The “Official Records” Loophole Would Make Ottawa Secrecy Easier
Canada’s Information Commissioner warns Ottawa’s access-law review could narrow transparency. Fix delays without shrinking the public’s right to know.
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On March 14, 2025, Mark Carney was sworn in as Canada's 24th Prime Minister before he had ever won a federal election or held elected office at any level. He was first chosen by approximately 150,000–200,000 Liberal Party members — a fraction of Canada's population — then later sought a voter mandate in the April 2025 election.
What Canadians got was a man who spent 13 years at Goldman Sachs, served as governor of two central banks, and then joined Brookfield Asset Management — managing over $1 trillion in global assets — while simultaneously acting as the UN's climate finance envoy. He launched carbon credit market frameworks that benefit firms like Brookfield. He advised the Liberal Party while Brookfield sought $10 billion in government contracts. He then became Prime Minister.
This is the story of how Canada's corporate-financial elite moved one of their own to the top of government — and what it means for ordinary Canadians.
Carney's career path reads like a globalist institution checklist: Goldman Sachs (1988–2003, 13 years) → Bank of Canada Governor (2008–2013) → Bank of England Governor (2013–2020) → Brookfield Asset Management Vice Chair (2020–2025) → UN Special Envoy on Climate Action (2019–2025) → WEF Board Member → Bilderberg attendee (2011, 2012, 2019) → Liberal Party Economic Task Force Chair (September 2024) → Prime Minister (March 14, 2025).
At every stage, private and public interests intertwined. At every stage, powerful networks accumulated. The question Canadians should ask: when Carney makes policy decisions as PM — on carbon markets, on financial regulation, on land conservation — who benefits?
The most acute conflict of interest involves Brookfield Asset Management. While serving as Carney's employer, Brookfield solicited the federal government for $10 billion in investment funds as part of a proposed $50 billion Canada-only asset fund. Carney was simultaneously advising the Liberal Party on economic policy. Because he was employed by the Liberal Party — not technically the PMO — he fell outside standard ethics disclosure requirements for government advisors.
Carney also championed the expansion of voluntary carbon markets — the very mechanisms Brookfield's green energy and transition investing portfolio is positioned to profit from. His 30x30 land conservation plan generates carbon credits managed by Indigenous and other organizations. His industrial carbon tax (which he kept, even while eliminating the consumer tax) creates a compliance market for green projects.
Every major Carney policy position has a plausible connection to the financial interests of his former employer and the globalist institutions he served. This is not a conspiracy — it is the structural consequence of a revolving door between finance and government.
Canada's system allows a new prime minister to be chosen by a party leadership vote before facing a general election. This is not unusual constitutionally. But the combination of factors in Carney's case is unusual: a PM who had never held any elected office before taking office, chosen by party insiders in a leadership race, who then immediately called an election rather than face the existing Parliament that could hold him accountable.
The Liberals won 169 seats in April 2025 — a minority. They achieved majority status through floor crossings by late 2025 and early 2026. The question of what was offered or promised to crossing MPs has never been fully answered publicly.
Canada now has a billionaire former Goldman Sachs banker as Prime Minister, managing a $1.17 trillion debt, committed to a 30% land lockup, maintaining an industrial carbon tax, and promising "green growth" — with deep financial ties to the very industry that will profit from those policies.
Every Canadian deserves to know this.
Canada’s Information Commissioner warns Ottawa’s access-law review could narrow transparency. Fix delays without shrinking the public’s right to know.
Read More →CMHC’s May data show flat trend growth, a monthly drop in starts and weaker supply momentum. Ottawa owes Canadians a public housing dashboard.
Read More →Ottawa’s access-to-information modernization should not narrow public records after ArriveCAN showed how informal digital workspaces can hide taxpayer receipts.
Read More →Ottawa passed tougher bail and sentencing rules after years of repeat-offender pressure. Canadians deserve proof the law works.
Read More →IRCC issued proof-of-citizenship certificates under the Lost Canadians law, then suspended an undisclosed number after people relied on them.
