National
Alleged Liberal vote-buying scandal lays bare election vulnerabilities Canada refuses to fix
Probe of membership drives and cash “rewards” echo patterns flagged years ago — in the Liberal Party and beyond. The system still invites abuse.
An alleged vote-buying scandal in Quebec’s Liberal Party is dredging up the same vulnerabilities that two landmark inquiries – one federal, one provincial – have already warned Canadians about.
The new crisis engulfing the Quebec Liberals focuses on Justin Trudeau’s former Quebec lieutenant and long-time Liberal MP Pablo Rodriguez, a heavyweight organizer within Canada’s most successful political machine, going back to his days in the Liberal youth wing.
The latest escalation – including early “validations” by Quebec’s anti-corruption unit, UPAC – comes in the wake of a journalistic investigation by Quebecor’s Bureau d’enquête revealing that Élections Québec is in possession of text messages between two people who allegedly worked to elect Rodriguez as Liberal leader last spring. According to those reports, the messages suggest that some party members who supported Rodriguez were “rewarded with money” in connection with their votes and membership cards. A follow-up explainer says the exchanges involved campaigners discussing sums spent so people would vote for him.
On Thursday, the Quebecor outlet reported that two UPAC investigators had visited the home of Marwah Rizqy – the party’s former parliamentary leader, recently ousted from caucus after a clash with Rodriguez – to take her statement, opening an early-stage probe that could touch on corruption, breach of trust, collusion, fraud, influence-peddling and related offences. On X, Rodriguez asked the force to “shed full light” on the affair and “lay the appropriate charges” if any illegal or unethical acts are confirmed.
Rodriguez’s response has followed a now-familiar Liberal crisis pattern. The Quebec Liberals have sent a formal legal notice to Le Journal de Montréal, whose Bureau d’enquête team broke the story, demanding the names of the people involved, the phone numbers linked to the texts, and an explanation of how the newspaper verified their authenticity – a move that has drawn a sharp defence of source protection from the paper’s editor. At the same time, the party has mandated former Quebec Superior Court chief justice Jacques R. Fournier to conduct what it says will be an independent investigation into the messages.
At the federal level, the Hogue Commission on foreign interference focused on Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government, probing whether Ottawa had downplayed interference from hostile states, including China and India, for partisan reasons.
Evidence before the inquiry also showed that the Conservative Party and the NDP faced their own vulnerabilities in internal leadership and nomination races.
Justice Marie-Josée Hogue warned that party nomination contests and leadership races can be “gateways” for foreign interference – vulnerable points where hostile states can tilt our democracy out of public view. A decade earlier, the Charbonneau Commission – launched under then-premier Jean Charest’s Liberal government – concluded that illegal political financing was a key mechanism that allowed corruption and, in some cases, organized crime to penetrate Quebec’s construction sector, public contracts and party machines.
Taken together, these inquiries should have made one lesson unavoidable: the moments when parties quietly decide who gets to run, and how they are chosen, are not private-club rituals. They are national-security vulnerabilities.
Élections Québec has also confirmed something shocking, but not surprising for anyone who followed the Hogue hearings: under the current provincial Election Act, it is not explicitly illegal to pay someone in exchange for their vote in a party leadership race.
Hogue’s foreign interference inquiry also showed that Liberal Party nomination rules allowed non-citizens, including international students as young as 14, to sign up as members and vote in candidate nomination contests. Élections Québec has explained that, in the context of a leadership contest, the law does not create an offence for a person who offers money to an elector to vote a certain way – whereas in a general election or by-election, such conduct is banned and punishable by hefty fines. The same statute that rightly criminalizes vote-buying in public elections says nothing when the vote is inside a party – even when the contest is to select a potential premier.
