Long lines at polling stations as Canadians turn up for advance voting
Canadians are reporting long lines as polling stations open for advance voting Friday.
Advance polls are open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. nationwide Friday through Monday, with election day set for April 28.
Some voters at polling stations across the country told CBC News early Friday they were waiting upwards of an hour to cast their ballots.
"I vote all the time and I've never had to wait for very long, normally. This is going to be an hour apparently," said James Knight, who was voting at Ottawa City Hall.
Knight said he believed the long wait was due to people's enthusiasm to cast their ballots, rather than any disorganization on the part of Elections Canada.
"They're tuned into the election. It's a big deal for Canada, what's going on. So I think they may have decided to turn out early and often."
WATCH | Voters talk about showing up for advance polls:
The holiday weekend means many Canadians who would normally be working on Fridays and Mondays have time off to get to their polling stations.
Their reasons for getting out early vary.
"The economy, that's probably the biggest issue for me," said Peter Xing, waiting in a line at a Vancouver polling station. "And just the whole world politics, I think we just need a strong leader."
Voters wait in line at Poirier Community Centre (Centennial Pavillion) in Coquitlam, B.C., Friday. (Ina Yau)
In St. John's, Carl Aylward said he was motivated by U.S. President Donald Trump's rhetoric about Canada becoming the "51st state."
"This is why I want to get out," he said. "We're not for sale."
Elections Canada spokesperson Dugald Maudsley told CBC News Network returning officers at some stations were bringing in extra workers to deal with bottlenecks.
"There's high interest across the country and it's busy at a number of the polls," he said.
Maudsley said a high turnout on the first day of advance polling doesn't necessarily mean there will be a high overall turnout, but many signs are pointing in that direction.
Last week, Elections Canada said more than 130,000 Canadians had already voted by special ballot, more than double the number cast at the same point in the 2021 election. The agency issues special ballots to Canadians who don't want to wait until election day or for advance polls.
Maudsley also said Canadians overseas have been asking for voting kits in larger numbers than ever before.
"Perhaps that means we'll have a good turnout on election day as well," he said.
For voters who plan to turn up for advance polls, Maudsley says the best times to avoid long lines tend to be before 10 a.m. and after 4 p.m.
He also suggests bringing your voter information card, if you received one in the mail, to make the process go faster.
On Tuesday, there will be voting in hospitals and other acute care facilities. Tuesday is also the deadline to vote at a local office and to apply to vote by mail.
Find information about where you can vote on the Elections Canada website or by calling Elections Canada at 1-800-463-6868.
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Hamilton Spectator
9 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Canada condemns Iran's attack on Israel, calls for de-escalation: Anand
OTTAWA - The Canadian government is condemning an Iranian attack on Israel after a barrage of long-range missiles was launched at Tel Aviv in retaliation for an Israeli strike in Iran. Israel attacked Iranian missile and nuclear sites Friday and Iran warned of 'severe punishment' before launching its missiles in response. Foreign Minister Anita Anand said Canada is urging restraint on both sides and that further actions could cause 'devastating consequences' for the broader region. Anand said the U.S.-Iran negotiations represent the best path to achieving a 'lasting and peaceful resolution' to Iran's nuclear program, adding that diplomatic engagement remains essential to ensuring long-term regional stability and international security. 'Iran cannot obtain nuclear weapons,' Anand said on social media Friday evening. 'Iran's continued efforts to pursue nuclear weapons, support for terrorists, and direct attacks on civilian centres embody Iran's persistent threat to regional stability and to Israel, which has the right to defend itself. 