Read More →Ottawa sold the Canadian Dental Care Plan with a $13B five-year price tag. New reporting says Health now puts patient fees above $18B.
Read More →A House response put Carney’s first-year VIP-flight catering bill near $963K. Taxpayers still deserve the itemized menu and reimbursement receipts.
Read More →A Senate report says CBC news should face outside fairness review. With another $150M in play, taxpayers deserve audit and spending receipts.
Read More →After watchdogs warned about lawful-access powers, Ottawa moved to compress debate. Canadians deserve public safeguards before surveillance powers expand.
Read More →Ottawa says Canadians get stronger privacy rights. Parliament should test the new digital regulator, firewalls and appeal safeguards.
Read More →Canada opened a 49,000-vehicle quota for Chinese-made EVs at a lower tariff. Canadians deserve allocation, jobs and compliance receipts.
Read More →Canada and France signed a classified-information agreement tied to defence, AI, space, aerospace and procurement access. Canadians deserve the safeguards.
Read More →The latest firearm-amnesty extension exposes the gap between Ottawa’s urgent public-safety rhetoric and a policy it still cannot finish.
Read More →Ottawa tabled a forced-labour import bill while eliminating the corporate-abuse watchdog meant to scrutinize Canadian companies abroad.
Read More →The Canada-Alberta pipeline promise still needs applications, designations, consultation milestones and public regulatory receipts.
Read More →The PBO says Parliament has about four weeks to approve $11.1B in new Supplementary Estimates authorities.
Read More →The budget watchdog says Ottawa’s fiscal-anchor path has a less-than-1% chance of declining every year under stress testing.
Read More →Ottawa’s child-safety bill leaves major internet-control details to future cabinet rules and a new Digital Safety Commission.
Read More →Ottawa’s new child-safety bill creates a digital regulator and leaves major age-verification details to future regulations.
Read More →The PBO projects a $72.0B deficit, $68.4B in new net spending measures and a rising debt-service burden.
Read More →Ottawa wants Canadians to accept a bigger defence buildout. National Defence still has to prove it can answer basic records requests on time.
Read More →Applicants asked for their own immigration records. The privacy watchdog says IRCC systematically gave them the short version.
Read More →Carney is calling the bridge opening a cooperation win. Taxpayers still need the final invoice, toll-recovery timetable, ownership terms and political-risk memo.
Read More →Ottawa is accepting the Senate’s noose amendment while leaving religious-speech safeguards and postcard transparency questions unresolved.
Read More →Liaison’s tracker still gives Liberals a national lead, but Carney’s approval has fallen to a tracker low while voters wait for delivery receipts.
Read More →Ottawa’s reported under-16 social-media ban needs clean statutory limits, privacy guardrails and no permanent ID checkpoint for every Canadian online.
Read More →Carney’s “AI for All” strategy promises 250,000 jobs by 2031. Canadians deserve the displacement modelling and spending receipts.
Read More →Ottawa’s rural low-wage TFW flexibility lets eligible employers keep above-cap shares or use a 15% cap while youth unemployment remains elevated.
Read More →Ottawa’s access-to-information review is open until June 15. Canadians need fewer delays and cleaner records, not new pause buttons.
Read More →Carney still leads, but Abacus shows approval, optimism and personal ratings retreating as voters keep naming affordability, the economy and housing.
Read More →Ottawa spent $437,304 on “Nation of Builders” Super Bowl ads. Taxpayers deserve the ads, invoices, approvals and public-interest test.
Read More →Carney’s lower-immigration explanation exposes how Liberal growth relied on headline population gains while productivity, housing and per-capita prosperity weakened.
Read More →Anonymous Liberal unrest and public denials create a simple test: can MPs raise local concerns without PMO pressure?
Read More →Ottawa condemns forced labour, but a House response shows Canadians still need clear public receipts on what CBSA is stopping at the border.
Read More →Ottawa delayed its major-project review overhaul until fall. Canadians deserve the submissions, legal guardrails and project-category receipts before Parliament votes.
Read More →The Senate rejected one rushed expansion, but Carney’s hate-speech bill still returns without the good-faith religious-speech safeguard Canadians asked for.
