logo
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew calls out U.S. lawmakers complaining about smoke from Canadian wildfires

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew calls out U.S. lawmakers complaining about smoke from Canadian wildfires

National Post11-07-2025
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew has pushed back against U.S. lawmakers who recently sent a letter to Canada's ambassador complaining that wildfires are sending smoke across the border and making it difficult for Americans to enjoy the summer.
Article content
The Tuesday letter was signed by six Republican lawmakers from Minnesota and Wisconsin, and questioned Canada's approach to fighting wildfires. In response, Kinew said Thursday that the lawmakers should speak with the American firefighters currently on the ground in Manitoba, instead of making political statements from afar.
Article content
Article content
'I've shaken the hands of American firefighters in northern Manitoba who are helping us out,' said Kinew. 'I would challenge these ambulance chasers in the U.S. Congress to go and do the same, and to hear how much the American firefighting heroes who are here, how much they love our province.'
Article content
Article content
The letter was sent by representatives Tom Tiffany, Brad Finstad, Tom Emmer, Michelle Fischbach, Glenn Grothman and Pete Stauber of Wisconsin and Minnesota, and addressed to Canada's U.S. ambassador, Kirsten Hillman.
Article content
In the letter, they outlined that over the last few years, Canadian wildfires have impacted American's quality of life. They argued that a 'lack of active forest management' is a key cause, but arson could also be a contributing factor. The letter went on to say that with all the technology available, 'this worrisome trend can be reversed if proper action is taken.'
'This is what turns people off politics,' Kinew said in response. 'When you've got a group of congresspeople trying to trivialize and make hay out of a wildfire season where we've lost lives in our province. There's no place for that in politics.
Article content
'If you can't get likes on Instagram from your own skills as a politician don't bother trying to throw other people under the bus during a state of emergency.'
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Liberals spending $2B to boost military pay and benefits this year
Liberals spending $2B to boost military pay and benefits this year

CBC

timea few seconds ago

  • CBC

Liberals spending $2B to boost military pay and benefits this year

Social Sharing The Liberal government announced its long-promised pay increase for members of the Canadian military on Friday, unveiling a graduated series of salary top-ups and incentives that will help the lowest-ranking soldiers, sailors and aircrew the most. Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered the news during a media availability at the country's largest military airbase in Trenton, Ont., fulfilling a leadership and campaign promise. The pay and allowance increase will cost $2 billion per year and the pay bumps are retroactive to the beginning of the fiscal year in April. This spending is part of the additional $9 billion for defence that Carney announced earlier this year to meet Canada's NATO commitment. Senior defence officials, speaking on background at a technical briefing prior to the prime minister's announcement, said the last comprehensive overhaul of the pay and benefits system took place a generation ago in 1998. Several weeks ago, Defence Minister David McGuinty had suggested the pay increase would be 20 per cent across the board. Carney had also suggested the same, raising a great deal of expectation in the ranks. WATCH | Military commander on staffing shortfall: Canada short 13,000 troops, but U.S. military ties are 'solid,' top soldier says 6 months ago The Canadian Armed Forces is still short some 13,000 troops, but top soldier Gen. Jennie Carignan says the military is working to modernize the recruitment process to boost those numbers. Carignan also said despite recent tensions, Canada-U.S. military ties are 'solid.' The way the new system unrolls, the lowest ranks of the regular force — private, ordinary sailors and aviators — will get a 20 per cent boost (if they serve reserves the increase will be 13 per cent). Non-commissioned members, junior officers up to the rank of naval commander or lieutenant-colonel, will receive a 13 per cent pay hike. For officers of the rank of colonel and above, the increase will be eight per cent. To recruit and hold on to people, there will be a bonus of $10,000 to complete basic training, an additional $20,000 when training is completed and another $20,000 once they have completed their first term of service. Higher deployment bonuses The Department of National Defence is also increasing a series of posting and hardship allowances, as well as creating new ones. For example, members of the military are paid a bonus when on deployment overseas or at sea. Given the frequency troops have been asked to carry out domestic operations, the department is now introducing an allowance for deployments at home and in the Arctic. Troops forced to live away from their families will get a bigger stipend as part of the changes. As well, military members who are asked to move frequently will get a higher allowance. The department is also delivering a targeted benefit to encourage and retain members who conduct training. The military has struggled to recruit, train and retain members. Defence officials on Friday acknowledged that they are short 12,722 personnel — both regular and reserve force. An internal report assessing the military effort to retain troops, obtained by CBC News, said 76 per cent of Canadian Armed Forces occupations were in critical shortfall. The report, entitled Evaluation of CAF Retention, was dated April 2025, but relied in some cases on data from 2024. Defence officials on Friday provided a lower number in terms of the overall critical shortfall, suggesting only 40 per cent of the occupations within the military are staffed at below 75 per cent. They acknowledged, however, certain jobs are under a lot of stress.