'Canadians in the region are encouraged to remain vigilant and to register with the embassy in order to receive timely updates.' The Israeli strike involved more than 200 aircraft and about 100 targets, according to Israel's military. Iran confirmed the deaths of three of its top military leaders and launched more than 100 drones at Israel in response. Israel said the drones were being intercepted outside the country's airspace. Israeli leaders described the attack as a pre-emptive strike to head off an imminent threat by destroying Iran's ability to build nuclear weapons. Iran maintains its nuclear program is for civilian purposes only. After a meeting with the National Security Council, Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters Friday evening that the government was monitoring the situation 'closely.' At this point, Canada has not announced any changes to embassy staffing in Israel and the broader region. Canada closed its embassy in Iran in 2012. The U.S. evacuated some people from its embassy in Iraq before Israel attacked Iran. MP Robert Oliphant, Anand's parliamentary secretary, told reporters Friday that Iran is a 'wild card' in the Israel-Hamas war. '(Iran is) obviously using proxy wars at various times in various places, and so we will never defend Iran while we always stand with the people of Iran,' he said. He said Canadian diplomatic staff in the region are being protected through 'strong measures' but was unable to say whether plans are in the works to pull them out or boost embassy safety protocols. Dennis Horak, Canada's last ambassador to Iran, said that if Ottawa chooses to evacuate embassies in the region, its first step would be to order dependants and non-essential staff to leave. 'There are contingency plans for all of the embassies to have about evacuation plans and things like that, and those will be dusted off and may be reviewed,' Horak said. 'Ideally, out of our embassy in Israel, there would be a desire to get at least dependants out, but again the logistics of that may be challenging.' While Israeli airspace is currently closed, Horak said Canadians could leave by road for Jordan. With Canada hosting the G7 next week, Horak said it's an 'opportune' time for world leaders to discuss the conflict in the Middle East. 'How success would be defined is a whole other story,' he said. 'So I think it's fortunate timing, actually.' Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Israel has the right to act to defend itself by 'disarming' Iran before it has the capability to launch a nuclear strike. 'We should all hope that this is the end of the regime's nuclear program and that the great Persian people can now rise up to reclaim their country from the totalitarian regime,' Poilievre said on social media. 'All levels of government must take extra steps to protect Canada's Jewish community from vile antisemites who may use these events as an excuse for more acts of violence.' NDP foreign affairs critic Heather McPherson condemned Israel's actions in a media statement. 'While we have long condemned Iranian leadership, including the (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), this illegal act by Israel will only provoke further violence,' she said. In a media statement, B'nai Brith Canada called on the federal government to support Israel. 'An Iran armed with nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles is an existential threat to the entire world,' the advocacy body said. 'For years, the Islamic Republic of Iran has worked relentlessly to develop nuclear weapons, arm terrorist proxies with weapons of mass destruction, and openly call for the annihilation of Israel and the West. Yesterday, Israel acted decisively to prevent a global catastrophe.' — With files from Catherine Morrison and The Associated Press This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


Hamilton Spectator
14 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
As Trump heads to the G7, Canada hopes to avoid another Charlevoix-style eruption
OTTAWA - U.S. President Donald Trump is set to arrive Sunday in Alberta for the G7 summit — his first visit to Canada since leaving in a huff seven years ago. Ottawa could use everything from golfing and creative scheduling to special cabinet orders to make the visit successful and avoid a repeat diplomatic disaster. 'He is somebody who is very prickly when he feels like he's not being fully respected,' said Eric Miller, president of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group, a cross-border consultancy. 'You want to make absolutely sure that … he walks away and says, 'You know, those Canadians aren't so bad after all.'' Better than last time The last time Trump was in Canada — for the G7 summit in the Charlevoix region of Quebec — things ended in a blowout. Trump refused to sign the communiqué, the published list of statements on common G7 issues that are mostly negotiated and agreed to by member nations ahead of time. He left early and lambasted Trudeau as 'very dishonest and weak' in a spat over tariffs. The summit included what Miller called the 'photograph for the ages' — of then German chancellor Angela Merkel and others standing sternly over a seated Donald Trump, who appeared to be glaring back with crossed arms. German Ambassador to Canada Matthias Lüttenberg put it bluntly when he told a June 4 panel that Ottawa was again navigating 'very difficult circumstances' as G7 chair — and capably, in his view. 