surprising move harkened back to a time of authoritarian leaders that the country has not seen since the 1980s, when the country entered its current democratic era.

Following Yoon’s announcement, South Korea’s military proclaimed that parliament and other political gatherings that could cause “social confusion” would be suspended, Yonhap reported, and that media and publishers would be under the control of the martial law command.

The military also said the country’s striking doctors should return to work within 48 hours, Yonhap said. Thousands of doctors have been striking for months over government plans to expand the number of students at medical schools.

TV footage showed police officers blocking the entrance of the National Assembly and helmeted soldiers carrying rifles in front of the National Assembly’s main building to restrict the entrance of people. Parliamentary aides were seen trying to push the soldiers back by spraying fire extinguishers.

Some protesters scuffled with troops ahead of the lawmakers’ vote, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or major property damage. At least one window was broken as troops attempted to enter the Assembly building. One woman tried unsuccessfully to pull a rifle away from one of the soldiers, while shouting “Aren’t you embarrassed?”

An Associated Press photographer saw at least three helicopters, likely from the military, that landed inside the Assembly grounds, while two or three helicopters circled above the site.

“I am so angry, I am beyond confused,” demonstrator Im Jin-soo, 66, told Reuters. “I came out to protect democracy. During the dictators we couldn’t rise up, but now we can.”

National Assembly employees spray a fire extinguisher towards soldiers at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (Cho Da-un/Yonhap via AP).
People try to enter the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man).
South Korean martial law soldiers try to enter the National Assembly compound in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (Cho Sung-bong/Newsis via AP). AY

Don Baker, a professor of Korean history at the University of British Columbia and co-director of the Centre for Korean Research, told Global News Yoon’s presidency will likely not survive what he called “a major miscalculation.”

“I knew he was unpopular, but I didn’t think he’d be stupid enough to try martial law,” he said.

“There will be an impeachment. Once he’s impeached and it’s voted on and he’s out of office, he will be arrested. … And then there will be an election for president.”

Three of the last four South Korean presidents have faced criminal investigations for corruption, and two of them were later convicted and imprisoned. Yoon’s role as prosecutor general in the indictment of former president Park Geun-hye helped catapult him to fame before he ran for the presidency.

There is much more on this story on Global News at:

Why Yoon says he declared martial law




Sunday, October 6, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > Even in Trudeau's Ottawa, or is it, 'especially' in Trudeau's Ottawa

 

House of Commons grinds to halt over

 allegations of Liberal ‘corruption’


The government has been unable to put any of its own business before the House of Commons for a full week, and the Conservatives on Thursday said that’s the result of Liberal “corruption.”

Conservative House leader Andrew Scheer said the governing party would rather see the House bogged down in debate than produce documents related to misspent government dollars in a program his party has dubbed the “green slush fund.”

House Speaker Greg Fergus ruled last Thursday that the government “clearly did not fully comply” with an order from the House to provide documents related to a now-defunct foundation responsible for doling out hundreds of millions of federal dollars for green technology projects.

The House has been seized with a debate on the issue ever since and Scheer said it will stay that way until the government agrees to hand over the documents to police.

“They’re willing to have Parliament ground to a halt rather than hand over this information to the RCMP for a potential criminal investigation,” Scheer said in an interview Thursday.

The RCMP told MPs this summer they likely would not be able to use the documents as part of an investigation, but Scheer said they should have access to all the information before they decide.

Click to play video: 'Liberals reject Bloc’s old age security motion to increase payments to seniors'
1:54
Liberals reject Bloc’s old age security motion to increase payments to seniors

The Liberals claimed that ordering the production of documents to be handed over to the RCMP blurs the lines between Parliament and the judiciary, and blame Conservatives for the dysfunction in the House.

Liberal House leader Karina Gould called the request for the documents an abuse of Parliament’s power that tramples on the Charter rights of Canadians.

“Let’s be very clear, this is the Conservatives trying to muck up Parliament,” Gould said Thursday.

