Enbridge Line 5: A clear and present danger
Canadian energy company Enbridge's Line 5 traverses an extremely sensitive ecological area across northern Wisconsin, 400 rivers and streams as well as a myriad of wetlands, in addition to a path under the Mackinac Straights between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, all the while skirting the southern shore of Lake Superior. Such close proximity to the Great Lakes, lakes that hold over 20% of the world's fresh surface water, lakes that supply drinking water to nearly 40 million people, yes, that does indeed make Line 5 a ticking time bomb.
Northern Wisconsin is also a very culturally sensitive area, home to the Bad River Reservation. The Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa were guaranteed rights to their lands by an 1854 treaty with the U.S. government. The easements for Line 5 across the reservation, granted to Enbridge by the Chippewa, expired in 2013 and the Bad River Band chose not to renew them. Enbridge continues to operate the line, illegally and in direct violation of the Bad River Band's right to sovereignty over their land.
The Bad River Band has a guaranteed legal right to their land. They also have a right to Food Sovereignty, the internationally recognized right of food providers to have control over their land, seeds and water while rejecting the privatization of natural resources. Line 5 clearly impinges on the Band's right to hunt, fish, harvest wild rice, to farm and have access to safe drinking water.
A federal court ruled that Enbridge has been trespassing on lands of the Bad River Band since 2013 and ordered the company to cease operations of Line 5 by June of 2026 (seems that immediate cessation would make more sense), but rather than shut down the aging line, Enbridge plans to build a diversion around the Bad River Reservation. They plan to move the pipeline out of the Bad River Band's front yard into their back yard, leaving 100% of the threats to people and the environment in place.
Liquid petroleum (crude oil, natural gas and petroleum product) pipelines are big business in the U.S. With 2.6 million miles of oil and gas pipelines, the U.S. network is the largest in the world. If we continue our heavy and growing dependence on liquid fossil fuels, we must realize that we will continue to negatively impact the climate and the lives of everyone on the planet.
Instead of moving to a just transition away from fossil fuels, liquid or otherwise, the government continues to subsidize the industry through direct payments and tax breaks, refusing to acknowledge the cost of pollution-related health problems and environmental damage, a cost which is of course, incalculable.
There are nearly 20,000 miles of pipelines planned or currently under construction in the U.S., thus it would appear that government and private industry are in no hurry to break that addiction, much less make a just transition. While no previous administration was in any hurry to break with the fossil fuel industry, they at least gave the illusion of championing a transition to cleaner energy.
The current administration is abundantly clear. Their strategy is having no strategy. They don't like wind and solar and they plan to end any support for renewable energy. They don't care if they upend global markets, banking, energy companies or certainly any efforts to help developing countries transition away from fossil fuels.
Pipelines are everywhere across the U.S., a spiderweb connecting wells, refineries, transportation and distribution centers. The vast majority of pipelines are buried and many, if not all, at some point cross streams, rivers, lakes and run over aquifers. Pipeline ruptures and other assorted failures will continue and spillage will find its way into the bodies of water they skirt around or pass under. It's not a question if they will leak, but when.
Enbridge controls the largest network of petroleum pipelines in the Great Lakes states, and they are hardly immune to spills. Between 1999 and 2013 it was reported that Enbridge had over 1,000 spills dumping a reported 7.4 million gallons of oil.
In 2010 Enbridge's Line 6B ruptured and contaminated the Kalamazoo River in Michigan, the largest inland oil spill in U.S. history. Over 1.2 million gallons of oil were recovered from the river between 2010 and 2014. How much went downstream or was buried in sediment, we'll never know.
In 2024 a fault in Enbridge Line 6 caused a spill of 70 thousand gallons near Cambridge Wisconsin. And Enbridge's most infamous pipeline, the 71-year-old Line 5 from Superior Wisconsin to Sarnia Ontario, has had 29 spills in the last 50 years, loosing over 1 million gallons of oil.
Some consider Line 5 to be a 'public good' because, as Enbridge argues, shutting the line down will shut down the U.S. economy and people will not be able to afford to heat their homes — claims they have never supported with any evidence. A public good is one that everyone can use, that everyone can benefit from. A public good is not, as Enbridge apparently believes, a mechanism for corporate profit.