'I mean, I wouldn't like to negotiate with a country at the table who's questioning my sovereignty as a state,' he said. Sen. Peter Boehm, who was summit head in 2018, recalled two late nights of negotiations because the Trump administration didn't align with the others on including climate change or references to the 'rules-based international order.' Informal talks Prime Minister Mark Carney won office in April after repeatedly saying he could stand up to Trump's threats to ruin the Canadian economy in order to make the country an American state. Carney had a cordial visit to Washington in early May and even got praise from Trump on social media and in person, despite the president insisting Canada should still become a U.S. state. The two have continued talking. U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra revealed earlier this month that the president and Carney have exchanged frequent calls and texts on trade and tariffs. Miller said facetime between the two leaders in Alberta could help them make progress on economic concerns, as well as Trump's pitch to bring Canada into his proposed Golden Dome missile shield project. 'Given that there is this conversation underway, it is important that they have an opportunity to continue that, and to meet perhaps in a setting that is less structured and formal than the Oval Office,' Miller said. 'Life is about imperfect choices, and it's absolutely the right thing to have Mr. Trump come to Canada.' He said he's not sure if there will be any formal announcement, though he added Trump is keen to sign agreements with multiple countries ahead of his self-imposed July 9 deadline for so-called retaliatory tariffs. Miller said both Canada and the U.S. are likely to take credit for Ottawa announcing this month it will drastically speed up its pledge to meet NATO's defence spending target. Trump might also take note of the fact that he's in one of the few provinces that have opted to resume sales of U.S. alcohol, after all provinces banned it from their liquor store shelves in response to U.S. tariffs. Lower expectations Ottawa's decision to schedule relatively short group discussions among G7 leaders, and to invite numerous other world leaders, could mean more of the one-on-one meetings that Trump prefers. 'Trump does not like multilateral meetings particularly. He loses interest,' Boehm said. Canadian officials have said they are focused on releasing shorter, focused statements — which could avoid the kind of major blowups that could come from trying to craft the kind of massive joint communiqué that has concluded almost all other G7 summits. Former prime minister Jean Chretien told a panel Thursday that if Trump does have an outburst, G7 leaders should ignore him and 'keep talking normally.' Miller said that for Canada, 'ensuring a positive agenda that doesn't lead to acrimony afterwards' means advancing its interests without isolating the U.S., particularly with so many guest leaders attending. 'The trick that Mr. Carney has to pull off is to reassure the U.S. that it wants a good, positive relationship — while at the same time running vigorously, as quickly as possible, to try to build new relationships,' he said. It's also entirely possible that Trump will leave before the meetings conclude. A visiting felon Keeping it positive is also likely why Ottawa will skirt rules that might bar Trump from crossing into Canada after he was found guilty on 34 criminal counts in a 'hush money' trial in May 2024. Immigration lawyers say those convicted of serious crimes abroad must serve their time and wait five years before seeking a certificate of admissibility to Canada, though there are loopholes if someone seeks a visa for a compelling reason. The federal cabinet passed a formal order published in February that gives diplomatic immunity and privileges to 'representatives of a foreign state that participate in the G7 meetings.' Fore! Another way Canada could ensure a successful visit could be to get Trump to the Kananaskis Country Golf Course — a prospect much discussed in media reports that remained unconfirmed as of Friday afternoon. Carney gave Trump a hat and golf gear from that course during his visit to the Oval Office in May. Miller said that wasn't just a gimmick — Trump loves making deals while teeing off, and it could provide Carney or others with hours of facetime on a golf cart, which is Trump's comfort zone. 'Golf has been pretty central to his life,' he said. 'It makes eminent sense to have Mr. Trump playing at a high-quality golf course.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2025.