“Conservative members of Parliament are here for their own political, personal objectives and they don’t care what they do to Canadians in the meantime, and that is something that should be extremely alarming to all of us.”

Scheer said the Charter exists “to protect the people from the government. It is not there to protect the government from accountability by the people.”

A similar dispute over government documents played out when the Conservatives were on the governing side of the aisle during a minority government dispute more than a decade ago.

In 2009, the House ordered the government to disclose unredacted documents related to Canada’s role in the torture of Afghan detainees.

A few weeks after opposition parties passed a motion demanding the documents be produced, then-prime minister Stephen Harper prorogued Parliament for several months, preventing the House committee from pursuing the issue.

Click to play video: 'Liberals, Conservatives trade allegations of corruption: ‘Lining her own pockets’'
3:09
Liberals, Conservatives trade allegations of corruption: ‘Lining her own pockets’

In this case, the Liberal government abolished Sustainable Development Technology Canada after the auditor general released a scathing report about the organization’s management last spring.

Of the projects she looked at, one in every six that received funding were ineligible. The auditor’s report also found 90 cases where conflict-of-interest polices were violated.

A month later, the ethics commissioner concluded that the former chair of the foundation failed to recuse herself from decisions that benefited organizations to which she had ties.

'Banging on the desk'

The House has been in a state of almost constant turmoil since the MPs returned to Ottawa in mid-September.

The Conservatives have made two attempts to topple the minority government with non-confidence motions. Though both attempts failed to win the support of other opposition parties, the Conservatives promise there will be more such votes to come.

Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet decried a “lack of respect for democracy” in the chamber during an unrelated press conference on Thursday in Chicoutimi, Que.

Blanchet claimed Bloc MPs are among the few in Parliament asking thoughtful questions instead of “spouting slogans and banging on the desk,” like other parties in the House.

“They are proud to have repeated the same thing that they’ve repeated 60 times in the last 60 days,” he said in French.

“Refusing to answer questions, when there are real ones, is no more respectful of voters.”

Click to play video: 'Liberals say they’ll co-operate with ArriveCan investigation as Conservatives probe for answers'
1:15
Liberals say they’ll co-operate with ArriveCan investigation as Conservatives probe for answers

Among the few votes that have gone ahead this week was a Bloc Québécois motion to push the government to support its pension bill for seniors under the age of 75, a change that would cost more than $3 billion a year.

Though the Conservatives have criticized what they call politically motivated inflationary spending, they threw their support behind the bill.

Scheer did not respond to a question about why the party supported the motion.

The Conservative critic for seniors, Anna Roberts, said in a statement that the government’s inflationary spending has “increased the cost of groceries and gas and put added strain on Canadian families and seniors on fixed incomes.”

Ethics questions for Carney appointment

The Conservatives have also asked Canada’s lobbying commissioner to investigate whether it violates ethics rules for the prime minister to make Mark Carney a Liberal adviser.

The Liberals announced at their recent caucus retreat in Nanaimo, B.C., that Carney, the former Bank of Canada governor, had been appointed chair of a task force on economic growth.

They said Carney will help shape the party’s policies for the next election, and will report to Justin Trudeau and the Liberal platform committee.

Click to play video: 'Conservatives say Freeland being ‘shoved aside’ by Liberals for Mark Carney'
2:33
Conservatives say Freeland being ‘shoved aside’ by Liberals for Mark Carney

Tory ethics critic Michael Barrett said in a letter to the commissioner that Carney is not registered to lobby federally, but his corporate positions put him in several potential conflicts of interest.

“How could any ministerial staff member, member of Parliament or cabinet minister not feel a sense of obligation to Mr. Carney because of his close affiliation with the prime minister and minister of finance?” Barrett asked in his letter Thursday.

Carney is also the chair of Brookfield Asset Management, which is in talks with the government to launch a $50-billion investment fund with support from Ottawa and Canadian pensions.

When asked about Carney’s potential conflict of interest in the House, Health Minister Mark Holland accused the Conservatives of trying to “smear” a Canadian who is renowned around the world.