Line 5 is a privately owned property, existing only to generate profits for Enbridge. If it were a public good, Enbridge would certainly be giving more attention to the rights of the Bad River Band, the well-being of all the people who depend on the clean waters of the Great Lakes and to protecting the sensitive environment of northern Wisconsin and Michigan. They are not. Their trespassing, their disregard for the environment, their continuing legal efforts to protect their bottom line above all else, only points to their self-serving avarice.
The Bad River Band wants Enbridge out, and in their eyes it is not a case of 'not in my back yard' they do not want Line 5 in anyone's back yard.
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Politico
7 minutes ago
- Politico
The gov race and guilt by association
Good Monday morning! There's a lot of guilt by association accusations going around the New Jersey governor's race. Like with so many other contests, Republicans have been pressing Mikie Sherrill on whether she supports Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist they accuse of anti-semitism over his criticism of Israel, since he won the New York mayoral primary. That's fair enough. Mamdani has said he supported or refused to condemn some pretty controversial sentiments, like 'globalize the intifada,' even if he's lately been gently walking some of that back. And if Sherrill is going to be New Jersey's governor and Mamdani the mayor of New York City, they're going to have to deal with each other and policies that come from the furthest reaches of her party's left flank. Sherrill has been cagey about her support for Mamdani, giving mushy answers on whether she supports him. And big-name Democrats have done the same, uncomfortably avoiding formal endorsements. On Saturday, Ciattarelli headlined a 'New Jersey Unites' rally in Seaside Heights, which featured Republican activist Scott Presler. Presler is a social media star and has been spending a lot of time in New Jersey to register Republicans and boost the party's chances at flipping the governor's seat. The Sherrill campaign seized on the association late last week. 'Jack Ciattarelli hitting the trail alongside Scott Presler is yet more proof that Jack will roll over and let Trump turn New Jersey into his stomping ground to drive up prices and take away our rights,' spokesperson Carly Jones said in a press release, in response to this Philadelphia Inquirer article. Presler in 2017 coordinated 'anti-Sharia' marches for ACT for America, which the anti-Defamation League describes as 'the largest anti-Muslim group in the United States,' saying it 'propagates the hateful conspiracy theory that Muslims are infiltrating US institutions in order to impose Sharia law.' (Like Mamdani, Presler's embraced other controversial ideas as well, but for the sake of apples-to-apples I'm just bringing up religion.) Presler isn't in as high stakes a position as Mamdani, who's the frontrunner to lead the biggest and most important city in the country. But Ciattarelli has also associated himself more closely with Presler than Sherrill has with Mamdani. In a statement, Ciattarelli campaign manager Eric Arpert said Sherrill believes that New York, where roughly half a million New Jerseyans commute for work, 'should be run by a man who wants to defund the New York City Police Department, wants to stop sending law enforcement officers to respond to domestic violence calls, still refuses to condemn the violent 'globalize the intifada' and has said Israel does not have the right to exist as a Jewish state. Never mind that he wants to do away with free market capitalism and shutter private businesses.' 'That's Mamdani today, not years ago, and that's who Mikie Sherrill supports to lead our neighboring city for years to come,' Arpert said. 'Why? Because the truth is, they're both radicals.' I'm not interested in tsk-tsking anyone or policing language. But if candidates are playing the game of guilt by association, I think they should be held to the same standard. FEEDBACK? Reach me at mfriedman@ SHOW ME THE WAY: Acting Gov. Tahesha Way has no public schedule QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'The state NAACP has some very good people doing some very good things every day. But Richard Smith, I'm afraid, has shown he cares less about the little guy than the wealthy elites like Norcross.' — New Jersey Working Family Alliance state director Antoinette Miles, following the NAACP's criticism of Attorney General Matt Platkin's since-dismissed indictment of George Norcross HAPPY BIRTHDAY — Ben Albert, Erica Daughtrey, Aileen McCandless, Tony Ghee. WHAT TRENTON MADE KEEPING MUM-DANI — Mamdani supports Sherrill, who keeps her distance, by POLITICO's Madison Fernandez: New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani said he supports Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill in her bid for governor of New Jersey. The other way around? Not so much. Mamdani said he 'absolutely' would support Sherrill in an interview with PIX11's Dan Mannarino on Friday. Sherrill has not offered an outright endorsement of Mamdani — though her opponent, Republican Jack Ciattarelli, has sought to tie her to the democratic socialist. 