
Advocate hopes review of N.B. right-to-information law strengthens weak legislation
The Liberal government has asked for public submissions on its election promise to modernize legislation governing the public's right to obtain information from provincial departments and agencies.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Edmonton Journal
6 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Gunter: Trudeau cost Canada a chance to get into global LNG game — Trump and U.S. are reaping the benefit
Article content Last Sunday, at President Donald Trump's golf resort in Scotland (a.k.a. King Donald's summer palace), Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Union pledged European countries would buy US$750 billion (over $1 trillion Canadian) of U.S. energy – largely LNG – over the next three years in return for Trump promising to impose only 15% tariffs on the union's member states. Article content Article content Boy, those American and European trade negotiators must be dunces. Don't they know that three years ago, then-German Chancellor Olaf Scholz made a special trip to Canada to ask our government to sell tens of billions in LNG to his country? Our economic genius of a prime minister, Justin Trudeau rejected Scholz's request because 'there is no business case' for selling LNG to Europe. Article content Article content Article content This past Thursday, the South Koreans made a similar deal with the U.S. — $100 billion (about $138 billion Canadian) in energy over four years, primarily LNG. Article content What's wrong with these countries? Can they not see that the greatest economic mind of the 21st Century, Justin Pierre James Trudeau, had decreed it was foolhardy to sign such agreements? Article content Article content The U.S. deals with the EU and Korea just for LNG are worth about $800 billion Canadian over the next four years. The rest of the sales are for oil and nuclear fuels. Article content Article content A good part of that market might have been Canada's had we not been ruled by a 'green' dreamweaver and eco-cultist who prevented this country from jumping into the world LNG market early in the game. Article content Now the Americans have sucked up a lot of the oxygen in the room, and it will be hard for Canada to get a foothold, even if current Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney gets off his duff and agrees to more pipelines and LNG ports. Article content Trudeau's thinking (which remains Carney's thinking until the current Liberal government does more than just talk a good game) cost Canada at least $400 billion in investment during the Trudeau decade, drove down our per capita income, dropped us out of the 25 richest countries in the world, distorted our housing market and drove up prices and unemployment.


West Australian
8 hours ago
- West Australian
Sussan Ley calls on ‘outstanding' WA women to put hands up for Liberal preselection as party faces rebuild
The West Australian exclusive Sussan Ley calls on 'outstanding' WA women to put hands up for Liberal preselection as party faces rebuild

AU Financial Review
11 hours ago
- AU Financial Review
Retro remote work rules no fix for Victoria's productivity plunge
Victorian Labor Premier Jacinta Allan's pledge to enshrine in law public servants' and private sector workers' right to work from home at least two days a week may be smart short-term politics. However, it's typically poor public policy from Australia's most far-left government, whose long-term rule has coincided with Victoria's economic and financial decline. This includes cellar-dwelling labour productivity, which has grown more slowly in Victoria over the past decade than in any other state or territory. Allan's proposed legislation is likely to be struck down by a constitutional challenge in the High Court, legal experts warn. Yet the retail political purpose is to wedge the Liberal opposition ahead of the next state election due in November next year. Victorian Labor is aligning itself with the female voters who led the backlash that, during the federal election campaign, forced the Coalition to ditch its plan to force Canberra-based bureaucrats to work from the office full-time.