National
Talk is cheap, Mister Prime Minister

From the National Citizens Coalition
By Peter Coleman, President, National Citizens Coalition
‘Carney has a choice. He can continue down the path of complacency, recycling failed policies and delaying action, or he can start rebuilding trust and chart a new course.’
It’s been nearly a month since a disappointing federal election that returned Mark Carney and his Liberals to a minority government. Touted by much of the media as the “smartest guy in the room,” Carney was supposed to be the mastermind who could navigate Canada out of the economic and social quagmire left by a decade of deliberate policy missteps—many of which, ironically, he advised on as a global economic insider. Yet, as we approach the one-month mark of his leadership, Canadians are left asking: where’s the urgency? Where’s the vision? And where’s the budget?
Instead of bold action, we see the same tired faces in cabinet, including divisive figures like Steven Guilbeault, now inexplicably tasked as Minister of Canadian Identity. This is the same Guilbeault who championed a carbon tax that hammered Canadian families and businesses while delivering negligible environmental gains. His reappointment, alongside other architects of the past decade’s policy disasters, signals a troubling lack of fresh thinking. If Carney truly believed in change, wouldn’t he have cleaned house?
Parliament’s schedule only deepens the disappointment. Delayed until next week and set to adjourn from June 20 to September 15, the House of Commons will sit for a mere 20 days over six months. This leisurely pace is an insult to Canadians grappling with recession, a federal debt with annual interest costs exceeding $60 billion—more than we spend on healthcare—and businesses laying off workers or eyeing moves south of the border. While Carney’s government takes a summer siesta, Canadians are left to wonder: who’s fighting for us?
Contrast this with the energy of Pierre Poilievre’s campaign, which promised to undo years of damage with decisive action, and promised to keep MPs in Ottawa for the summer. Poilievre vowed to prioritize pipelines, slash bureaucratic red tape, and restore economic vitality. Yet Carney, who leaned on a U.S. administration’s late bluster and interference to bolster his electoral chances, seems content to coast. His vague pronouncements on critical issues—skyrocketing debt, an influx of temporary foreign workers, and stalled energy projects—offer little reassurance. Canadians deserve more than half-promises and word-salads punctuated by countless “umms” and “ahhs.” We need pipelines built, jobs protected, and a government that works as hard as its people.
The temporary foreign worker and fake-student program, for instance, has ballooned to unsustainable levels. Millions of supposedly temporary workers fill jobs that could—and should—go to Canadians, especially as unemployment skyrockets, particularly among our youth. Companies preaching “Buy Canadian” must be held accountable to “Hire Canadian.” A government serious about recovery would act swiftly to recalibrate this program, lowering numbers substantially, deporting low-skill, non-permanent residents, and prioritizing Canadian workers and addressing the labour market distortions that have left many feeling like strangers in their own economy.
At the National Citizens Coalition, we believe Canada deserves better. Our mission is rooted in common sense, fiscal prudence, free speech, and a national pride not reliant on the prodding of an American president. While Liberal politicians retreat to their cottages this summer, we’ll be working tirelessly to grow the common-sense movement. We’re reaching millions of Canadians through grassroots campaigns, reaching policymakers and stakeholders, and engaging with great Canadian producers and manufacturers to support the jobs and industries this country desperately needs for recovery. Our vision is clear: a Canada that again rewards hard work, champions opportunity, and provides a clear path to prosperity.
Carney’s minority government has a choice. It can continue down the path of complacency, recycling failed policies and delaying action, or it can seize this moment to rebuild trust and chart a new course. Time is of the essence, and working Canadians don’t have long. If Carney truly is the “smartest guy in the room,” it’s time he proves it—not with rhetoric, but with results.
Peter Coleman is the President of the National Citizens Coalition.
National
Blanket Mandate Letter Worrying Sign For Carney Era

From the National Citizens Coalition
By Brian Passifiume
The prime minister’s decision to forego separate mandate letters for his cabinet is being met with raised eyebrows.
Former MP Kevin Vuong told the Toronto Sun the decision to issue a single mandate letter — instead of the customary individual directives to each cabinet minister — is yet another concerning diversion from the norm that’s become typical of the Prime Minister’s Office under Carney.
“No budget, no itineraries and now no mandate letters. Somebody should tell Prime Minister Carney that that’s not how a democracy works,” he said.
“By refusing to share, we have no choice but to ask: What does he have to hide? Is there something in his ministers’ mandate letters that he doesn’t want Canadians to see?”
On Wednesday, Carney issued a single mandate letter — free from Justin Trudeau-era platitudes like diversity, climate change and social justice and instead emphasizing trade, the economy and rebuilding Canada’s relations with the United States.
“This seems to be a government that is running less on emotional intelligence and virtue signalling,” said Stephen Taylor, a partner at Shift Media who nonetheless added Carney’s decision to withhold mandate letters does little but consolidate the power of the PMO.
“There’s some good words in the mandate letter, but a cabinet appointed full of Trudeau ministers just makes it suspect because that’s the government that will be implementing that agenda.”
He said a cabinet boasting members such as Steven Guilbeault and Gregor Robertson should give Canadians pause.
Alex Brown, a director with the National Citizens Coalition, said forgoing mandate letters is another worrying sign of this government’s tendency to err on the side of unaccountability.
“Justin Trudeau produced 38 of these mandate letters in 2021,” he said.
“And yes, all 38 of those ended up being historic dumpster fires, but to just cut the corner here already — by the end of the summer this group will have only sat in the House of Commons for 20 days in total.”
While he said the mandate letter had some encouraging signs, Brown said what it lacked most of all was substance aside from almost peripheral mentions of key issues like immigration and housing.
“It’s as if they ran the Conservative election platform through ChatGPT and asked them to distil it to 1,000 words and then take out the details,” he said.
“It’s so high level it’s almost insulting — it doesn’t get into anything specific.”
Brownstone Institute
RCMP seem more interested in House of Commons Pages than MP’s suspected of colluding with China

