National
Liberal ‘Project Fear’ A Longer Con

From the National Citizens Coalition
NATIONAL CITIZENS COALITION SLAMS LIBERAL PARTY’S “PROJECT FEAR,” AMID NEW REVELATIONS ON CREATION OF “ELBOWS UP” CAMPAIGN STRATEGY
The National Citizens Coalition (NCC) and its President, Peter Coleman, are calling out the Liberal Party’s disgraceful ‘Project Fear’ tactics, following new revelations obtained by Blacklock’s Reporter, a trusted Canadian independent news source and accredited member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery.
New documents expose that the Liberal Party conducted government-funded focus groups to test their fearmongering, ‘elbows up’ strategy months before the United States announced tariffs, using pollsters hired by the Privy Council.
Readers should also note this government focus-group effort took place around the time of Trudeau’s ‘hot mic’ with business leaders and the press, when he released what would become the foundations for the Liberal campaign.
This premeditated ‘Project Fear’ strategy, designed to stoke anxiety and division, is a betrayal of the trust Canadians place in their government.
“Young Canadians, working Canadians, common-sense Canadians, they desperately needed change, and they can see through the Liberal Party’s manipulative tactics,” says Peter Coleman, President of the National Citizens Coalition.
“The Liberal governments has been caught red-handed abusing taxpayer dollars to test-drive a fear-mongering campaign long before any tariffs were even announced. This was not leadership, it’s political opportunism at its worst. Canadians deserve a government that tackles real challenges with honesty, not one that takes a serious situation like negotiations and tariff threats from south of the border, and then manufactures a greater crisis for votes.”
The NCC condemns the Liberal Party’s exploitation of confidential focus groups to shape a narrative that abuses economic uncertainties for partisan gain. This revelation underscores a pattern of prioritizing political survival over the public’s interest, a hallmark of the Liberals’ recent tenure.
The ‘elbows up’ campaign, far from being a spontaneous response to U.S. tariffs, appears to have been a calculated move to manipulate public perception, funded by taxpayers and orchestrated through the Privy Council.
“We know better than to take the Carney Liberals at their word,” Coleman continues. “The Liberals have long-shown they’ll say anything to cling to power. That they pulled this cynical stunt during a vital change election, with a worst-in-the-G7 housing crisis, out-of-control immigration, record healthcare wait-times, and rising crime and chaos… I’m ashamed for the millions of Canadians who have been denied their moment of recovery because of this ‘Project Fear.’ Especially knowing those ‘elbows’ are now down.”
The NCC demands transparency on how these focus groups were funded, who authorized them and when, what connection they potentially share with the PMO, and why taxpayer money was used to fund a partisan re-election strategy.
Canada’s pioneering conservative advocacy group demands the Carney Liberals release all documents related to these focus groups, and commit to governing with integrity, not deception. The NCC stands with Canadians who value truth, fiscal responsibility, and leadership that puts the nation’s interests above political gamesmanship.
“The trust and goodwill the Carney Liberals have been receiving from subsidized media and short-sighted supporters, it should be earned. These cynical political animals, largely from the same Trudeau team who got our country into this mess in the first place, should be afforded no benefit of the doubt. The honeymoon is over,” the NCC president concludes.
Censorship Industrial Complex
Canadian pro-freedom group sounds alarm over Liberal plans to revive internet censorship bill

From LifeSiteNews
The Democracy Fund warned that the Liberal government may bring back a form of Bill C-63, which is aimed at regulating online speech.
One of Canada’s top pro-democracy groups has sounded the alarm by warning that the Canadian federal government is planning to revive a controversial Trudeau-era internet censorship bill that lapsed.
The Democracy Fund (TDF), in a recent press release, warned about plans by the Liberal government under Prime Minister Mark Carney to bring back a form of Bill C-63. The bill, which lapsed when the election was called earlier this year, aimed to regulate online speech, which could mean “mass censorship” of the internet.
“TDF is concerned that the government will try once more to give itself the power to criminalize and punish online speech and debate,” the group said.
“TDF will oppose that.”
According to the TDF, it is “concerned that the government intends to re-introduce the previously abandoned Online Harms Bill in the same or modified form.”
Bill C-63, or the Online Harms Act, was put forth under the guise of protecting children from exploitation online. The bill died earlier this year after former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the 2025 federal election.
While protecting children is indeed a duty of the state, the bill included several measures that targeted vaguely defined “hate speech” infractions involving race, gender, and religion, among other categories. The proposal was thus blasted by many legal experts.
The Online Harms Act would have censored legal internet content that the government thought “likely to foment detestation or vilification of an individual or group.” It would be up to the Canadian Human Rights Commission to investigate complaints.
The TDF said that Bill C-63 would have made it a criminal offense to publish ill-defined “harmful content.”
“It required social media companies to remove potentially harmful content or face punitive fines. Many defenders of civil liberty, including TDF, worried that the application of this badly defined concept would lead to mass surveillance and censorship,” the group said.
The TDF warned that under Carney, the government is “once again considering new or similar legislation to regulate online speech, with the Minister of Justice claiming he would take another look at the matter.”
Mark Joseph, TDF litigation director, pointed out that Canada already has laws that “the government can, and does, use to address most of the bad conduct that the Bill ostensibly targeted.”
“To the extent that there are gaps in the Criminal Code, amendments should be carefully drafted to fix this,” he said.
“However, the previous Bill C-63 sought to implement a regime of mass censorship.”
As reported by LifeSiteNews last month, a recent Trudeau-appointed Canadian senator said that he and other “interested senators” want Carney to revive a controversial Trudeau-era internet censorship bill that lapsed.
Another recent Carney government Bill C-2, which looks to ban cash donations over $10,000, was blasted by a constitutional freedom group as a “step towards tyranny.”
Carney, as reported by LifeSiteNews, vowed to continue in Trudeau’s footsteps, promising even more legislation to crack down on lawful internet content.
He has also said his government plans to launch a “new economy” in Canada that will involve “deepening” ties to the world.
Under Carney, the Liberals are expected to continue much of what they did under Justin Trudeau, including the party’s zealous push in favor of abortion, euthanasia, radical gender ideology, internet regulation and so-called “climate change” policies. Indeed, Carney, like Trudeau, seems to have extensive ties to both China and the globalist World Economic Forum, connections that were brought up routinely by conservatives in the lead-up to the election.
Economy
The stars are aligning for a new pipeline to the West Coast

From Resource Works
Mark Carney says another pipeline is “highly likely”, and that welcome news.
While attending this year’s Calgary Stampede, Prime Minister Mark Carney made it official that a new pipeline to Canada’s West Coast is “highly likely.”
While far from a guarantee, it is still great news for Canada and our energy industry. After years of projects being put on hold or cancelled, things are coming together at the perfect time for truly nation-building enterprises.
Carney’s comments at Stampede have been preceded by a number of other promising signs.
At a June meeting between Carney and the premiers in Saskatoon, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith proposed a “grand bargain” that would include a privately funded pipeline capable of moving a million barrels of oil a day, along with significant green investments.
Carney agreed with Smith’s plan, saying that Canada needed to balance economic growth with environmental responsibility.
Business and political leaders have been mostly united in calling for the federal government to speed up the building of pipelines, for economic and strategic reasons. As we know, it is very difficult to find consensus in Canada, with British Columbia Premier David Eby still reluctant to commit to another pipeline on the coast of the province.
Alberta has been actively encouraging support from the private sector to fund a new pipeline that would fulfil the goals of the Northern Gateway project, a pipeline proposed in 2008 but snuffed out by a hail of regulations under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
We are in a new era, however, and we at Resource Works remarked that last month’s G7 meeting in Kananaskis could prove to be a pivotal moment in the history of Canadian energy. An Ipsos poll found that Canada was the most favoured nation for supplying oil in the G7, and our potential as an energy superpower has never been more important for the democratic world, given the instability caused by Russia and other autocratic energy powers.
Because of this shifting, uncertain global climate, Canadian oil and gas are more attractive than ever, and diversifying our exports beyond the United States has become a necessity in the wake of Donald Trump’s regime of tariffs on Canada and other friendly countries.
It has jolted Canadian political leaders into action, and the premiers are all on board with strengthening our economic independence and trade diversification, even if not all agree on what that should look like.
Two premiers who have found common ground are Danielle Smith and Ontario Premier Doug Ford. After meeting at Stampede, the pair signed two memorandums of understanding to collaborate on studying an energy corridor and other infrastructure to boost interprovincial trade. This included the possibility of an eastward-bound pipeline to Ontario ports for shipping abroad.
Ford explicitly said that “the days of relying on the United States 100 percent, those days are over.” That’s in line with Alberta’s push for new pipeline routes, especially to northwestern B.C., which are supported by Smith’s government.
On June 10, Resource Works founder and CEO Stewart Muir wrote that Canadian energy projects are a daunting endeavour, akin to a complicated jigsaw puzzle, but that getting discouraged by the complexity causes us to lose sight of the picture itself. He asserted that Canadians have to accept that messiness, not avoid it.
Prime Minister Carney has suggested he will make adjustments to existing regulations and controversial legislation like Bill C-69 and the emissions cap, all of which have slowed the development of new energy infrastructure.
This moment of alignment between Ottawa, the provinces, and other stakeholders cannot be wasted. The stars are aligning, and it will be a tragedy if we cannot take a great step into the future of our country.
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