Read More →The Parliamentary Budget Officer’s June outlook says Ottawa’s deficits are deeper, growth is weaker, and Carney’s fiscal anchors need receipts.
Read More →Signal, DuckDuckGo and VPN providers are warning Canada could lose privacy tools if Ottawa refuses hard statutory guardrails in Bill C-22.
Read More →Carney’s new AI task force puts billions in public AI infrastructure, trusted-AI regulation, public-sector adoption and tech-insider access on the table.
Read More →CMHC says cutting development charges can help some projects pencil out, but the math does not justify selling fee relief as a housing cure-all.
Read More →Ottawa says Bill C-22’s policing-confirmation tool and technical-capability regime “go together.” Canadians deserve a clean vote before privacy powers are bundled into law.
Read More →Ottawa is telling the CRTC to rethink a 15 percent streamer contribution rule while replacing the expected money with a taxpayer backstop.
Read More →Carney’s Buy Canadian slogan needs ownership, labour, content and waiver receipts before taxpayers are told every qualifying contract benefits Canada.
Read More →Canada’s economy has slipped into technical-recession territory while Mark Carney says the plan is “settling in.” Canadians deserve receipts, not reassurance.
Read More →Ottawa promised automation would reduce immigration backlogs. Lawyers say weak automated refusal reasons are helping move the backlog into Federal Court.
Read More →Louise Arbour’s June 8 installation is a state ceremony, but taxpayers still deserve a public cost table before Ottawa spends the money.
Read More →Canadian Press reports Amazon, Microsoft and Google hold 85 percent of Canada’s public cloud market. Carney’s sovereign AI promise needs vendor, data and legal-exposure receipts.
Read More →Global News reports Mark Carney attended just 33 of the first 123 question periods. During economic weakness, Canadians deserve a prime minister who answers MPs directly.
Read More →Mark Carney’s Buy Canadian defence strategy promises domestic contracts, jobs and faster procurement. Taxpayers and troops need lobbyist, contract and readiness receipts.
Read More →Mark Carney says a $51-billion infrastructure fund will help build communities and housing. Taxpayers deserve a project-by-project ledger before the money flows.
Read More →Mark Carney’s own admission turns Ottawa’s antisemitism response into a measurable public-safety test: publish enforcement, campus and community-security receipts.
Read More →Steven Guilbeault’s exit puts Mark Carney’s climate and energy reset to a simple accountability test: show what was cancelled, what remains, and what replaces it.
Read More →Canada’s latest GDP report gives Mark Carney a plain accountability test: publish the economic receipts before asking Parliament to fast-track more spending.
Read More →Ottawa says affordability matters, then winds down a small consumer-affairs office and grant stream funding watchdog work on fraud, junk fees and consumer rights.
Read More →Nicolas Vincent says youth unemployment is above 14% and the 2022–24 influx of young people from abroad intensified competition for entry-level jobs. Ottawa needs a capacity test.
Read More →ESDC is modernizing OAS, EI and CPP delivery while a private AI trust platform’s key reports remain hidden. Canadians deserve the receipts before automation touches benefits.
Read More →Ottawa says Bill C-22 was never meant to breach encryption. RCMP committee evidence makes the case for a full statutory rewrite before MPs approve new lawful-access powers.
Read More →Wang Yi’s Ottawa visit exposed the accountability problem in Carney’s China reset: managed media access, trade promises and security questions Canadians deserve answered.
Read More →Records reviewed by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation show $195,400 in taxpayer-funded catering on three Carney overseas flights. Affordability rhetoric now needs receipts.
Read More →PBO numbers connect IFHP costs, asylum backlogs and CBSA removals inventory. Ottawa owes Canadians a public dashboard.
Read More →A viral TikTok points to the fair question: is Carney really an outsider reformer, or the product of an elite institutional pipeline voters deserve to see clearly?
Read More →A viral reel gets the anger right but risks getting the target wrong. Gang crime is not a community. It is a security failure — and Ottawa needs receipts.
Read More →Canada is moving through the formal process to accept 2024 WHO International Health Regulations amendments. The issue is democratic consent, clear limits and public accountability before the next crisis.