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump Has Completely Wrecked America's Brand
The longest undefended border in the world has a new and insurmountable wall running the entire length of its extent, from sea to shining sea, a barrier as real as it is imaginary. For Canadians, the constant recipients of Donald Trump's lurid attempts to be press-ganged into becoming the 51st state, there is no longer any need for American border control at the many crossings into the United States. The border is now self-controlled and self-policed, with virtually the entire population of America's peaceful neighbor to the north, my homeland, agreeing that crossing over to America is not just taboo — it's a kind of betrayal, even borderline treasonous. For decades, the greatest cross-border threats to Canada have come from the south: guns, drugs, weak beer, idiotic wars, reactionary politics, reality TV, idiotic wars, and now epically stupid tariffs and the deranged lunge for annexation. For Americans, Canada has always been a place of refuge — for loyalists fleeing the Revolutionary War and slaves in the Civil War, to draft dodgers during the Vietnam War and women in the all-too-real fictional gender war of The Handmaid's Tale. It has also been the butt of lame jokes — an easy source of mockery, yin to the Yankee yang, universal health care and social justice to America's 'we're all going to die' nihilism. A quiet and politely passive neighbor, prospering under a mutually beneficial trade agreement negotiated by Trump in his first term, Canada has long been taken for granted, to the extent its existence is even noticed at all. Former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, father of the recently replaced prime minister Justin, once said that living next door to the United States was like sleeping with an elephant — every twitch and twinge can be felt. But what about trying to exist next to an angry, irrational, vengeful orangutan on a rampage, a tariff-imposing, grudge-holding mob boss with a Nero-strength case of narcissism, who seems intent making himself a Mount Rushmore-worthy historical figure, or failing that, a dictator — even as he turns himself and increasingly America into a laughingstock? AS A SELF-DESCRIBED mastermind marketer and salesman, Donald Trump has always placed a supreme premium on the value of his brand, claiming it alone is worth billions — ascribing the greatest part of his invented net worth to the intangible monetary appeal of his P. T. Barnum carnival act. As president, Trump has enriched himself and his grifter children with corrupt crypto and creepo businesses, with his family demanding the construction of a Trump-branded golf course for peasants to play on the rice paddies of Vietnam as their latest extortion racket, along the way plunging the concept of graft to a new low — perhaps even rivaling his hero Vladimir Putin. But Trump is also the steward of the most valuable brand in human history: the United States. Instead of Trump's paltry few billion, the brand of America is worth trillions upon trillions, an incalculable value proposition that is undergoing the most radical relaunch since New Coke in the 1980s. A Manhattan advertising executive for a global agency once hired to promote 'Brand USA' during the Obama years tells me that the approach used then was simple and effective: democracy, independence, freedom. The key phrases now, he says, are capitalism and culture — but that is putting the best possible spin on what's really happening to America's global reputation. 'The world is in denial about what's really going on in America,' the executive says. 'The election was a mirror reflecting America back to itself — the election is who America really is right now — and that is frustrated young white dudes who are angry at the world.' For Canadians intent on boycotting American-made goods and services in favor of Canadian content, as a reaction to Trump's frontal assault on its economy and sovereignty, there is still a humorous element to the undeniable crack-like attraction of American culture. A recent comedy sketch from the CBC show This Hour Has Twenty-Two Minutes titled 'Canadians Anonymous,' illustrates the point, as addled hosers admit that they can't get enough Yankee three-ply toilet paper from Walmart, let alone swap Diet Pepsi for generic Canadian diet cola. As the mortified Canadians sit in a circle of trust, confessing to their relapses buying American products like dry drunks in an AA meeting, they share the strange love-hate relationship between the two countries — a longing felt exclusively, it seems, by America's northern neighbor. 'Now, who wants to get drunk?' the sponsor asks as the group session ends. 'Me,' comes the instant reply. 'I can't be sober during this trade war.' The star of This Hour is Mark Critch, a Newfoundlander, a peculiar subspecies of Canadian with a mid-Atlantic brogue and a wicked sense of humor — not the kind of comedy that travels to America in the milquetoast guise of Mike Myers or Jim Carrey, with Canadians passing as Americans. Critch is a specific kind of celebrity — world-famous all-over Canada, you might say — who creates comedy for Canadians, without having to pander in search of the supposed big time. 