
Provincial leaders to discuss what happens if Canada doesn't reach a deal with U.S.
CTV News political commentator Scott Reid discusses the significance of Prime Minister Mark Carney attending the meeting with premiers.
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Vancouver Sun
36 minutes ago
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Opinion: Canada needs a nation-building project for young people. We've done it before
Canada is facing overlapping crises that threaten our national fabric — rising authoritarianism abroad, deepening climate instability at home, and a growing sense of disillusionment among our young people. We need a bold, nation-building response, one that invests in youth not just as future leaders, but as the leaders we need now. To the south, the U.S. is becoming increasingly authoritarian and inward-looking. What was once our most stable trading partner is veering toward isolationism and chaos, reshaping the global order in the process. Meanwhile, the climate crisis is amplifying the impacts of extreme weather, with wildfires this spring forcing emergency declarations in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. These cascading challenges are not distant — they are hitting our communities now. In response, the government of Prime Minister Mark Carney has focused on fast-tracking resource projects and boosting defence spending to shore up economic and geopolitical resilience. A daily roundup of Opinion pieces from the Sun and beyond. 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 Informed Opinion will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. But if we're serious about safeguarding Canada's future, we must also look inward, supporting those most impacted by this changing world and preventing the drift toward authoritarianism that we're seeing take hold elsewhere. Young people are bearing the brunt of today's instability. Youth unemployment is rising sharply — one in four unemployed Canadians is under 25. Entry-level jobs are being hollowed out by automation and AI. A recent Ipsos poll found 43 per cent of Canadians ages 18 to 35 would vote to join the U.S. under certain conditions (if citizenship and conversion of assets to U.S. dollars were guaranteed). If this doesn't raise alarm bells, we're not listening. This isn't the first time Canada has faced existential threats to its unity and identity. In the 1970s, amid fears of separation and economic turmoil, the federal government launched Katimavik, a national youth service program aimed at fostering unity and workforce development. Since then, it has served over 35,000 participants, 90 per cent of whom say the program significantly benefited their lives. Today, the threats are different — but just as urgent. What we need is a modern-day Katimavik: a national Youth Climate Corps that matches the scale of the moment. Communities across Canada are unprepared for climate disasters. We need rapid mobilization on wildfire and flood mitigation, extreme heat preparedness, and disaster response. This is work that needs to happen, and young people are ready to do it. As executive-director of Youth Climate Corps B.C., I've seen firsthand the demand for this kind of program. When the B.C. government took leadership and invested $3 million over three years to pilot our model, we received more than eight times the number of applications than available placements. Local governments are now stepping forward with matching funds to bring the program to their communities. We've also seen how local climate action can shift public perception. Federal climate policy often feels abstract or polarizing, but when young people are visibly improving their own communities — retrofitting homes, preparing for fires, supporting community zero-waste projects — it builds grassroots support and civic pride. A national Youth Climate Corps would do more than fight climate change. It would offer young Canadians meaningful, community-based work that pays a living wage and aligns with their values. It would provide the kind of purposeful, nation-building experience that previous generations have benefited from — and that this generation urgently needs. A recent Vancouver Coastal Health report found that half of Grade 11 students had experienced climate anxiety in the previous two weeks. The mental and economic toll on youth is unsustainable. We know transformative change is coming to Canadian communities. The question is whether that change will empower young leaders or leave them behind. We can choose a future where young people are building stronger, more resilient communities. Or we can ignore their needs and risk another existential threat to our democracy. We have a choice: invest in young people to lead the transformation we need, or risk losing them to despair, disillusionment, or worse. A national Youth Climate Corps is not just a good idea — it's a necessary one. Ben Simone is executive-director of B.C.'s Youth Climate Corps.