Read More →Before Ottawa asks Canadians to trust more surveillance power, it should prove existing agencies report Charter-risk conduct fully and promptly.
Read More →More than 200,000 Bill C-9 postcards should trigger public mail-handling receipts before senators vote on speech law.
Read More →Dropping Trudeau’s speech-complaint model is a start. The replacement online-safety bill still needs clear limits and public receipts.
Read More →Tougher bail rules only matter if Ottawa publishes bail-breach, repeat-offender, court-delay and victim-safety results.
Read More →A defence-procurement agenda needs public receipts, not a restricted industry bubble where independent media say they were shut out.
Read More →Canada’s projected $2.44T combined federal-provincial debt turns Ottawa’s investment branding into a taxpayer-receipts test.
Read More →Tim Hortons’ TFW reversal is an accountability test for Ottawa’s low-wage labour policy while youth unemployment sits at 14.3%.
Read More →As Wang Yi comes to Ottawa, Carney’s China reset needs public red lines, diaspora-safety commitments and foreign-interference receipts.
Read More →A Privy Council Office memo to Mark Carney treated post-Tumbler Ridge questions about missed warning signs, firearms access and mental-health intervention as accountability narratives.
Read More →Carney’s Governor General choice and Senate-appointment comments raise a basic accountability test: publish the criteria, consultations and conflict screens.
Read More →Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne says Bill C-22 improves on Bill C-2, but still needs tighter subscriber-info, metadata, encryption and breach-reporting guardrails.
Read More →Ottawa’s one-time worker PR fast-track may help rural employers, but Canadians need public criteria, honest target accounting and housing-service receipts.
Read More →Ottawa’s new Defence Investment Agency may speed military buying, but shortcut procurement needs public exception logs, ownership disclosure and contract receipts.
Read More →A $90B Crown-corporation rail project, a ministerial recusal screen and a rushed fiscal agenda demand public logs, testimony and receipts.
Read More →Google, Apple, civil-liberties witnesses and Citizen Lab have turned Bill C-22 into a test of encryption, secret technical orders and foreign-access safeguards.
Read More →The ethics committee record shows why Canadians need visible Carney conflict-screen logs, not another black-box promise around Brookfield-linked assets.
Read More →The PBO says Ottawa is asking Parliament to approve $502.8B in authorities while debt charges climb and a defence central vote hides details until after approval.
Read More →After the Cowichan title ruling raised property-rights uncertainty in B.C., Liberals voted down a committee-and-plan motion. Canadians deserve legal clarity, not slogans.
Read More →Taxpayer-funded travel records show a $524,815.04 in-flight catering bill across 28 Prime Ministerial trips. Carney’s affordability message now needs receipts.
Read More →Surrey police data show a sharp rise in South Asian-series extortion files and shots fired. Carney’s Liberals owe Canadians enforcement receipts, not slogans.
Read More →Bill C-31 bundles tax, housing, labour, transport, crypto and defence-procurement changes. If Ottawa wants it fast-tracked before summer, Canadians deserve the receipts first.
Read More →Ottawa says refugee health co-pays will save about $140 million, but doctors warn patient fees can delay care and shift costs to hospitals and provinces.
Read More →Ottawa is pushing gun owners toward an October deadline while a taxpayers watchdog says Public Safety Canada had no analysis showing the buyback will reduce crime or improve public safety.
Read More →Fourteen Liberal MPs reportedly warned Carney that pipeline and environmental rollbacks could compromise government credibility. Publish the letter and the trade-off receipts.
Read More →Ottawa is consulting on Canada Labour Code changes that unions warn could narrow strike power. Publish the paper, invitee list and Charter analysis.
Read More →Alberta’s October 19 vote is not an immediate separation referendum. It is Carney’s test: publish concrete federal-provincial deliverables before the ballot.
Read More →The Parliamentary Budget Officer puts Canadian public support for the 2026 World Cup at $1.066B — about $82M per Canadian match. Publish the ledger before kickoff.