'When I order a Manhattan in a bar in Toronto now I get the instant judgy eye,' Critch tells me. 'Like it's the most horrible thing.' Critch likens Trump to a toxic boyfriend negging Canada, a form of gaslighting that has the predator president claiming that America doesn't need Canada's lumber or steel or boundless fresh water — when of course the opposite is true. Ironically, Trump's constant attempt to neg Canada has only developed an historically unprecedented positive form of patriotism, from urban hipster leftists to redneck prairie farmers insulted by the bullying and repulsive lechery for Canada's own priceless resources — natural, national, intellectual, historical, but above all civilizational. For generations, Canadians have defined themselves largely as not being American, a counterpoint form of identity that seemed to lack its own driving force, until Trump came along. Now, not being American has taken on an entirely new significance — a national characteristic that is both exceptional and the envy of the world. A LITTLE APPRECIATED aspect of the self-generated reality of the con artist is that they need to surround themselves with people stupid or craven enough to go along with their scams. The same is true for Trump, just on an epic level, with the halfwitted J.D. Vance and fake tough guy Don Jr. leading the charge, along with wide-eyed maniacs like Peter Navarro, Stephen Miller, and Kash Patel, as the new brand ambassadors for the United States. Then there are those who are wise to the con, but who believe it's profitable to go along with the Big Lie while it lasts — like Elon Musk, depending on the level of ketamine in his system measured against his naked, corrupt self interest and sadistic impulses. Together, as the con artist preys upon the gullibility of his followers, promising fantasies that are literally too good to be true, they are enveloped by the giddy sense that if the lies are big enough the bullshit might actually come true. But the result is that the loneliest man in every room is the con man surrounded by idiots — particularly because he is frequently his own victim, convinced by his own lies, isolating himself from his own tenuous grasp on reality. The new prime minister of Canada appears aware of this context — and the dire threat to Canada's national interest Trump represents. Sitting with Trump in the White House, as poised as any Goldman Sachs banker — because he was one — freshly elected Prime Minister Mark Carney is the kind of sophisticated financial figure who routinely refused to do business with the failed businessman Trump, and for very good reason. Carney is a true plutocrat, fluent in the language of Wall Street and global commerce in a way that Trump can only dream of. As Carney sits politely listening to a torrent of Trump's lies, he effortlessly deploys the arcane argot of the global elite, offering a 'step change' in the trade agreement between the two countries, for example, as Trump leans forward in an odd form of deference wondering what precisely fancy words like 'step change' might actually mean — an illustration of the Canadian leader's mastery of America's worst and most ridiculous excesses. 'Carney gives Trump the opportunity to not look stupid,' the comedian Critch tells me. 'Carney can explain things to him. Carney has dealt with every kind of bullshit developer like Trump. They recognize something in each other.' So it is that Trump lives inside a kind of Potemkin village, the fake model settlements 19th century Russians courtiers built to hide the truth about the poverty and suffering of the peasants from the clueless tyrannical Tsar. Only in Trump's case, the entire world is his ornate Potemkin snow globe, a kind of inverted psychedelic trip where Trump is never wrong and foreigners pay tariffs — not American consumers. Inside this bubble, Trump is respected and admired and worshipped — not ridiculed and loathed. In this alternate reality, with Trump's acolytes urging on his worst instincts, he continues to insist that Canada will become the 51st state, despite the nearly universal disgust and contempt the president engenders in Canada. 'The Canada stuff started as a joke, and I suppose it still is a joke,' Critch sighs. 