'Mikie Sherrill is 100% focused on New Jersey and beating Trump-endorsed 100% MAGA Jack Ciattarelli — she'll leave New York endorsements to New Yorkers,' Sherrill campaign spokesperson Sean Higgins said in a statement. While New Jersey governors and New York City mayors often work together, it's not an issue that is as top of mind for New Jersey voters compared to affordability and the economy. Still, the debate over Mamdani nationwide is indicative of tensions in the Democratic Party as members figure out the path forward ahead of the competitive midterm elections. KEVIN WALSH MAKES ANOTHER ENEMY — 'Caldwell-helmed co-op faced audit over contracting, surplus practices,' by New Jersey Globe's Zach Blackburn: 'Dale Caldwell, the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, possesses a long and distinct résumé: Centenary University president, pastor, school board member, tennis community leader, and more. A less eye-catching role of his was the presidency of the Educational Services Commission of New Jersey, a little-known but wide-reaching procurement cooperative that secures contracts for more than 700 school districts and local governments throughout the state. Caldwell served as a top official at the commission for more than two decades, during which the agency transformed. The commission started as a Middlesex County-based co-op that helped local schools secure contracts on services ranging from utilities to health insurance. By 2016, the commission had partnered with hundreds of districts across the state's 21 counties, even changing its name to reflect its new statewide mission. Last year, Caldwell resigned from the commission, as well as his longtime role on the New Brunswick Board of Education, to devote more time to his work at Centenary. But last July, shortly after Caldwell departed, the Office of the State Comptroller published an audit that found the commission improperly procured contracts, amassed an excessive surplus of taxpayer money, and failed to consider alternative health insurance providers.' — Key calculations on health benefits savings expected this week — ''Times have changed': Paid vs. volunteer fire departments represent complex issue in NJ' — 'What Makes Jersey Run: Will Black voters connect with Sherrill? Or boost Ciattarelli?' — 'As electric bills rise, evidence mounts that data centers share blame. States feel pressure to act' — Opinion: 'How Phil Murphy caused New Jersey electricity prices to soar' TRUMP ERA SAVING GRACE — 'NJ prosecutor fired to make way for Alina Habba files appeal,' by Bloomberg's Justin Wise and David Voreacos: 'The former deputy for New Jersey's US attorney claims she was fired in 'direct retaliation' for judges appointing her as the state's top federal prosecutor. Desiree Grace said her July 22 termination was 'completely unjustified,' according to her appeal filed to the US Merit Systems Protection Board, the body which mediates challenges from federal workers over adverse employment decisions. The appeal, which Bloomberg Law obtained through a Freedom of Information Act Request, comes as a federal judge in Pennsylvania weighs whether President Donald Trump lawfully appointed Alina Habba, his former personal attorney, to the acting US attorney role. The case carries broader implications. At least two criminal defendants have argued that Trump overstepped a court's authority and that prosecutors can no longer pursue cases at Habba's direction.' PYRAMID SCHEME — 'Menendez is in jail, but his foreign bribers are still cashing in. Why?' by Tom Malinowski for NJ Advance Media: 'In New Jersey, we think of the fall of former U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez as a story of old fashioned corruption — a politician taking gifts for favors. For that crime, Menendez is now serving an 11 year prison sentence … But there is an equally disturbing side of the story that's gotten less attention, involving the people on the other side of the transaction ... As evidence in Menendez's trial showed, the government of a foreign dictatorship — Egypt — and its willing partners in the United States used the former senator to gather intelligence on our country, and to change our government's foreign