Read More →A fact-check of the viral TikTok claiming Justin Trudeau is now worth $387 million — salary and inheritance facts check out, but the huge net-worth number is unsupported.
Read More →A sourced review of six viral Instagram reels linking Carney, Maxwell, Epstein, Pickton, Prince Andrew, Louise Arbour, Soros, LCF and elite global networks — with the videos included.
Read More →A sourced Carney Watch fact-check of the viral reel linking Mark Carney, Diana Fox Carney, Ghislaine Maxwell, Prince Andrew, Andrew Bailey and London Capital & Finance.
Read More →Glenn Beck and Liz Truss are warning Canadians about Mark Carney’s central-bank, climate-finance and global-institution record. The stronger question is accountability.
Read More →Canada’s Osaka Expo pavilion may have been polished public diplomacy. Taxpayers still deserve the final cost, amendments, evaluation metrics and line-item receipts.
Read More →Carney’s Liberals changed the committee math after securing a post-election majority. The accountability test is whether oversight stays public.
Read More →The Northland Tales controversy has escalated from political allegation to NPF, RCMP veterans, legal-services and taxpayer-accountability questions.
Read More →Northern Perspective’s latest video points to a sharper accountability test: Brookfield’s public-finance footprint makes Carney’s conflict firewall impossible to ignore.
Read More →Beijing warned Canadian MPs and warships away from Taiwan. Carney’s China reset needs public red lines, not diplomatic fog.
Read More →Leadership and nomination contests can decide who reaches Parliament — and who becomes prime minister. After foreign-interference warnings, private-club rules are not enough.
Read More →Reported China-linked guests at a high-dollar Liberal fundraiser with Mark Carney raise the obvious accountability question: why is prime-ministerial access still happening behind closed doors after foreign-interference warnings?
Read More →A House of Commons response reported by Juno says more than $1.1B in Canada Child Benefit payments went to temporary residents in 2025. The issue is eligibility, verification, immigration planning and taxpayer transparency.
Read More →A hidden RCMP-China policing MOU, a Beijing disclosure veto, diaspora-safety fears and a Five Eyes security environment where trust has to be earned.
Read More →Ottawa Police confirms a May 19–21 penalty hearing. The safe accountability question is not vaccine causation; it is whether COVID-era institutions can handle uncomfortable questions transparently.
Read More →Washington paused a Canada-U.S. defence forum dating to 1940. Carney says not to overplay it. Parliament should demand the defence-commitment receipts.
Read More →The House ethics committee says prime ministers should sell controlled assets because blind trusts are not true divestment. Carney should publish the firewall before public money moves.
Read More →Carney wants to double Canada’s electricity grid by 2050 while adjusting clean-electricity rules. Before the branding, taxpayers need the cost, rate and reliability math.
Read More →CBC says defence officials verified the CFLRS report. The pass rate fell from 85% to 77% after recruiting-policy changes — raising hard questions about standards, screening and readiness.
Read More →The viral clip points to a larger timeline: Winnipeg Lab secrecy, green-fund conflicts, foreign interference, emergency powers, internet-control bills, MAID and Bill C-22 surveillance warnings.
Read More →A viral Facebook post runs hot, but the sourced issue is stronger: Bill C-22 has triggered serious surveillance warnings from civil-liberties groups and privacy companies.
Read More →The Canada Infrastructure Bank’s Mersey River Wind loan may support clean power, but taxpayers deserve the loan terms, conflict checks and subsidy stack.
Read More →The verified contrast is real: Washington heard public prayer and Scripture; Ottawa’s message from Mark Carney was Pride as a national promise.
Read More →The PBO says Ottawa’s own economic update is missing key new government measures. That is the problem: Canadians are being sold confidence before the receipts are public.
Read More →A r/canada thread pointed to Bill C-25’s fundraiser-disclosure change. The legal text shows advance publication rules are being repealed and replaced with post-event reporting.
Read More →CBC says Northland Tales is an entertainment/social-experiment project. Critics say fake-premise tactics crossed the line. Taxpayers deserve the paper trail.