Another strand concerns the role of federal Liberal MP Fayçal El-Khoury. As first reported in La Presse, Élections Québec is examining a conversation between El-Khoury and Marwah Rizqy at a November 14 event, because of a possible link to Rodriguez’s leadership bid. Initially, El-Khoury told La Presse he had no involvement in the race. Subsequent Quebecor reporting showed he in fact held a solicitor’s certificate – and had been authorized to collect donations for Rodriguez’s campaign, a role Rodriguez later confirmed.
Here again, the structural vulnerability matters as much as the individuals. Solicitor certificates are recorded with Élections Québec, but the lists of who holds them are not public. Only the party and the elections authority know who is empowered to raise money for leadership candidates. Without investigative reporting, the fact that a federal MP was fundraising for a provincial leadership contender – one who, like Rodriguez, is also a former federal Liberal minister – would likely never have surfaced.
Much of the evidence in the early days of the Rodriguez affair is contested, and all parties are entitled to a presumption of innocence.
But the established facts already suggest a textbook example of how poorly Canada’s laws and institutions have internalized past lessons: party nominations and leadership races remain black boxes for potential corruption, yet are still not treated like election-day voting in legal or regulatory terms.
While federal Liberals now seek to draw a hard line between themselves and their provincial cousins, the overlap of political machinery between the two parties in Quebec is hard to deny, and it points back to Rodriguez’s central role in Trudeau’s government.
Rodriguez, a former transport minister for Trudeau, was part of a government still haunted by ethical questions over Trudeau’s alleged pressure on former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to defer a prosecution against Quebec-based engineering giant SNC-Lavalin.
Wilson-Raybould later testified that the prime minister and senior officials repeatedly raised electoral considerations in Quebec when urging her to revisit the SNC-Lavalin file – including Trudeau’s remark, in a key September 2018 meeting, that there was an election coming up and that he was “an MP in Quebec.”
As The Hill Times put it in 2024, “Rodriguez’s potential departure would leave a huge gap in [the] Liberal electoral machine in Quebec,” and the same column described him as deeply embedded in Quebec’s political world and widely regarded as a highly effective organizer across the province.
There are no allegations, at this stage, of foreign interference or corrupt actors in the Rodriguez leadership race. But the developing facts lay bare exactly the kind of weakly regulated, low-visibility contests that Hogue singled out, and they show that, roughly a decade after Charbonneau’s final report in 2015, Quebec still tolerates a culture of what francophone media call “fling-flang” – loosely translated as backroom shenanigans – around political money that erodes public confidence and leaves the door open to serious threats.
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Business
Canadians love Nordic-style social programs as long as someone else pays for them
This article supplied by Troy Media.
By Pat Murphy
Generous social programs come with trade-offs. Pretending otherwise is political fiction
Nordic societies fund their own benefits through taxes and cost-sharing. Canadians expect someone to foot the bill
Like Donald Trump, one of my favourite words starts with the letter “T.” But where Trump likes the word “tariff,” my choice is “trade-off.” Virtually everything in life is a trade-off, and we’d all be much better off if we instinctively understood that.
Think about it.
If you yield to the immediate pleasure of spending all your money on whatever catches your fancy, you’ll wind up broke. If you regularly enjoy drinking to excess, be prepared to pay the unpleasant price of hangovers and maybe worse. If you don’t bother to acquire some marketable skill or credential, don’t be surprised if your employment prospects are limited. If you succumb to the allure of fooling around, you may well lose your marriage. And so on.
Failing to understand trade-offs also extends into political life. Take, for instance, the current fashion for anti-capitalist democratic socialism. Pushed to explain their vision, proponents will often make reference to the Nordic countries. But they exhibit little or no understanding of how these societies actually work.
As American economist Deirdre Nansen McCloskey notes, “Sweden is pretty much as ‘capitalistic’ as is the United States. If ‘socialism’ means government ownership of the means of production, which is the classic definition, Sweden never qualified.” The central planning/government ownership model isn’t the Swedish way.
What the Nordics do have, however, is a robust social safety net. And it’s useful to look at how they pay for it.