policy, by easing restrictions on arms sales that were put in place because of Egypt's imprisonment and torture of dissidents. The trial also made clear that a New Jersey company — IS EG Halal based in Edgewater — played a vital role in parts of the corrupt scheme … So what has happened to the authors of this scheme? After the Menendez indictment, Democrats in the U.S. Senate temporarily held up some U.S. aid to Egypt, but the current Republican-led Congress is moving to lift all restrictions on that aid — which would be even more than what the Egyptians hoped to get from bribing Menendez. No Egyptian official has been sanctioned by the U.S. government for trying to corrupt our political system, though prosecutors and reporters identified some of them and the Treasury and State Departments have legal authority to freeze their assets and to ban them from entering the U.S.' — 'FAA proposes to extend flight restrictions at Newark airport until 2026' LOCAL PUTTING OUT THE FIREMAN — 'After long process, NJDEP unveils Liberty State Park Master Plan at open house,' by Hudson County View's Daniel Ulloa: 'The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) unveiled the Liberty State Park Master Plan to revitalize Jersey City's premiere open space at an open house last night after great deliberation and public input … [NJDEP Commissioner Shawn] LaTourette noted the extensive advocacy for further development of the post-industrial space that has been done, and as a result, they launched a program to clean the soil of the interior portion of the park in October 2023. 'The DEP set a determined course for transforming Liberty State Park into one of the nation's premier outdoor urban environments,' he declared. LaTourette noted the interior will be natural, but it will have an engineered landscape to increase storm protection measures, along with active recreation. He further stated that the train shed canopy will serve as a market and gathering space, while the south side will house an athletics hub with regulation fields, tracks, and athletic courts … However, the total cost of the ambitious master plan vision is very high: He indicated it would cost $1 billion and take 10 years to complete all the recommended improvements.' CLOSTER PHOBIA — 'Bergen man's swastika-adorned car prompts outrage, calls for investigation,' by The Record's Deena Yellin: 'New Jersey law enforcement agencies are investigating a Closter man after a photo of his car, adorned with a swastika decal and the URL of his anti-Jewish writings, circulated on social media. The swastika was subsequently removed and someone spray-painted a neon green Jewish star on the vehicle on Thursday. Nonetheless, the original photo, which was shared earlier this week on X by the advocacy organization Stop Antisemitism, raised alarms among Jewish community members and Closter residents. The photo also showed the car bearing a New York State emergency medical technician license plate, leading a New York lawmaker to call for the plates to be revoked.' MAMMAS DON'T LET YOUR BABIES GROW UP TO BE GLOU BOYS — 'Parents can be fined or charged for their kids' bad behavior in a South Jersey town,' by 6ABC's Leland Pinder: 'Under a new ordinance in Gloucester Township, New Jersey, parents or guardians of minors involved in public disturbances could face fines or even jail time. The new law is in response to incidents of youth misbehavior, including at last year's Gloucester Township Day where fights broke out and hundreds of teens caused chaos at Veterans Park and a nearby shopping center. Gloucester Township Day was cancelled this year because of the chaos that unfolded at last year's event. Officials hope this new level of accountability will crack down on bad behavior … According to police, the ordinance lists 28 offenses ranging from felonies to minor infractions like loitering or breaking curfew. If a child is repeatedly found guilty in juvenile court, that's when a parent could face 90 days in jail and/or a hefty $2,000 fine.' PROTECT YA TEANECK — 'Jury awards Teaneck police officer over $2.1 million in whistleblower lawsuit,' by The Record's Kaitlyn Kanzler: 'A Teaneck police officer was awarded just over $2.1 million by a jury on Aug. 7 after blowing the whistle on excessive force within his department. In April 2022, Officer Glenn Coley filed a lawsuit against the borough, the police department, the former police chief and several ranking officers. The lawsuit named former Chief Glenn O'Reilly, Capt. Michael Ferrante, Capt. Kenneth Croonquist, Sgt. Jeanne Williams and Sgt. Kenneth Egbert, but that O'Reilly in particular, made up events and allegations to suspend him and retaliate against him. Coley was awarded $937,200 in