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Conservatives nearly sweep Saskatchewan, CBC News projects

Conservatives nearly sweep Saskatchewan, CBC News projects

CBC29-04-2025

The CBC Decision Desk has projected the Conservatives will take an overwhelming majority of ridings in Saskatchewan, with the Liberals projected to win a fourth consecutive government.
CBC has projected 13 out of Saskatchewan's 14 ridings will be won by the Conservatives. The Liberals are projected to win one riding.
The CBC's Decision Desk has projected the following results for Saskatchewan:
Battlefords-Lloydminster-Meadow Lake: Rosemarie Falk (incumbent), Conservatives.
Regina-Lewvan: Warren Steinley (incumbent), Conservatives.
Regina-Qu'Appelle: Andrew Scheer (incumbent), Conservatives.
Regina-Wascana: Michael Kram (incumbent), Conservatives.
Saskatoon South: Kevin Waugh (incumbent), Conservatives.
Saskatoon West: Brad Redekopp (incumbent), Conservatives.
Saskatoon-University: Corey Tochor (incumbent), Conservatives.
Yorkton-Melville: Cathay Wagantall (incumbent), Conservatives.
Souris-Moose Mountain: Steven Bonk (incumbent), Conservatives.
Moose Jaw-Lake Centre-Lanigan: Fraser Tolmie (incumbent), Conservatives.
Carlton Trail-Eagle Creek: Kelly Block (incumbent), Conservatives.
Swift Current-Grasslands-Kindersley: Jeremy Patzer (incumbent), Conservatives.
Prince Albert: Randy Hoback (incumbent), Conservatives.
Desnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River: Buckley Belanger, Liberals.
Meanwhile, Mark Carney's Liberals are expected to form the next government, CBC News projects. It is too soon to say whether it will be a minority or majority. A party needs to win 172 seats to form a majority government.
In an emailed statement, Sask. NDP Leader Carla Beck congratulated Carney on his win, saying he has the "opportunity to deliver on the priorities of the people of Saskatchewan within a united Canada."
She noted an equalization deal, protecting $10/day childcare, removing Chinese tariffs on canola, and infrastructure to support industry and trade as priorities.
Winning MPs thank supporters
Saskatoon South projected winner for the Conservatives, Kevin Waugh, spoke to a crowd of supporters at Prairieland Park on Monday evening, attributing his fourth win to door-knockers.
"We ran on affordability. And every door that we knocked talked about affordability," Waugh said, calling it the number one challenge in Saskatoon.
In Regina, Andrew Scheer thanked the voters in the Regina-Qu'Appelle riding for keeping him in Ottawa since 2004.
"This is such a diverse riding with many different challenges and needs and dynamics and I've gotten to know so many people in so many different communities," said Scheer.
Andrew Scheer wins Regina-Qu'Appelle riding for 8th straight time
1 hour ago
Duration 1:55
Buckley Belanger of Desnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River is the first projected Liberal MP since Ralph Goodale, who lost his Regina seat in 2019. Belanger spoke to his supporters in La Ronge Monday evening, addressing challenges the north is facing.
"Things like poor housing, things like ... the illicit drug trade; the infrastructure needs that we have in northern Saskatchewan. We think that Ottawa can make a significant difference with our communities, with our families on battling some of these things," said Belanger.
WATCH | Liberal candidates reflect on election losses in Regina:
Liberal candidates reflect on election losses in Regina
1 hour ago
Duration 2:11
Liberal candidate for Regina-Wascana Jeffrey Walters and the Liberal candidate for Regina-Lewvan Mac Hird address the crowd after losing their 2025 federal election bids.
There are 14 federal ridings in Saskatchewan. Nearly 207,000 provincial residents voted in the advance polls — more that a 12-per-cent increase from the last general election in 2021. The Conservatives swept all 14 Saskatchewan ridings in the past two federal elections.

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Filipino forces and villagers struggle to live in China's shadow in disputed waters
Filipino forces and villagers struggle to live in China's shadow in disputed waters

Winnipeg Free Press

time3 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Filipino forces and villagers struggle to live in China's shadow in disputed waters

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But that longstanding aspiration by Philippine officials has been stymied by a tangle of territorial conflicts involving a militarily superior China. Beijing claims virtually the entire South China Sea, a vital global trade route with rich undersea deposits of gas and oil. It has increasingly flexed its military might, including its navy — the largest in the world — to strengthen its grip on a strategic waterway it says it has owned since ancient times. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan contest China's expansive claims with their own, and the territorial stand-offs have increasingly flared into cat-and-mouse confrontations at sea in recent years. The long-simmering disputes are also a delicate fault line in the regional rivalry between Beijing and Washington. Both former President Joe Biden and his successor, Donald Trump, have condemned China's growing aggression in the contested waters, including its coast guard's use of powerful water cannons, blinding military-grade lasers and dangerous sea maneuvers against the coast guard and navy of the Philippines, Washington's oldest treaty ally in Asia. Under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who took office in mid-2022, the Philippines has intensified a campaign to expose China's increasingly assertive actions by capturing them in video and photographs. The images have then been made public in the hope that international pressure would prompt Beijing to back down to avoid damage to its reputation. The Philippine military invited a small group of journalists, including two from The Associated Press, in a dayslong naval patrol of the South China Sea territories claimed by Manila and on visits to navy and marine forces deployed to guard them. During the patrol, which ended over the weekend, the BRP Andres Bonifacio navy ship carrying the journalists warned a number of Chinese coast guard ships and suspected Chinese militia vessels by two-way radio to move away from Philippines-claimed waters. The Chinese ships responded by asserting their sovereignty in the offshore region without undertaking any provocative actions. On West York Island, two Filipino marines in camouflage uniforms stood guard with M4 assault rifles under a Philippine flag. One used binoculars to scan the surrounding waters for Chinese or Vietnamese ships passing by from a distance. One of the farthest islands in the disputed waters from the nearest Philippine province of Palawan, West York is a difficult and risky post, where Filipino forces see nothing beyond the small island but sea. Military personnel can occasionally call their loved ones during their two-month deployment, but the internet connection is spotty, especially during the typhoon season that starts in June, according to military personnel on the island. They grow eggplants, okra and chili peppers and raise goats and chickens to augment food provisions delivered by navy ships from Palawan. There is a makeshift basketball court to help while away off-duty time and ease the feeling of isolation. 'It's being away from your family,' Padilla said. 'At the end of the day, you go home to an empty room.' Marine Col. Joel Bonavente, who was among the visiting military officials, told AP that military personnel posted in the remote outpost get additional pay to compensate for the 'hazard and loneliness.' On Thitu, the largest Philippines-claimed island, which lies west of West York, civilians have thrived for decades in a small fishing village alongside the military forces. An AP journalist who visited Thitu several years ago saw an island with only a few low-slung wooden and concrete buildings and a gravel airstrip that was being eroded by the constant pounding of waves. There were a few shanties mainlanders had moved to from Palawan in exchange for a monthly government provision of groceries, rice and cash in a bid to grow a civilian community. Dramatic infrastructure improvements have occurred through the years on the 37.2-hectare (92-acre) island, which now has a concrete runway, a huge aircraft hangar, a wharf, a storm shelter and concrete roads running through the fishing village, military encampments and a three-story coast guard surveillance center. A high school building is nearly finished near a seawater desalination facility. 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Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate
Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate

Vancouver Sun

time9 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate

OTTAWA — The Liberal government is mulling arming the Canadian Coast Guard as it launches a significant reform of the civilian maritime agency to give it a bigger role in the country's security apparatus. The move is one of many significant changes that the Liberals are planning for the chronically underfunded Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) that Prime Minister Mark Carney has promised to equip with new gear and a new security mandate. On the same day Carney announced his plan to accelerate defence spending this year, his office told National Post Monday that the CCG — which currently reports to the minister of fisheries — would shift to the minister of national defence's portfolio. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. The move away from the fisheries minister makes it both likely easier for the CCG's budget to be included in Canada's defence spending in the eyes of NATO and is part of Carney's desire to pivot the 63-year-old civilian agency towards a more security-oriented role. 'Canadians elected our new Government on a strong mandate for change — to protect our borders and defend our sovereignty with increased focus and investment. To that end, the Prime Minister will soon initiate the process of moving the Canadian Coast Guard to the leadership of the Minister of National Defence,' PMO spokesperson Emily Williams said in a statement. 'The change will permit the Coast Guard to fulfill better both its civilian and security responsibilities.' The statement did not say when the changeover would happen, with Williams promising that 'more details will come in due course.' A senior Liberal source also told National Post that the government is considering arming the CCG, though they stressed that no decision has been made yet as officials continue to chart the reform. Arming the CCG, which would be a massive — and costly — change for the special agency that has always been an unarmed civilian organization. 'We're not there yet,' the official said of the decision. The source was granted anonymity to discuss internal government deliberations. The Coast Guard has struggled for years with its mandate, pulled between its various responsibilities such as research, search and rescue, icebreaking, marine protection and coastal surveillance, but without any law enforcement powers. Due to its icebreaking capabilities, it also has unique expertise on the Canadian Arctic within the government. In the recent election campaign, the Liberals promised to give the CCG a new mandate 'to conduct maritime surveillance operations' along with the required equipment. Last week, the Liberals tabled a border security bill that proposes to give the CCG a new security mandate, the power to conduct 'security patrols' and the ability to share information with the military and intelligence agencies. In an interview, former CCG Commissioner Jody Thomas said the agency is long overdue for significant reform and that she'd been 'nagging' the government to move the agency to the defence or public safety portfolio for years. 'It is a major change, and I think it's an important change. I think that this is just another signal that Canada is changing its perspective on our own sovereignty,' said Thomas, who was also headed the Department of National Defence and was National Security Advisor to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Regarding armaments, she said that icebreakers currently under construction have been fitted for, but not with, weapons, meaning that arming them would be a relatively straightforward task. The real challenge of arming the Coast Guard, she warned, is training. 'It's a very expensive decision, not for the weaponry, but for the training and the constant preparation and exercising that's required,' she said. 'The Navy is always in training… for what's coming. The Coast Guard is out there working. So, it's a very different fleet and with very different purposes.' There are also talks within government of switching the Coast Guard from a special operating agency, which is still part of its host department, into a departmental agency with its own governing legislation that reports to the Minister of National Defense. I think that this is just another signal that Canada is changing its perspective on our own sovereignty In an interview in late May, Thomas argued that that needs to happen. 'It does need to be a legislative agency, the special operating agency status right now, that's a very flimsy sort of architecture and legal basis for an agency' with a security focus, Thomas said. A chronic challenge for the Coast Guard has been the deteriorating condition of its fleet while it operates on a 'shoestring' budget, according to Thomas. As of November, the CCG had 18 icebreakers , making it the second-largest icebreaking fleet in the world. Its fleet registry shows it has just over 120 ships on duty, the majority of which are small rescue vessels. But the aging fleet is also deteriorating rapidly, with ships spending more time in repairs and less time in the water. 'The CCG's aging vessels are becoming more costly to maintain and are more frequently taken out of operation for unscheduled repairs, placing further strain on the remaining fleet,' the agency said in its 2024-2025 department plans report . 'The need to replace the vessels has never been more important.' In March, the federal government contracted two new polar icebreakers which are expected to be delivered between 2030 and 2032. But Thomas said the coast guard has much bigger needs. 'We're one of the few countries that uses the same fleet for northern and southern ice breaking. We ice break year-round, essentially,' she said. 'So, you have to look at the wear and tear on the ship and the things you want them to do, and the places you want them to be, and they're going to have to plan the fleet accordingly.' National Post cnardi@ Get more deep-dive National Post political coverage and analysis in your inbox with the Political Hack newsletter, where Ottawa bureau chief Stuart Thomson and political analyst Tasha Kheiriddin get at what's really going on behind the scenes on Parliament Hill every Wednesday and Friday, exclusively for subscribers. Sign up here . Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate
Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate

Calgary Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Calgary Herald

Liberals considering arming the Coast Guard amid significant pivot towards new security mandate

Article content OTTAWA — The Liberal government is mulling arming the Canadian Coast Guard as it launches a significant reform of the civilian maritime agency to give it a bigger role in the country's security apparatus. Article content The move is one of many significant changes that the Liberals are planning for the chronically underfunded Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) that Prime Minister Mark Carney has promised to equip with new gear and a new security mandate. Article content Article content Article content On the same day Carney announced his plan to accelerate defence spending this year, his office told National Post Monday that the CCG — which currently reports to the minister of fisheries — would shift to the minister of national defence's portfolio. Article content Article content The move away from the fisheries minister makes it both likely easier for the CCG's budget to be included in Canada's defence spending in the eyes of NATO and is part of Carney's desire to pivot the 63-year-old civilian agency towards a more security-oriented role. Article content 'Canadians elected our new Government on a strong mandate for change — to protect our borders and defend our sovereignty with increased focus and investment. To that end, the Prime Minister will soon initiate the process of moving the Canadian Coast Guard to the leadership of the Minister of National Defence,' PMO spokesperson Emily Williams said in a statement. Article content Article content 'The change will permit the Coast Guard to fulfill better both its civilian and security responsibilities.' Article content Article content The statement did not say when the changeover would happen, with Williams promising that 'more details will come in due course.' Article content A senior Liberal source also told National Post that the government is considering arming the CCG, though they stressed that no decision has been made yet as officials continue to chart the reform. Article content Arming the CCG, which would be a massive — and costly — change for the special agency that has always been an unarmed civilian organization.

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