
Limited spots for driver's ed program drive up demand, causing long lineups at MPI
Big demand for Manitoba Public Insurance's condensed driver's education program drove teens to long lineups outside MPI offices on Wednesday. Only a fraction of those who lined up in Winnipeg were able to get spots in the program.
Hashtags

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


National Post
26 minutes ago
- National Post
NP View: King Charles III affirmed what it is to be Canadian
Article content But in other, more serious ways, the Crown has receded from public life. It is no longer common to hear people sing God Save the King, even as a secondary anthem. The Red Ensign, Canada's old flag, has weirdly been dismissed by progressives as a symbol of the far right, as opposed to a proud symbol of our history. Statues of past monarchs, and of early prime ministers are toppled. Article content Contemporary prime ministers adopt the manner and practices of a president of a republic, as opposed to a chief advisor to the Crown. Carney's repeated signing of fake executive orders, emulating Trump, are merely the latest example of this. Article content As for Governors General, who act on behalf of the Sovereign, they had tended before the 1970s to be those with experience as diplomats or in the military. In other words, the Governor General was traditionally chosen from among the ranks of people already familiar with serving the Crown, and placing such service above partisan needs. Article content That all changed with Pierre Trudeau, and those named to the role since have been increasingly political, while increasingly having little respect for the institution. Article content Article content This week, a social media account for Governor General Mary Simon posted that conversations with the King 'deepen the meaningful bond between our nations' followed by small images of the Canadian and U.K. flags. The message was that the King was representing another nation, rather than being the King of Canada. It is an unfortunately common misunderstanding among Canadians, but the one person who should not make this mistake is the Governor General, even if it was an underling who wrote the post. Article content This degradation of the Crown in Canada must come to end. Perhaps it is true that if Canadians were designing a political system from scratch, it would not be based on a 1,000 year-old institution that has evolved to the point where the person with the most power constitutionally may only keep that power if he never (or rarely) uses it. Article content Our system of government, with a hereditary head of state that is not only above politics, but who must avoid politics, however, has proven remarkably stable, and remarkably well suited to protecting the rights and liberties of Canadians. Following the King's visit, let us all do our part to hold on to the very institutions that define us. Article content


National Post
27 minutes ago
- National Post
Avi Benlolo: The Jewish community is under attack — will you stand with us?
Article content This past week, The Abraham Global Peace Initiative hosted a powerful and inspiring gala at Toronto's historic Casa Loma. The keynote speaker, former Israeli UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan, addressed a sold-out crowd made up of proud Canadians — many of them children and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors. They gathered to counter hate, intolerance and to promote human rights and peace in the Middle East. But outside, a dangerous scene unfolded: a mob of radicalized agitators, emboldened and hateful, hurled slurs and threats at our guests simply for being Jewish. Article content Article content Article content I implore every Canadian to take the time to understand what is happening on our streets. There are men and women (and even children) dressed in full military fatigues. They wear keffiyehs over their faces (same as Hamas, ISIS or al-Qaida) to hide their identities and terrorize. They shout death threats at Jewish people — and at others who simply happen to be walking by. They block roads, sidewalks, and disrupt entire neighbourhoods. You need to know about this—and stop looking away as if its not your problem. Article content Article content Some attendees, deeply shaken, said the hatred reminded them of the stories their families told about Europe in the 1930s. It started the same way: mobs denouncing Jews, attempting to isolate them from public life, striking fear into their hearts. This isn't a page from a history book. It is happening at Jewish events every day on Canadian soil. Article content But you wouldn't know about it because Canadian media (except for the National Post) isn't reporting about this homeland support for terrorism. Our media broadcasters are keeping this threat hidden from Canadians, failing to critically analyze the hate infesting our streets. Just the other day, for the first time in history, Israel elevated its global threat alert for Canada to its highest level — warning Israelis about travel to this country. Canada's mainstream media was largely silent. Article content Article content Across the country, Jewish Canadians face increasing threats — from schoolyards to university campuses, from synagogues to charity galas. Demonstrators chant for violence, wave terrorist symbols, and show no fear of law enforcement. In fact, they often shout at and shove the very officers trying to protect us. Article content Article content Yes, our police services are doing their best. To their credit and leadership, the Toronto Police comes out in force. I cannot believe the abuse they take. They are shoved, spat at, sworn at and yelled at with megaphones. Our own police service members should not be treated this way. Why are Canadians not speaking out?


National Post
27 minutes ago
- National Post
Colby Cosh: It turns out Trump's tariffs were illegal after all
The U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) issued a decision yesterday that annuls various salvos of surprise economic tariffs, including ones on Canada, that have been enacted by President Donald Trump since his inauguration in January. I won't lie to you: I had the same initial reaction to this consequential news that you probably did, which was 'Hooray!' and then 'Huh, there's a U.S. Court of International Trade?' Article content Article content Article content This court is surely unfamiliar even to most Americans, no doubt because much of its work involves settling issues like 'Do hockey pants count as 'garments' or 'sports equipment' under customs law?' Nevertheless, the CIT does have exclusive jurisdiction over civil actions involving U.S. trade law. It's just that no president has ever before rewritten the tariff schedule of the republic in the half-mad fashion of a child taking crayons to a fresh-painted wall. Article content Article content The American Constitution, from day one, has unambiguously assigned the right to set international tariffs to Congress. Congress is allowed to delegate its powers to the president and his agents for limited or temporary purposes, but it can't abandon those powers to him altogether. Defining this legal frontier is what the CIT was asked to do, and their demarcation of it will now swim upward through higher appellate courts (its decision has been put on hold in the meantime). Article content The lawsuit was actually two parallel suits raising overlapping objections to the tariffs. One was brought forward by 12 U.S. states, and the other was filed by a group of tariff-exposed American businesses, including manufacturers of bikes, electronics kits and fishing equipment. The latter set of plaintiffs was roped together by the usual posse of heroic libertarians and legal originalists, including George Mason University law prof Ilya Somin. Article content About 24 hours after Trump originally announced the 'Liberation Day' worldwide tariffs, Somin quickly blogged about how insanely unconstitutional the whole idea was, and concluded his article essentially by saying 'I'm darn well gonna do something about this nonsense.' I don't mean to suggest he deserves primary credit; I only intend to call attention, once again, to U.S. libertarians being the best friends Canada doesn't know it has. Article content