compensatory damages and $1,180,000 in punitive damages. The lawsuit said the hostilities against Coley stemmed from his testimony on behalf of a Black Teaneck woman who had been the victim of police brutality in 2014.' RUTHERFORD — 'After fire destroys their synagogue, congregants gather to pray,' by Mark Bonamo for The New York Times: 'Even after their synagogue had burned to the ground, members of Congregation Beth El in Rutherford, N.J., gathered, as always, for Sabbath services on Saturday, grateful no one had been hurt and pledging to rebuild. More than 100 people prayed outdoors under large white tents near the charred debris of the building, mindful of what had been lost — and who had been saved. Congregants dusted soot from their chairs. The service competed with the sound of backhoes removing rubble from the site, just yards away. 'Seven Torah scrolls are gone, with no remnants — this is very painful for us,' Rabbi Yitzchok Lerman told those assembled. 'I want to say thank you, God, for sparing my life and sparing my family.' The synagogue fire, in a residential neighborhood of Rutherford, a small community in Bergen County, started in the early hours of Friday morning. Rabbi Lerman, his wife and four of their children narrowly escaped without injuries. The cause of the fire was under investigation, but there was no indication that it was criminal in nature, John R. Russo, Rutherford's police chief, said on Friday.' TO DEMONSTRATE THAT IT DOES NOT EMBRACE FASCISM, FRANCONI'S WILL RENAME ITSELF FRANCO'S — 'Sources: Controversial Wildwood Pizzeria shuts down after bomb threat,' by Philadelphia Magazine's Victor Fiorillo: 'On Tuesday, I told you about a controversy that had erupted online after a person visiting Franconi's Pizza on the boardwalk in Wildwood discovered Nazi imagery hanging on a wall in the kitchen, as seen above. Four days later, the restaurant had to shut down temporarily on a busy Friday afternoon at the Shore after someone reportedly made a bomb threat against the restaurant. Social media images in various Wildwood Facebook groups show photos of police tape and officers blocking off the entrance to Franconi's Pizza along the boardwalk and officers speaking with employees and management at Franconi's on the side street next to the restaurant.' — 'Neptune cop hired in 2023 failed to disclose he was fired by the NYPD' — 'A decades-old elementary school is being torn down for houses, and these [Long Beach Island] mayors are not happy' — Moriarty: 'Camden's success can teach us how to reduce crime in N.J.' EVERYTHING ELSE BASEBALL JERSEY — 'Jen Pawol breaks MLB's gender barrier as the first female umpire to work a regular-season game,' by The AP's Charles Odum: 'Jen Pawol felt love and support from fans, family, peers and players as she made history as the first female umpire to work a regular-season game in the major leagues. 'It was amazing when we took the field,' Pawol said. 'It seemed like quite a few people were clapping and calling my name. That was pretty intense and emotional.' Pawol's much-anticipated debut came as the first base umpire for Saturday's first game of a split doubleheader between the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins. It was a smooth debut … Pawol, who is from New Jersey, had only a few days to prepare for Saturday's doubleheader.' — 'What is 4-H? At NJ State Fair, it's about cows, rabbits, leadership and legacy' — 'Clifton High School Beekeeping Club takes honey to market, sells out fast' — 'FedEx 'lied' and messed with the wrong church. This N.J. pastor fought back against 'extortion''


Politico
36 minutes ago
- Politico
Hold for Mark Carney
Presented by Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada It's Monday. Canada Playbook turned 4 over the weekend. Thanks for waking up with us. In today's edition: → Inside the PM's high-stakes, 100-day phone blitz. → Trade tensions, Gaza flashpoints and the Trump-Putin wild card. → What's on Tim Hodgson's desk. Trade war AURA FARMING — Prime Minister MARK CARNEY says he'll next speak with DONALD TRUMP when it makes sense. While the U.S. president is on hold, the PM has spent months burning up the phone lines — a 100-day-plus post-election charm offensive with at least 55 counterparts. The Prime Minister's Office shares public summaries of the private conversations, known in the biz as 'a readout.' Playbook sorted through them, back to April 28 when the Liberal government won — and French President EMMANUEL MACRON was first on the horn to say, Félicitations. — Meeting count: More than 90. — On the agenda: The PM uses the calls to pitch Canadian energy, push AI and quantum, and to sound out allies on defense procurement. — Spotted on the phone log: MACRON, DONALD TRUMP, VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY, ANTÓNIO COSTA, ANTÓNIO GUTERRES, SHIGERU ISHIBA, CHRISTOPHER LUXON, URSULA VON DER LEYEN, ANTHONY ALBANESE, METTE FREDERIKSEN, KEIR STARMER, PEDRO SÁNCHEZ, CLAUDIA SHEINBAUM, DICK SCHOOF, SERGIO MATTARELLA, GIORGIA MELONI, FRIEDRICH MERZ, ROSEN ZHELYAZKOV, EVIKA SILIŅA, LUC FRIEDEN, ANDREJ PLENKOVIĆ, ISAAC HERZOG, MICHAEL D. HIGGINS. — Favorite things: Trade, defense and energy — a notable shift from the priorities of former Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU, who often focused on humanitarian needs, climate change and the rule of law. — Buzzing with energy: Carney, who keeps promising to turn Canada into an 'energy superpower,' talks up conventional energy and green energy, promoting nuclear power and critical minerals. His sales pitch has also been interspersed by meetings with Canada's premiers, who have been carving out strategies to find customers for their natural resources in new global markets, especially in Europe and the Indo-Pacific. → Audience: Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Brazil, U.K., Australia, South Africa, Netherlands, European Commission, France, Estonia, Chile, Italy, Germany, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Mexico, Malaysia, Belgium, India and Singapore. — Also spotted: SANTIAGO PEÑA, BOLA AHMED TINUBU, JD VANCE, DONALD TUSK, JONAS GAHR STØRE, KING ABDULLAH II, MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN AL SAUD, PRABOWO SUBIANTO, LI QIANG, NARENDRA MODI, MARK RUTTE, LUIZ INÁCIO LULA DA SILVA, MOHAMED BIN ZAYED AL NAHYAN, BART DE WEVER, ULF KRISTERSSON, KING WILLEM-ALEXANDER and QUEEN MÁXIMA, EDGARS RINKĒVIČS, KRISTEN MICHAL, KRISTRÚN MJÖLL FROSTADÓTTIR, ABDEL FATTAH EL-SISI, FERDINAND MARCOS JR., ANWAR IBRAHIM, GABRIEL BORIC, LAWRENCE WONG, MAHMOUD ABBAS. — House in order: Carney's agenda items on global phone calls align with his domestic agenda. The PM has cast himself as a wartime leader, uniting provinces, pushing for energy dominance and pledging to vault Canada's economic growth rate to the top of the G7. He often cites World War II as a 'hinge moment,' and says today's 'dangerous and divided world,' including Trump's tariffs, presents a similar turning point that demands bold and coordinated action. — Hey, bestie: The PM's closest overseas confidants have been European Commission President VON DER LEYEN, French President MACRON, United Kingdom PM STARMER, Ukraine President ZELENSKYY and Mexico President SHEINBAUM. Carney touches base with each of them at least once a month — sometimes more. He's also kept in close touch with PMs MELONI and SCHOOF. — Taking the temperature: The Prime Minister's Office signs off nearly every readout with a look to the road ahead. — Diplomatic tell: Variations on the phrase 'will remain in close contact' are reserved for those who pass the vibe check. When the PM met with Trump and Vance on different occasions, the adjective 'close' was nowhere to be found. Here's what the tone of those readouts reveals about Canada's evolving relationships with each country. Warm = Remaining in close contact. Medium = Staying in touch. Cold = No mention of future communication. → Warm: France, United Kingdom, European Union, Europe, Japan, United Nations, New Zealand, Australia, Mexico, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Nordic countries, Philippines and Chile. → Medium: United States, India, Egypt and Indonesia. → Cold: China. — In related reading: BEA VONGDOUANGCHANH took sum of the PM's first 100 days, then noted: 'The real test starts now.' THE ROOMS THAT MATTER — Prime Minister MARK CARNEY is spending the week in the Ottawa area on a staycation that his office says will include staying in close contact with his officials on several economic and security priorities for the weeks ahead. THREE THINGS WE'RE WATCHING TRADE TALKS — So, when will it make 'sense' for the PM to get POTUS on the horn to discuss the economic and security pact that failed to materialize by the president's Aug. 1 deadline? Carney offered no hints during his most recent media avail. And about the timing of talks related to the renewal of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, he indicated he's in no hurry. — To recap: Carney has suggested it would begin in about nine months; Canada-U.S. Trade Minister DOMINIC LEBLANC told POLITICO recently the review could come as early as this fall. — The latest: The U.S. Department of Commerce says it has made a final decision to more than double countervailing duties on Canadian softwood lumber imports, The Canadian Press reports. — In related reading: 'Canada is living through an era of acute, sustained, profound and abiding rage,' Toronto writer STEPHEN MARCHE writes in The New York Times. 'The source is President Trump; the object is the United States.' GAZA — Canada's decision to join allies such as France and the U.K. with a stated intention to recognize Palestine as a state drew scorn from Israeli Prime Minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU on Sunday. During an event at CFB Trenton on Friday, Carney was sharply critical of Israel's plan to take over all of Gaza. 'It is going to put the lives of the hostages at greater risk, rather than lessening it,' the prime minister said. An hour later, he released a statement condemning the Israeli action because it would 'further escalate' the conflict. — In related reading: The AP reports that Australia plans to recognize a Palestinian state, Prime Minister ANTHONY ALBANESE said today. TWOSOME OR THREESOME — President TRUMP says he plans to meet Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN in Alaska on Friday to discuss an end to the conflict with Ukraine. And though the White House says he's open to including Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY, the plan right now is for it to be only a Trump-Putin meeting. — NATO is optimistic: NATO Secretary-General MARK RUTTE said Sunday this week's meeting will go a long way to demonstrating whether Putin is serious about peace. — Allies rally: The leaders of the U.K., France, Italy, Germany, Poland, Finland and the European Commission said in a joint statement that Ukraine should be at the table where its future is discussed. — Why that matters: Trump has suggested there might be some 'swapping' of territory to get to a deal. Zelenskyy and his European allies firmly reject that idea. CONVERSATION STARTER MAJOR PROJECTS — Before the kids are back at school, expect the ribbon to be cut on Ottawa's Major Federal Projects Office. It's part of CARNEY's plan to spur 'nation-building' to bolster the economy against the shocks of TRUMP's tariffs. — The big get: Playbook recently interviewed Energy and Natural Resources Minister TIM HODGSON about his project list. Here are five things that came up in our conversation: → 'Infrastructure corridors,' he said, pointing to 'the Grays Bay component to the western Arctic corridor — that will unlock many significant critical middle opportunities.' → An energy partnership that links Canada's six eastern provinces — the four Maritime provinces and Ontario and Quebec. '[It] will actually connect 60 gigawatts of wind and 15 gigawatts of new hydroelectric power in a connected grid across the six provinces. It'll improve the stability of the grid. It'll improve the baseload of the grid, and allow us to sell that energy in the form of potentially clean hydrogen to Europe.' → Critical minerals clusters: 'We have the second-biggest land mass in the world. We have 30-plus of the critical minerals. And we know where they are. We have world-class mining companies, we have the technology.' → Nuclear: Hodgson said the government is focused on small modular reactors. → Export diversification infrastructure: He said this could include projects on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and at the Port of Montreal. MORNING MUST-CLICKS — The attack of a Jewish father in front of his children in a Montreal neighborhood has drawn widespread condemnation, The Gazette's KALINA LAFRAMBOISE reports. — On 'The House,' DAVID THURTON of CBC News examined where the Carney government sits on Canada's climate targets. — The Canadian Press reports that another day of punishing heat and humidity is expected to hit Ontario, Quebec and the four Atlantic provinces today. — From BRIAN DABBS and SARA SCHONHARDT of POLITICO's E&E News: Trump team pushes to oust No. 2 official at world energy body. — TOM NICHOLS noted in The Atlantic: 'If all anyone knows about Golden Dome is that it will be an expensive, all-azimuth defense against everything that flies, then the Pentagon's reluctance to discuss it is understandable.' — NATAN OBED, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, spoke with 'The Hot Room' pod about what Canada's Inuit want from the federal government. LOBBY WATCH — TONY VALERI recently posted 25 meetings on behalf of ArcelorMittal Dofasco, including check-ins with Clerk of the Privy Council MICHAEL SABIA, PMO chief of staff MARC-ANDRÉ BLANCHARD and Energy Minister TIM HODGSON. PLAYBOOKERS Birthdays: HBD to retired politician NORM KELLY, Quebec politician SOL ZANETTI and former MP TONY VALERI. Spotted: MARK CARNEY's cat NICO on X. Movers and shakers: ZEUS EDEN, Toronto Mayor OLIVIA CHOW's press secretary, is moving to London — England, not Ontario — for graduate studies in climate change, management and finance. GRANTLY FRANKLIN started a new role as consul, foreign policy and diplomacy service at the Consulate General of Canada in Detroit. Noted: PETER VAN PRAAGH, president of the Halifax International Security Forum, told the Globe: 'Skipping Halifax doesn't make the U.S. look strong. It makes it look unsure of its own ideas – afraid to engage, to be questioned, to be seen.' POLITICO's scoop on the story is here. Media mentions: APTN is celebrating its 25th anniversary. Birthdays, gatherings, social notices for this community: Send them our way. PROZONE For Pro subscribers, our latest policy newsletter. In other news for Pro readers: — Swiss lawmakers turn against F-35 deal after Trump's tariff bombshell. — Big Tech's next major political battle may already be brewing in your backyard. — WTO cuts 2026 trade forecast as Trump tariff hike takes hold. — Foreign governments bet big to lobby Trump on tariffs. Most came up empty. — Solar imports caught in Trump crackdown on Chinese forced labor. TRIVIA Friday's answer: For JOE CLARK's 75th birthday, his family commissioned a major orchestral work by Edmonton-based composer JOHN ESTACIO. Props to GANGA WIGNARAJAH, ELIZABETH BURN, JENN KEAY, JOHN PEPPER, ROBERT MCDOUGALL, MALCOLM MCKAY, FRED SAGEL, MAIA EASTMAN, AMY CASTLE, CHRIS RANDS, YAROSLAV BARAN, RAY DEL BIANCO, JOHN MERRIMAN, PAUL WELLS, LAURA A. 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UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
North Korea warns of 'negative consequences' for U.S.-S. Korea military drills
SEOUL, Aug. 11 (UPI) -- North Korea's defense chief on Monday condemned the upcoming large-scale Ulchi Freedom Shield joint military exercise between the United States and South Korea and warned of "negative consequences." The North "strongly" denounces the allies "for their provocative moves of clearly showing the stand of military confrontation with the DPRK and making another serious challenge to the security environment on the Korean Peninsula and in the region," Defense Minister No Kwang Choi said in a statement carried by the state-run Korean Central News Agency. The Democratic People's Republic of Korea is the official name of North Korea. "[We] solemnly warn them of the negative consequences to be entailed by them," No said. The Ulchi Freedom Shield exercise, which includes live field maneuvers, computer simulation-based command post exercises and related civil defense drills, will be held from Aug. 18-28. No called the exercise "not only a direct military provocation against the DPRK but also a real threat to amplify the unpredictability of the situation on the Korean Peninsula." The North will "strictly exercise the sovereign right of the DPRK at the level of the right to self-defense in a case of any provocation going beyond the boundary line," No said. Pyongyang regularly condemns the allies' joint drills as rehearsals for an invasion and has at times reacted with missile launches and other provocations. A representative of the South Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command on Monday emphasized that the exercise, which will involve around 21,000 personnel, is "defensive in nature." "All professional militaries train," the representative said in a background briefing with reporters. "North Korea trains, we train. Our training is designed to protect everyone living inside the Republic of Korea. They fire missiles and rockets -- it's not the same." The CFC representative noted that the tone of No's statement was relatively measured, however. "If you actually look at North Korea's statement, it's a little bit tame compared to historical norms," the representative said. "They basically said: 'Whatever you do, just don't go across our border.'" The exercise comes amid efforts by the administration of South Korean President Lee Jae Myung to improve frayed relations with Pyongyang. Last week, the South's military removed loudspeakers that had been installed along the DMZ to blast anti-Pyongyang messages across the border. On Saturday, North Korea began removing its own speakers in some forward areas, Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a message to reporters. Half of Ulchi Freedom Shield's 44 planned field training exercises have been rescheduled to next month, the CFC representative confirmed Monday, citing an ongoing heatwave and flooding damage to training areas as the primary reasons. According to local media reports, the move is also being made in an effort to avoid provoking Pyongyang. The CFC representative said that the changes would have "minimal impact." "There shouldn't be any loss in readiness or defensive posture from rescheduling those events," the representative said. "The most important training is being conducted as planned."