Read More →Meta’s Rachel Curran told Parliament Part 2 of Bill C-22 could conscript private companies into Ottawa’s surveillance apparatus and weaken secure systems.
Read More →A forwarded post about ACFN and Alberta’s blocked separation petition mixes real accountability questions with claims that need proof. The strong version is disclosure, not name-calling.
Read More →Ottawa is moving Canada-India defence cooperation forward after CSIS identified India as a foreign-interference and transnational-repression risk. Parliament deserves safeguards before deeper ties proceed.
Read More →The Auditor General found IRCC had warning signals at scale but launched only 4,057 investigations into more than 153,000 potentially non-compliant students.
Read More →Carney’s $25B Canada Strong Fund may invest beside private capital. The ethics question is whether taxpayers see hard conflict firewalls before public money becomes private leverage.
Read More →CMHC’s April starts report shows a 17% monthly SAAR bounce, but actual starts were still down year-over-year and Vancouver fell 30%. That is not yet a 500,000-home plan.
Read More →Windscribe has joined Signal in warning it could leave Canada over Bill C-22. Parliament needs real privacy safeguards before lawful access becomes forced insecurity.
Read More →Blacklock’s and Parks Canada’s own evaluation point to expensive oTENTik-style accommodations and weak cost-recovery records. Taxpayers deserve the business case.
Read More →A viral TikTok points to Ontario’s $3B jail expansion. The conspiracy leap is not proven — but the public-safety question is real.
Read More →The U.S. “pure evil” meme is not a Trudeau story. But it points to a Canadian pattern: Liberal campaigns often replace proof with fear of the alternative.
Read More →If Ottawa can invoke “economic security” to override pesticide-risk decisions, Canadians need the evidence, definitions and safeguards before Parliament votes.
Read More →After ISC asked FSIN to repay $28.7 million following audit findings, Canadians deserve transparency without turning accountability into an anti-Indigenous smear.
Read More →If publishers want Ottawa to keep richer payroll rebates, Canadians deserve a public recipient list, dollar amounts and lobbying disclosure.
Read More →Ottawa now admits immigration affects housing. Canadians deserve an immigration levels plan tied to homes, healthcare, schools and real construction capacity.
Read More →The Elevate Report argues conservatives need more than anti-Liberal slogans. Carney is vulnerable where Liberal hope collides with household costs and hard policy proof.
Read More →Signal says it may leave Canada rather than comply with Ottawa’s lawful-access bill. Canadians need proof this will not become an encryption backdoor or metadata dragnet.
Read More →Carney and Alberta are set to advance a pipeline pact tied to industrial carbon pricing. Western workers need permits, timelines and legal certainty — not another invoice.
Read More →Carney says Ottawa is open to selling public assets like airports and ports to fund infrastructure. Canadians need a public-interest test before any sale.
Read More →ACFN helped stop Alberta’s separation referendum petition in court. The ruling may be legal, but Canadians deserve transparency on legal funding, finances, foreign-funded activism and democratic accountability.
Read More →A court quashed Alberta’s separation referendum petition over the duty to consult. If Carney is serious about pipelines, Ottawa needs legal clarity, timelines and a real consultation plan.
Read More →Blacklock’s reports Anita Anand’s department used the phrase “mass grave” in private talks with China. The Kamloops investigation itself still uses careful language about potential burials.
Read More →A viral TikTok points to four defeated Conservative justice bills. The House vote record shows Canadians deserve answers on sex-offender sentencing, deportation, parole trauma and bail reform.
Read More →A Barrie high school controversy over a safer-snorting pamphlet shows why parents are right to demand basic common sense in drug policy and school communications.
Read More →Aaron Gunn says he asked the CBC Ombudsman to investigate allegations that a CBC/APTN production used fake framing and aliases to target critics of the anti–Sir John A. Macdonald narrative.
Read More →StatsCan says individual census answers are protected, but its Public Use Microdata File subscription is available to businesses for $10,000 per year. Canadians deserve a plain-language buyer and use report.
Read More →Carney’s new electricity strategy promises to double the grid by 2050 while Ottawa’s own strategy points to over $1 trillion in system costs. Canadians need receipts first.
