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2025 Federal Election

Canadian construction worker goes viral for saying he refused to shake Mark Carney’s hand

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By Anthony Murdoch

‘I’m the guy in the black hardhat. I didn’t want to be there. I’d vowed not to shake his hand. I told the organizers I wouldn’t,’ wrote the construction worker on X.

A Canadian construction worker has gone viral online after making a video saying he “vowed” not to “shake the hand” of Prime Minister Mark Carney at a recent press conference in Alberta.

The construction worker from Edmonton, Alberta, who goes by Job B online, vented his frustration on X last week saying that he was more or less forced to be a prop in a Carney press conference on March 20.

“I’m the guy in the black hardhat. I didn’t want to be there. I’d vowed not to shake his hand. I told the organizers I wouldn’t,” said Jon B in response to a video of the incident which has since gone viral. 

Carney, who has only been prime minister for about two weeks after taking over as Liberal Party leader from Justin Trudeau, was in Edmonton last week for meetings. Carney is not an MP and was never elected by the Canadian people.  

Jon B said that he and the other construction workers were more or less forced to be used as props in the photo shoot, noting, “we didn’t have much choice.”

According to Jon B, his co-workers “all felt the same” in terms of their negative view of Carney. 

Carney, an admitted “elitist” and “globalist,” triggered a general election on Sunday to take place on April 28.

Since taking office from Trudeau, Carney has admitted that he will “probably” have to recuse himself from certain governmental matters due to potential conflicts of interest. The prime minister made the concession shortly after lashing out at a reporter when asked whether his large private investment holdings present an ethical issue.  

Recent reports claim that Carney held $6.8 million in Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. stock options before quitting the company. 

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2025 Federal Election

Carney says Liberals won’t make voting pact with NDP

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

Mark Carney says unlike his predecessor Justin Trudeau, the Liberals will not be making a voting pact with the left-wing New Democratic Party.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has said that his Liberal Party, which formed a minority government last week, will not be forming a voting pact with the far-left New Democratic Party.

Speaking to reporters last week, Carney replied “no” when asked by a reporter if he would be “pursuing a formal governing pact of any kind with the NDP.”

The reporter followed up asking, “Why not?” to which Carney replied, “Why?” adding, “That’s my answer.”

Last week’s election saw Liberal leader Carney beat out Conservative rival Pierre Poilievre, who also lost his seat to a Liberal rival. Poilievre’s riding was unusual in that it had 90 candidates named on the ballot, making the voting list in that riding incredibly long.

The Conservatives managed to pick up over 20 new seats, and Poilievre has vowed to stay on as party leader, for now, and will soon run in a by-election to try and regain his seat.

As it stands now, the unofficial results show the Liberals at 169 seats, which is four short of a majority. The Conservatives have 144 seats, the Bloc Québécois have 22 seats, the NDP has 7 and the Green Party has one.

In 2022, while also leading a Liberal minority government, former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau concocted a Supply And Confidence Agreement with former NDP leader Jagmeet Singh. Under the agreement, the NDP would protect the Liberals from being ousted via a vote of non-confidence in exchange for the Liberals supporting certain NDP-led legislation.

Carney’s insistence that he will not make such an agreement means it remains to be seen how his government will garner the votes necessary to pass legislation.

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2025 Federal Election

Group that added dozens of names to ballot in Poilievre’s riding plans to do it again

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

The ‘Longest Ballot Committee’ is looking to run hundreds of protest candidates against Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre in an upcoming by-election in the Alberta.

A group called the “Longest Ballot Committee” is looking to run hundreds of protest candidates against Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre in an upcoming by-election in the Alberta Battle River–Crowfoot riding, just like they did in his former Ottawa-area Carelton riding in last week’s election.

The Longest Ballot Committee is a grassroots group that packs ridings with protest candidates and is looking to place 200 names in the Battle River–Crowfoot riding. The riding was won by Conservative-elect MP Damien Kurek who garnered over 80 percent of the vote, but has since said he is going to vacate his seat to allow Poilievre to run a by-election and reclaim his seat in Parliament in a Conservative-safe area.

In an email to its followers, the committee said “dozens and dozens” of volunteers are ready to sign up as candidates for the yet-to-be-called by-election. The initiative follows after the group did the same thing in Poilievre’s former Carelton riding which he lost last Monday, and which saw voters being given an extremely long ballot with 90 candidates.

The group asked people who want to run to send them their legal name and information by May 12, adding that if about 200 people sign up they will “make a long ballot happen.”

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