
Counter protestors drown out few disruptors at Wortley Pride
Dozens of Wortley Pride allies line the sidewalk of Wortley Road in London, Ont. on June 14, 2025 to counter protest. (Brent Lale/CTV London)
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CTV News
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- CTV News
Melancon reacts to the Quebec Liberals choosing Rodriguez
Montreal Watch Political analyst Raphael Melancon with his reaction to the Quebec Liberals choosing Pablo Rodriguez as their new leader.


Global News
42 minutes ago
- Global News
Protesters, airplane watchers gather in Alberta as leaders head to G7
Airplane enthusiasts are setting up at the Calgary International Airport in hopes of seeing some exciting aircraft land for the start of the G7 leaders' summit in nearby Kananaskis, Alta. Corbin Johnson wants to catch a glimpse of the plane carrying U.S. President Donald Trump. 'Air Force 1 is certainly the gold standard, but I think myself and everyone else is very excited to see all the other aircraft are coming,' Johnson said Saturday, as he checked out a viewing area of the airport. The spot is also one of three designated demonstration zones that police have set up in Calgary, with another in Banff. Prime Minister Mark Carney is hosting G7 leaders from the United States, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Italy, who were expected to arrive Sunday for the start of the three-day summit in Kananaskis, southwest of Calgary in the Rocky Mountains. Some leaders of non-member countries, including Ukraine and India, are also set to attend. Story continues below advertisement Johnson, a camera around his neck, said he posts all his plane photos on Instagram. 'My love of airplanes, I would say started right here, where we're standing. My parents would take me here to plane spot and look at all the planes that would come through here,' he said. 'This is absolutely my number 1 hobby. It's something you can make as full time as you kind of want to.' View image in full screen Plane spotter Corbin Johnson is shown at the Calgary International Airport on Saturday, June 14, 2025. With world leaders arriving in Calgary for the G7 leaders' summit in Kananaskis, Alta., airplane enthusiasts are setting up shop at the Calgary airport in hopes of seeing some exciting aircraft. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Bill Graveland. BG Jaidon Phelps, 20, is an aspiring pilot that works at WestJet. He was at the viewing area at 6 a.m. on Sunday. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'It's just cool to be part of what's going on and see what aircraft are coming in from all of the various nations that are participating and most importantly to see if we can get Air Force 1,' he said. Story continues below advertisement 'It's just the magnitude of what it is. Something you've always wanted to see.' The community of plane spotters tends to share intel, with some people noting early Sunday that the Japanese delegation was already Canada-bound. There was also discussion of the best location to see the planes come in. As the leaders were scheduled to arrive hundreds of protesters from several different groups rallied in front of Calgary City Hall, another of the designated protest zones in the city. Standing out was a definite anti-Trump bias with signs including 'Yankee Go Home,' 'Elbows Up' and 'True North Strong and Peeved.' 1:55 RCMP unveils security operation plans for G7 summit Leanne MacKenzie said she lived in California for 20 years before coming back to Canada, and is disturbed by the situation involving the National Guard there. Story continues below advertisement Trump ordered the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles after protesters fighting federal immigration enforcement raids last week blocked a freeway and set cars on fire. California's governor has opposed the deployments and the state has filed a lawsuit to stop them. 'Since Trump is supposedly here for the G7 I'm coming out today to protest fascism in the U.S.A.,' MacKenzie said. 'My understanding is this protest is being livestreamed. I'm sure he's going to look the other way because he's the biggest baby on the planet but I'm doing what I possibly can to make a difference and this is the only way I can at this point.' Self-described grandmother Lesley Boyer was sitting in her wheelchair with a sign that had an expletive disparaging Trump. 'Both of my grandfathers fought fascists and I'm very concerned about (Trump's) 51st state comment and I'm very afraid that he may actually try something,' she said. Though domestic air traffic continues to flow normally, it's far from business as usual at the Calgary airport this weekend. 2:09 Air restrictions over Calgary, Kananaskis for G7 Leaders' Summit Police said they have received indications that protesters are expected, and the demonstrations are to be broadcast on TVs set up for the leaders in Kananaskis. Story continues below advertisement RCMP Chief Supt. David Hall said he just wants the protests to be peaceful. 'We know it's important for people to have their message seen and heard by the world leaders, and it's for this reason we've established live feeds,' he said. 'We police behaviours and not beliefs. And so I'd just encourage everyone to look to conduct any demonstration activity over the next few days in a lawful, peaceful and safe manner.'

Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Buy Canadian movement sours sales at one Edmonton candy store
The business model for Laurie Radostits's Edmonton candy store made sense when it opened a little more than a decade ago: bring the city products that were rarely seen in Canada. It is also part of the reason that, in March, she nearly had to close down. Sweet Convenience's shelves are a colourful garden of treats, cereals and sodas: PayDay candy bars, chocolate chip pancake Pop-Tarts, vanilla Coke. The common denominator? They're American. Before President Donald Trump initiated a trade war with Canada, Sweet Convenience fed a craving for American products that were difficult to find elsewhere. Since Mr. Trump introduced the tariffs that have targeted Canadian products, those cravings have been overtaken by a patriotic desire to spend money on more Canadian-produced goods. But Ms. Radostits soon learned that, to some, 'Buy Canadian' did not necessarily mean support Canadian businesses, particularly if their products didn't bear a Canadian flag. When the one-two punch of tariffs and 'Buy Canadian' landed against Sweet Convenience in February and March, Ms. Radostits said she felt 'lots of panic.' She had only felt that worried during the COVID-19 pandemic, she said, when she faced problems sourcing cross-border products. 'We've been through COVID. Okay. Can we get through Trump?' In the past, customers had requested Ms. Radostits special order their favourite American treats. But in late February and March, some were asking her to remove U.S. products from her store shelves. If she did cut her American products, she estimated 90 per cent of her stock would be eliminated. Trying to get a step ahead of tariffs, Ms. Radostits stockpiled inventory to maintain pretariff prices for as long as possible. In hindsight, it was a bad business move. She was met with an unexpected 'Buy Canadian' boom. Her sales dwindled and she could not pay the rent, although she was able to make a deal with the landlord to keep the store open. The small Canadian business was, ironically, suffering from an unofficial campaign to support Canadian businesses. 'Support Canadian and Buy Canadian are very different,' she argues. At her most dire moment, Ms. Radostits made an online plea for customers to buy from the shop in April, suggesting the store would otherwise have to close. The candy shop's fan base and former patrons returned and carried the business through Easter. While that wave has since ebbed, it hasn't disappeared. She's not as worried about having to close, but the fear remains. Sweet Convenience is enduring a 'double squeeze,' said Melise Panetta, a marketing lecturer at the Lazaridis School of Business at Wilfrid Laurier University who has also held senior positions at large consumer companies like PepsiCo. and S.C. Johnson. The candy store is dealing with the rising cost of operations and goods that other retailers are facing, but is also losing out to the Buy Canadian consumer sentiment that other Canadian retailers are seeing as a benefit. 'Even if it's a local business owned by local individuals – and even if it's cherished – they could still be at risk of having the negative perception of the products that they carry over to their overall retail image,' Ms. Panetta said. There are other stores dotted across Canada that, like Sweet Convenience, carry American treats. At Snack Passport, in Barrie, Ont., owner Jenna MacIsaac said U.S. products made up about 80 per cent of the store's revenue. That has since dropped to less than 20 per cent, she said. Ms. MacIsaac said the store rarely brings in American products now. An analysis from the Angus Reid Institute in February found 48 per cent of Canadians had already replaced, or planned to replace, U.S. products with Canadian alternatives. Sweet Convenience's unique situation is also a test of consumers' tolerance for American products though, Ms. Panetta warned, that shunning a domestic retailer has negative effects on the Canadian economy. 'That's still people that are working in our local economy. They are contributing to the local economy, and they're Canadians.' Ms. Radostits defends stocking American products by saying her profits stay in Canada because most of her orders come through Canadian third-party importers. The prices for some of her products have risen, but she has also tried a new strategy to make the price changes seem more subtle. Instead of raising prices on familiar items, where customers may visibly notice a price spike, she has chosen to order products she hasn't stocked before. That way, customers won't feel inclined to compare prices even if the new items are also subject to tariffs. It's a more subtle sticker shock. Ms. Radostits has also started labelling U.S.-licensed items to show if they had been made elsewhere, like Mexico or the Netherlands. She is also considering ordering a wider variety of foreign items, including from places in Europe. 'I don't want to go that route, so I'm kind of hoping something will change soon,' Ms. Radostits said. European products are a niche, she said, that has already been taken. Ms. Panetta, however, said choosing other countries might be the safer option and recommends the store could also start marking tariffed items with a 'T' like grocery retailer Loblaws has done.