Read More →Global reports Carney expects a pipeline announcement Friday. Western Canadians need permits and timelines, not another Liberal internal fight over resource jobs.
Read More →Blacklock’s reports CBC managers would not tell the Budget Office how an extra $150M will be spent. Taxpayers deserve line-by-line receipts.
Read More →Statistics Canada says ownership rates among young adults have fallen sharply since 2011. Housing announcements are not enough if the ladder keeps moving away.
Read More →Legalization was sold as taking cannabis out of criminal hands. If past drug records do not automatically bar federal cannabis licences, publish the aggregate screening numbers.
Read More →Blacklock’s reports federal managers looked to copy Liberal Party website styling for a housing program. Taxpayer-funded housing communications need non-partisan rules, not campaign branding.
Read More →Canada Post says a $673M credit is a rollover, putting support at about $2.04B to date — still a major taxpayer rescue while rural service cuts remain in view.
Read More →The PBO says Ottawa is asking Parliament to approve $230.4B in voted spending. MPs should demand line-by-line transparency before approving central-vote buckets.
Read More →Former governors general claimed $554K from a taxpayer-funded expense program last year. Carney says he will look into it — Canadians need receipts.
Read More →Blacklock’s says Access to Information records show Privy Council staff attended a closed-door meeting on reporter accreditation and blacklisting.
Read More →The Spring Economic Update quietly proposes changes to the Canada Post Corporation Act so law enforcement can search and seize mail when authorized by Parliament.
Read More →Ottawa’s own Spring Economic Update projects public debt charges climbing from $53.4B in 2024-25 to $80.9B by 2030-31.
Read More →When a federal benefits-delivery IT project grows from $1.75B to $6.6B, taxpayers deserve documents and hearings — not a committee shutdown.
Read More →With Senate vacancies growing, Carney should publish the appointment criteria, advisory-board status and conflict screen before naming senators.
Read More →Hong Kong diaspora groups are asking Ottawa to publish the RCMP-China police cooperation MOU and explain safeguards against transnational repression.
Read More →Sexual deepfakes are real abuse. Parliament still owes Canadians a clear definition before “nearly nude” becomes criminal-law language.
Read More →Ottawa is putting $25 billion into a national investment fund. Because Carney's former employer is active in the same sectors, taxpayers deserve written guardrails.
Read More →StatsCan says employment fell and unemployment hit 6.9%. Ottawa's rural low-wage TFW flexibility needs a transparent labour-market test.
Read More →The Prime Minister says selected-sector continental integration remains possible before the CUSMA review. Canadians deserve the sector list, red lines and terms.
Read More →Ottawa calls it lawful access. Critics warn the bill lowers subscriber-data thresholds, enables secret technical orders and opens the door to year-long metadata retention.
Read More →Ottawa wants one-year approvals, federal economic zones and shifted project authorities. Speed is good — cabinet shortcuts need sunlight.
Read More →Blacklock’s reports Commons committee members said the Liberal slogan appeared in federal advertising and PCO promised to investigate.
Read More →The viral number needs proof. Official records already show billions in asylum housing, hotels and health costs under Liberal management.
Read More →Todd Doherty’s public letter raises allegations about Liberal insiders and campaign advisers. The fair ask is transparency, not rumour.
Read More →The “free houses” claim is too loose. The real story is Ottawa’s asylum-housing money flowing through municipalities, hotels, shelters and capital acquisition.
Read More →A federal appointment, a floor-crossing, a provincial vacancy and a bruising Liberal nomination fight all landed in one Toronto riding.
Read More →Obama’s Canada 2020 keynote and Carney’s public welcome triggered online Logan Act accusations. The safer story is the political network, not an unproven legal claim.
Read More →Blacklock’s reports millions were quietly moved out of a homeless veterans program. VAC’s own plan says 1,460 veterans were supported in year one.
Read More →A Penticton range used by lawful firearms owners, cadets and police training is now in a federal court fight after Ottawa moved to divest the land.
Read More →Carney is speaking at a Toronto summit with global progressive leaders and U.S. Democratic figures. Canadians should ask whose networks are shaping the agenda.