Amy Hamm: Sydney Sweeney jeans ad causes wokists to lose their collective minds
Amy Hamm: Sydney Sweeney jeans ad causes wokists to lose their collective minds

National Post

time30 minutes ago

  • National Post

Amy Hamm: Sydney Sweeney jeans ad causes wokists to lose their collective minds

Article content In any political context outside of Nazi Germany, the denim advertisement would, one might think, reasonably be taken as a just that: an attempt to use a beautiful woman to sell some jeans. What happened, instead, is that Sweeney, with her anti-woke weapons of mass destruction, has become the centre of a left-wing, anti anti-woke fury that beggars belief. Article content Sweeney's American Eagle campaign is being framed as white supremacist and supportive of eugenics. Article content Did you know that Sweeney's adorable dog is a German Shepherd? Did someone say 'German'? Uh oh. People on the internet have decreed that the pup is a 'Nazi pet,' belonging to one 'Swastika Sweeney.' It has also emerged that Sweeney is a registered Republican voter. Such horror. Article content An op-ed in Newsweek argues that the jeans ad is 'a modern eugenics movement proudly re-emerging amid a welcoming political climate.' It dubiously links the 'rhetoric' of Trump's administration to entirely imagined and 'horrifying thoughts of what may be happening to immigrants currently being detained by ICE.' All inspired by a denim advertisement. Article content The only useful part of that statement is regarding a 'welcoming political climate.' For the current climate does, in fact, welcome this sort of intellectually dishonest, catastrophizing reaction that we are witnessing on the far-left. Article content The climate enabled using Sweeney as the easy, no-questions-asked target of a jealous and insecure rage towards all things beautiful. It enabled invocation of Trump's ICE raids to justify the emittance of one final (hopefully) extinction-burst like paroxysm over the dying corpse of wokeness in America. Article content It is a corpse that now lies in Sweeney's buxom shadow. American Eagle's stock price is increasing in the aftermath of the outrage. They have not apologized. They don't need to: it clearly wouldn't be good for the company's bottom line. Article content Instead, American Eagle released the following statement about the campaign on their Instagram account: ''Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans' is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story… Great jeans look good on everyone.' A cursory glance at their account reveals models of all skin colours in American Eagle jeans. But why let facts get in the way of woke outrage? Times are desperate; particularly when one side is on the precipice of losing a culture war. Article content Article content Article content

Maritime provinces to make announcement on 'regional connectivity'
Maritime provinces to make announcement on 'regional connectivity'

CBC

time31 minutes ago

  • CBC

Maritime provinces to make announcement on 'regional connectivity'

Watch live coverage from CBC News here when the announcement begins Atlantic provinces to make announcement on 'regional connectivity' Live in 1 hour P.E.I. Premier Rob Lantz and Charlottetown MP Sean Casey, as well as politicians from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, are making a joint announcement on "regional connectivity" at the Charlottetown Airport. The event starts at 3:30 p.m. AT. You can watch live coverage from CBC News here when it begins.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store