'But the world is starting to realize there is no plan.' For Carney, having a plan always beats having no plan, as he said repeatedly during his successful electoral campaign. Like most every world leader — many eagerly watching Carney to see how it's done — Carney's plan is to not rile Trump, thus not poking the bear, at least in theory. But behind the polite deference, Canada is furiously building a future that looks beyond America to trade across the country's provinces, with internal commercial barriers disappearing, along with new treaties with Europe and Asia; like the rest of the western world, Canada is frantically preparing for a post-America order, the aftermath of the decline and fall of an empire at the hyper-speed of the digital age. THE WORD 'CANADA' is derived from the Iroquois word for a collection of villages, an apt metaphor for a society defined by diversity and contradictions and multiplicity. There are countless complexities to Canadian politics, like the fact that the French-speaking separatist movement in Quebec likely saved the country in the past election by voting for Mark Carney's federalist Liberal party, while a rump of hard-right prairie MAGA-wannabes have now set out to separate from the country. In the same way that Americans quake in fear at so-called 'polar vortex' storm fronts that Canadians simply call 'winter,' there is a word the folks north of the border use for resolving seemingly intractable problems, without resorting to fascism or assaults on sanity and fundamental human decency: 'democracy.' Just below the surface for Canadians, rarely mentioned, is the shocking and painful realization that virtually no one in America has defended the country and the centuries-long alliance — at least not until the economic pain started to be felt. Despite the unhinged attacks, Trump's approval rating remains relatively high, with many Americans apparently more than happy to toss aside generations of cooperation — displaying the appallingly flimsy roots of the relationship with Canada. Another of the most difficult facts to swallow for Canadians is also the biggest reality of them all: Trump's attack on diversity, equity, and inclusion is an assault on the most basic values of Canadian society. Canada is a nation built on immigrants, as is America, and it's also a society that is facing a demographic catastrophe without the influx of immigrants creating a new kind of society and nation. Through a policy of multicultural toleration and even celebration of difference, Canada is becoming a post-national nation, as former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau noted in an interview with me more than a decade ago — a notion that has been mocked by Trump and America's extremist nationalists, but that is the only plausible way forward for a species sharing a fragile, warming, and shrinking planet. THE BORDER CROSSING north of Watertown, New York, usually has hundreds of cars lined up on both sides of the frontier on Memorial Day weekend, the traditional start to the summer. This year there were no cars waiting on the Canadian side to cross into the United States, despite the onset of the tourist season. Not a few cars or a slow day: only the one driven by my kids returning from a semester in university in Canada. The statistics about declining tourism revenue in America aren't simply numbers: This is a cultural and patriotic and civilizational transformation, a fact that MAGA extremists delight in, but that will only further isolate America in Trump's chaotic, delusional, and cowering country. Canadians love America, truth be told, but not at the price of their dignity and independence and self-respect. The half-filled state fairs in Minnesota and the condos for sale in Florida and the struggling Maine hotels are a sign of a troubling change for relations between the countries, but on a deeper level they represent the fact that the two countries are really parting ways. As seen from the far side of the 49th parallel, America doesn't seem to be turning its back on Canada, so much as it is turning its back on itself — its history and Constitution, the world, the future. To Canadians, America is freefalling into an abyss where even freedom of speech is becoming a questionable right. Consider this: Possessing the magazine you're reading — in print, on your electronic device — could now easily constitute a crime at the border crossing into America from Canada, if you possess the wrong nationality or passport or skin color or religion or immigration status. As Canadians are discovering on the frontier to the United States, all it takes is for an American border patrol officer to confiscate your belongings and search for any expression that is objectionable to the Trump regime — whatever the Dear Leader says that means on any given day, a category that might easily include Rolling Stone. Cross into Canada at the same frontier, over the majestic Thousand Islands Bridge spanning the blue waters of the St. Lawrence River, and you, dear reader, can find yourself on the far side of the only actual wall Donald Trump has ever successfully constructed, in a land that is not seized by the pathetic rage and self-pity of a sad old man — in the true north, strong and free. More from Rolling Stone Marines Arrive in Los Angeles as City Braces for 'No Kings' Protests Trump's Military Crackdown Is Starting To Dent His Poll Numbers Kim Gordon Has Words for Donald Trump on Re-Recorded 'Bye Bye 25!' Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence