
Provincial byelection on the horizon after PC MLA wins federal nomination
Natalie Jameson won the nomination for the federal Conservatives in Charlottetown. That means there will be a provincial byelection to fill her seat in the P.E.I. Legislature. CBC's Wayne Thibodeau reports.

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Article content This is in stark contrast to the pro-Palestinian groups that have chosen, in the spirit of Hamas, to spread hate in the world. We have watched these groups as they have become increasingly hateful, aggressive and violent. They have escalated from rallies outside of Jewish community centres and schools, to encampments on university grounds, to shootings at Jewish schools, to hunting Jews after a football match on the eve of Kristallnacht, to the murder of two innocent Israeli embassy staff. Standing next to them are the politicians who offer hollow words about antisemitism at the same time as they refuse to recognize or condemn the source of this evil. Article content Kudos to the Conservatives for pushing the Carney government (although unsuccessfully) to tender a spring budget. Obviously Prime Minister Carney thinks he has clear sailing to spend almost half a trillion dollars without telling Canadians where those billions will be going. Article content In any democracy the government is expected to inform taxpayers as to how it plans to spend their hard-earned tax dollars. Without a budget there is no real accountability or possibility for oversight. This move is a reminder for Carney, who keeps opining that voters gave him a massive mandate when in fact he has only a minority government. Article content Peter Shawn Taylor's article highlights a basic truth: when nature calls, fairness isn't optional — it's essential. But fairness means designing solutions that benefit the greatest number. Article content Gender inequality in washroom access is real. Long lines outside women's washrooms reflect a design failure rooted in outdated assumptions. But removing urinals or forcing everyone to sit doesn't fix the problem — it worsens it by increasing delays for all. Article content Instead of eliminating efficiency, we should expand it — especially as an aging population increases demand. Biological differences exist, and public infrastructure should reflect them. As in architecture, form should follow function. Article content The real issue is inadequate infrastructure for private functions in public spaces. Victorian prudishness once discouraged public washrooms; today, that legacy leaves us unprepared. Try to find easily accessible relief on the Toronto subway system. Moreover Canadians shouldn't adopt Europe's approach of charging for access. Intuition of natural law suggests that there is something wrong in demanding forced payment for nature's call. Instead, we should think and act based on utilitarianism: add urinals, increase public facilities, and open seasonal restrooms year-round. Article content Canada's $10-a-day child-care plan, legislated under Bill C-35, promised access, inclusion, and affordability — but it's clearly failing. Alberta, Ontario and Saskatchewan, holding over 73 per cent of Canada's child-care spaces outside Quebec, have refused the federal extension due to inadequate funding, soaring costs and discriminatory rules excluding private centres. Manitoba illustrates this clearly, giving raises only to educators in public or non-profit centres, leaving private educators behind simply due to business structure, not qualifications or quality. Alberta families face similar absurdities: newly licensed private centres can't access affordability grants, forcing parents into costly market-rate fees or endless waitlists.