J.P. Morgan’s Michael Cembalest is a man who knows his way around data. He puts it this way: “Copy the Nordic model if you like, but understand that it entails a lot of capitalism and pro-business policies, a lot of taxation on middle-class spending and wages, minimal reliance on corporate taxation and plenty of co-pays and deductibles in its health care system.”
For instance, take the kind of taxes that are often derided as undesirably regressive—sales taxes, social security taxes and payroll taxes. In Sweden, they account for a whopping 27 per cent of gross domestic product. And some 15 per cent of health expenditures are out of pocket.
Charles Lane—formerly with the Washington Post, now with The Free Press—is another who pulls no punches: “Nordic countries are generous, but they are not stupid. They understand there is no such thing as ‘free’ health care, and that requiring patients to have at least some skin in the game, in the form of cost-sharing, helps contain costs.”
In effect, Nordic societies have made an internal bargain. Ordinary people are prepared to fork over large chunks of their own money in return for a comprehensive social safety net. They’re not expecting the good stuff to come to them without a personal cost.
Scandinavians obviously understand the concept of trade-offs, a dimension that seems to be absent from much of the North American discussion. Instead of Nordic-style pragmatism, spending ideas on this side of the Atlantic are floated on the premise of having someone else pay. And the electorally prized middle class is to be protected at all costs.
In the aftermath of Zohran Mamdami’s New York City win, journalist Kevin Williamson had a sobering reality check: “Class warfare isn’t how they roll in Scandinavia. Oslo is a terrific place to be a billionaire—Copenhagen and Stockholm, too … what’s radically different about the Scandinavians is not how they tax the very high-income but how they tax the middle.”
Taxation propensities aside, Nordic societies are different from the United States and Canada.
Denmark, for instance, is very much a “high-trust” society, defined as a place “where interpersonal trust is relatively high and ethical values are strongly shared.” It’s often been said that it works the way it does because it’s full of Danes, which is broadly true—albeit less so than it was 40 years ago.
Denmark, though, has no interest in multiculturalism as we’ve come to know it. Although governed from the centre-left, there’s no state-sponsored focus on systemic discrimination or diversity representation. Instead, the emphasis is on social cohesion and conformity. If you want to create a society like Denmark, it helps to understand the dynamics that make it work.
Reality intrudes on all sorts of other issues. For example, there’s the way in which public discourse is disfigured on the question of climate change and the need to pursue aggressive net-zero policies.
Asked in the abstract, people are generally favourable, which is then touted as evidence of strong public support. But when subsequently asked how much they’re personally prepared to pay to accomplish these ambitious goals, the answer is often little or nothing.
If there’s one maxim we should be taught from childhood, it’s this: there are no panaceas, only trade-offs.
Troy Media columnist Pat Murphy casts a history buff’s eye at the goings-on in our world. Never cynical – well, perhaps a little bit.
Troy Media empowers Canadian community news outlets by providing independent, insightful analysis and commentary. Our mission is to support local media in helping Canadians stay informed and engaged by delivering reliable content that strengthens community connections and deepens understanding across the country.
Alberta
IEA peak-oil reversal gives Alberta long-term leverage
This article supplied by Troy Media.
The peak-oil narrative has collapsed, and the IEA’s U-turn marks a major strategic win for Alberta
After years of confidently predicting that global oil demand was on the verge of collapsing, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has now reversed course—a stunning retreat that shatters the peak-oil narrative and rewrites the outlook for oil-producing regions such as Alberta.
For years, analysts warned that an oil glut was coming. Suddenly, the tide has turned. The Paris-based IEA, the world’s most influential energy forecasting body, is stepping back from its long-held view that peak oil demand is just around the corner.
The IEA reversal is a strategic boost for Alberta and a political complication for Ottawa, which now has to reconcile its climate commitments with a global outlook that no longer supports a rapid decline in fossil fuel use or the doomsday narrative Ottawa has relied on to advance its climate agenda.
Alberta’s economy remains tied to long-term global demand for reliable, conventional energy. The province produces roughly 80 per cent of Canada’s oil and depends on resource revenues to fund a significant share of its provincial budget. The sector also plays a central role in the national economy, supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs and contributing close to 10 per cent of Canada’s GDP when related industries are included.
That reality stands in sharp contrast to Ottawa. Prime Minister Mark Carney has long championed net-zero timelines, ESG frameworks and tighter climate policy, and has repeatedly signalled that expanding long-term oil production is not part of his economic vision. The new IEA outlook bolsters Alberta’s position far more than it aligns with his government’s preferred direction.
Globally, the shift is even clearer. The IEA’s latest World Energy Outlook, released on Nov. 12, makes the reversal unmistakable. Under existing policies and regulations, global demand for oil and natural gas will continue to rise well past this decade and could keep climbing until 2050. Demand reaches 105 million barrels per day in 2035 and 113 million barrels per day in 2050, up from 100 million barrels per day last year, a direct contradiction of years of claims that the world was on the cusp of phasing out fossil fuels.
A key factor is the slowing pace of electric vehicle adoption, driven by weakening policy support outside China and Europe. The IEA now expects the share of electric vehicles in global car sales to plateau after 2035. In many countries, subsidies are being reduced, purchase incentives are ending and charging-infrastructure goals are slipping. Without coercive policy intervention, electric vehicle adoption will not accelerate fast enough to meaningfully cut oil demand.
The IEA’s own outlook now shows it wasn’t merely off in its forecasts; it repeatedly projected that oil demand was in rapid decline, despite evidence to the contrary. Just last year, IEA executive director Fatih Birol told the Financial Times that we were witnessing “the beginning of the end of the fossil fuel era.” The new outlook directly contradicts that claim.
The political landscape also matters. U.S. President Donald Trump’s return to the White House shifted global expectations. The United States withdrew from the Paris Agreement, reversed Biden-era climate measures and embraced an expansion of domestic oil and gas production. As the world’s largest economy and the IEA’s largest contributor, the U.S. carries significant weight, and other countries, including Canada and the United Kingdom, have taken steps to shore up energy security by keeping existing fossil-fuel capacity online while navigating their longer-term transition plans.
The IEA also warns that the world is likely to miss its goal of limiting temperature increases to 1.5 °C over pre-industrial levels. During the Biden years, the IAE maintained that reaching net-zero by mid-century required ending investment in new oil, gas and coal projects. That stance has now faded. Its updated position concedes that demand will not fall quickly enough to meet those targets.
Investment banks are also adjusting. A Bloomberg report citing Goldman Sachs analysts projects global oil demand could rise to 113 million barrels per day by 2040, compared with 103.5 million barrels per day in 2024, Irina Slav wrote for Oilprice.com. Goldman cites slow progress on net-zero policies, infrastructure challenges for wind and solar and weaker electric vehicle adoption.
“We do not assume major breakthroughs in low-carbon technology,” Sachs’ analysts wrote. “Even for peaking road oil demand, we expect a long plateau after 2030.” That implies a stable, not shrinking, market for oil.
OPEC, long insisting that peak demand is nowhere in sight, feels vindicated. “We hope … we have passed the peak in the misguided notion of ‘peak oil’,” the organization said last Wednesday after the outlook’s release.
Oil is set to remain at the centre of global energy demand for years to come, and for Alberta, Canada’s energy capital, the IEA’s course correction offers renewed certainty in a world that had been prematurely writing off its future.
Toronto-based Rashid Husain Syed is a highly regarded analyst specializing in energy and politics, particularly in the Middle East. In addition to his contributions to local and international newspapers, Rashid frequently lends his expertise as a speaker at global conferences. Organizations such as the Department of Energy in Washington and the International Energy Agency in Paris have sought his insights on global energy matters.
Troy Media empowers Canadian community news outlets by providing independent, insightful analysis and commentary. Our mission is to support local media in helping Canadians stay informed and engaged by delivering reliable content that strengthens community connections and deepens understanding across the country.
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