From the Brownstone Institute
By
Canadians shouldn’t have information about their wayward MPs, but the RCMP can’t have too much biometric information about regular people. It’s always a good time for a little fishing. Let’s run those prints, shall we?
Forget the members of Parliament who may have colluded with foreign governments. The real menace, the RCMP seem to think, are House of Commons pages. MPs suspected of foreign election interference should not be identified, the Mounties have insisted, but House of Commons staff must be fingerprinted. Serious threats to the country are hidden away, while innocent people are subjected to state surveillance. If you want to see how the managerial state (dys)functions, Canada is the place to be.
In June, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) tabled its redacted report that suggested at least 11 sitting MPs may have benefitted from foreign election interference. RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme cautioned against releasing their identities. Canadians remained in the dark until Oct. 28 when Kevin Vuong, a former Liberal MP now sitting as an Independent, hosted a news conference to suggest who some of the parliamentarians may be. Like the RCMP, most of the country’s media didn’t seem interested.
But the RCMP are very interested in certain other things. For years, they have pushed for the federal civil service to be fingerprinted. Not just high security clearance for top-secret stuff, but across government departments. The Treasury Board adopted the standard in 2014 and the House of Commons currently requires fingerprinting for staff hired since 2017. The Senate implemented fingerprinting this year. The RCMP have claimed that the old policy of doing criminal background checks by name is obsolete and too expensive.
But stated rationales are rarely the real ones. Name-based background checks are not obsolete or expensive. Numerous police departments continue to use them. They do so, in part, because name checks do not compromise biometric privacy. Fingerprints are a form of biometric data, as unique as your DNA. Under the federal Identification of Criminals Act, you must be in custody and charged with a serious offence before law enforcement can take your prints. Canadians shouldn’t have information about their wayward MPs, but the RCMP can’t have too much biometric information about regular people. It’s always a good time for a little fishing. Let’s run those prints, shall we?
It’s designed to seem like a small deal. If House of Commons staff must give their fingerprints, that’s just a requirement of the job. Managerial bureaucracies prefer not to coerce directly but to create requirements that are “choices.” Fingerprints aren’t mandatory. You can choose to provide them or choose not to work on the Hill.
Sound familiar? That’s the way Covid vaccine mandates worked too. Vaccines were never mandatory. There were no fines or prison terms. But the alternative was to lose your job, social life, or ability to visit a dying parent. When the state controls everything, it doesn’t always need to dictate. Instead, it provides unpalatable choices and raises the stakes so that people choose correctly.
Government intrudes incrementally. Digital ID, for instance, will be offered as a convenient choice. You can, if you wish, carry your papers in the form of a QR code on your phone. Voluntary, of course. But later there will be extra hoops to jump through to apply for a driver’s licence or health card in the old form.
Eventually, analogue ID will cost more, because, after all, digital ID is more automated and cheaper to run. Some outlets will not recognize plastic identification. Eventually, the government will offer only digital ID. The old way will be discarded as antiquated and too expensive to maintain. The new regime will provide the capacity to keep tabs on people like never before. Privacy will be compromised without debate. The bureaucracy will change the landscape in the guise of practicality, convenience, and cost.
Each new round of procedures and requirements is only slightly more invasive than the last. But turn around and find you have travelled a long way from where you began. Eventually, people will need digital ID, fingerprints, DNA, vaccine records, and social credit scores to be employed. It’s not coercive, just required for the job.
Occasionally the curtain is pulled back. The federal government unleashed the Emergencies Act on the truckers and their supporters in February 2022. Jackboots in riot gear took down peaceful protesters for objecting to government policy. Authorities revealed their contempt for law-abiding but argumentative citizens. For an honest moment, the government was not incremental and insidious, but enraged and direct. When they come after you in the streets with batons, at least you can see what’s happening.
We still don’t know who colluded with China. But we can be confident that House of Commons staffers aren’t wanted for murder. The RCMP has fingerprints to prove it. Controlling the people and shielding the powerful are mandates of the modern managerial state.
Republished from the Epoch Times
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