
More candidates step forward to run for Edmonton mayor
Edmonton Watch
CTV News Edmonton's Jeremy Thompson talks to long-term city councillors Andrew Knack and Tim Cartmell, who are both running to be Edmonton's next mayor.
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National Post
17 minutes ago
- National Post
'It's unacceptable': Brother of Jagmeet Singh says Canadians warned about risk to their life deserve protection
OTTAWA — The brother of former federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh says Canadians who receive a duty to warn about a threat against their life and safety should be provided protection, calling the lack of security 'unacceptable.' Article content Gurratan Singh says the need for protection is 'paramount' and that the current situation results in people being left to 'fend for themselves.' Article content Article content Article content 'It's unacceptable and an immediate step that must be given is security must be provided to those who are facing duty to warns from, especially, foreign governments.' Article content Article content 'I think any single Canadian who gets a duty to warn deserves that security immediately.' Article content Issues surrounding a duty to warn notification, a practice used by police to alert someone when it believes there to be a credible threat endangering them, have emerged in light of India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi's upcoming visit to attend the G7 in Alberta next week. Article content Sikh activists and community leaders have denounced Prime Minister Mark Carney's invitation to Modi as a betrayal of their community. Article content They have pointed to the RCMP having said it has evidence showing links between violent crimes, such as murders and extortion, to the Indian government. Article content Former prime minister Justin Trudeau also told the House of Commons in September 2023 that it had 'credible allegations' that agents acting on behalf of the Indian government were involved in the killing of prominent Sikh separatist and activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Article content Article content India has denied the accusation, but had considered Nijjar, who advocated for an independent Sikh state to be created in India's Punjab province, to be a terrorist. Article content Article content Earlier on Thursday, Global News also reported, citing unnamed sources, that former NDP leader Jagmeet Singh had been surveilled by someone with ties to the Indian government, which resulted in the RCMP providing him protection. Article content During the recent federal election campaign, Singh himself revealed that the RCMP warned him about a credible threat against his life in late 2023, which resulted in him and his family being placed under police protection. Article content At the time, Singh's wife was pregnant with their second child, and the former party leader told reporters he was so concerned about the threat that he considered quitting politics.


CBC
27 minutes ago
- CBC
Metal casket maker ready for trade war to end after steel hit with 50% tariff
Social Sharing At precisely noon, the casket welders, sanders and paint sprayers are turned off and a quiet hum settles over the Magog Caskets factory floor in southeastern Quebec. "The new closing time," says one of the workers as he removes his ear buds. "New" as a result of the imposition of tariffs and counter-tariffs between the United States and Canada. "The Trump administration is charging me a tariff. It's like, whatever I do, [the U.S.] is trying to strangle me," said Nicolas Lacasse, the owner of Magog Caskets. "And when I try to defend myself, it's like Canada is holding my hand, so I can't defend myself." Magog Caskets is the only manufacturer of metal caskets in Canada, which it sells primarily in Quebec and the U.S. And the primary material used to make those caskets? Steel. Not only has the U.S. imposed a 50 per cent tariff on aluminum and steel, but Canada has imposed a reciprocal tariff of 25 per cent. So Lacasse has had to reduce his employee workload from 39 hours a week to only 15 to 20 hours because he no longer makes a profit. Best response in world of bad options Like thousands of businesses across Canada, Lacasse has had to come up with the least painful option when faced with tariffs and counter-tariffs. His first option is to continue buying Canadian steel but face a 50 per cent tariff on the finished caskets going into the U.S. Option 2, and the one he chose: buy American steel, eat the cost of the exchange rate and pay the 25 per cent counter-tariff on the raw material. "That was the most cost-effective one, actually," Lacasse said. "It's still creating trouble here, though. I'm running at a loss." According to an analysis by Statistics Canada, 53 per cent of import-export companies in Canada think the tariffs will have a high-to-medium impact on business within the next three months. April saw Canada's largest recorded merchandise trade deficit, as companies attempted to minimize the damage to consumer pocketbooks. "We are seeing a large number of companies take all sorts of aggressive steps to either cancel contracts, avoid shipping or otherwise renegotiate pricing, for example, with their customers or their suppliers," said William Pellerin, a trade lawyer with the firm McMillan LLP. "It's very destabilizing. There's no question about it." Option to pass cost to customer impossible Lacasse says while some businesses have the option to pass the increased tariff-related costs on to customers, that's impossible for him. As the only Canadian metal casket manufacturer, the company only competes with those in the United States. Those companies aren't raising prices, so he can't. As a result, he has appealed to the Canadian government to give his niche business an exemption. "Right now, it's only my cash flow that keeps me going," he said. "We need to get help from the government to at least avoid that 25 per cent tariff, like they did in the automotive industry. That's the only way we can make it survive at this point." The Canadian government has been giving exemptions, but there is a backlog in demands. In April, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said those exemptions are meant to help companies in the short term. "We're giving Canadian companies and entities more time to adjust their supply chains and become less dependent on U.S. suppliers," Champagne said. "There are definitely clients that have benefitted greatly from the various exemptions, including a remission, which is a large-scale exemption that the government of Canada offered in mid-April," said Pellerin, the lawyer. "The government's looking at it based on the best interests of Canada. These exemptions are retroactive, but we're expecting that they're going to take four to six months before they're granted."

CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
CTV National News: Former PM Chretien's advice on dealing with Trump
Watch Jean Chretien's advice to world leaders on how to deal with U.S. President Trump is to keep their cool, before joking about grabbing him by the neck.