Read More →The PBO says the Spring Economic Update gives directional updates, not enough details, on major projects, housing, defence and the $25B Canada Strong Fund.
Read More →The PBO’s May 7 Main Estimates report shows $502.8B in spending authorities, $53.7B in debt charges, and new reasons Parliament should demand definitions, metrics and receipts.
Read More →A May 8 Liberal fundraiser lands while Bill C-25 moves toward Senate study. If the Liberals believe their fundraising is clean, they should want more sunlight — not weaker reporting rules.
Read More →Poilievre says he will stay on and keep fighting after Carney secured a majority. The real issue is whether Carney represents change — or a refreshed Liberal machine.
Read More →Parliament is asking whether Ottawa approved World Cup-related temporary visas despite inadmissibility, fraud, criminal-record or ministerial-override flags. Canadians deserve the numbers before kickoff.
Read More →Pierre Poilievre is warning that Liberal legal choices on Indigenous land litigation have left homeowners asking whether registered title still means what Canadians thought it meant.
Read More →Northern Perspective highlights Democracy Watch's warning that Carney's conflict screen and federal ethics-law loopholes leave Canadians without enough transparency.
Read More →Juno News reports leaked CAF documents show serious concerns inside military recruitment as Ottawa celebrates higher enrolment numbers. The issue is standards, readiness and accountability.
Read More →Bill C-9 is still moving through the Senate after the House passed language repealing a religious-text defence. Civil liberties should not depend on Liberal reassurance.
Read More →Northern Perspective's new video captures a growing concern: more power, more insider finance, more opaque structures — and less meaningful public accountability.
Read More →The Liberals are studying private investment in Canadian airports while Carney launches a $25B Canada Strong Fund. Public gateways should not become investor product without full scrutiny.
Read More →The mental-illness-only MAID expansion remains delayed until March 17, 2027. That is not cancelled. It is a countdown — and Carney owes Canadians an answer.
Read More →PrescribeIT was supposed to modernize prescriptions. Nearly $300M later, it is ending for poor national adoption — and Liberal MPs blocked a motion to bring the health minister to committee.
Read More →The Alliston EV plant was supposed to produce up to 240,000 electric vehicles a year by 2028. Honda is reportedly pulling out as EV demand weakens and strategy shifts toward hybrids.
Read More →A project that touches Old Age Security, CPP and EI has ballooned from $1.75 billion to $6.6 billion. When MPs asked for documents, Liberal MPs used their new majority to move on. Sources: Canadian Press / Auditor General.
Read More →Canada can support allies and still demand receipts. Carney announced another $270 million for Ukraine while Ottawa’s own books show debt and interest costs climbing hard. Sources: PMO / Spring Economic Update.
Read More →Canada's decline did not happen overnight. It was built policy by policy, scandal by scandal, broken promise by broken promise. The answer is not despair. The answer is memory — documented, sourced, shared, and impossible to bury.
Read More →The Department of Public Safety promised Canadians a free, keyword-searchable flood-risk database — so prospective homebuyers could check whether the property they were about to spend $800,000 on was likely to end up underwater. The deadline was December 31. The Commissioner of Environment confirmed yesterday: it's late. Source: Blacklock's Reporter.
Read More →Carney's pick for Governor General brings a 40-year record into Rideau Hall — including praise for Fidel Castro's Cuba, praise for China's "commitment" to human rights after Beijing donated to her UN office, and a track record on Israel that even her supporters concede is divisive. National Post columnist Chris Selley: "They did it again." Sources: National Post, Western Standard, UN Watch, China Daily (2008).
Read More →A new CSIS security report to Parliament names the People's Republic of China as a leading perpetrator of espionage and foreign interference, including "cultivation of relationships" with unnamed Canadian politicians. The report dropped the same week Foreign Minister Anita Anand unveiled a "new foreign policy" emphasizing cooperation with Beijing. Source: Blacklock's Reporter.
Read More →The Privy Council Office quietly commissioned focus groups asking Canadians where to cut federal spending. The result, hidden until access-to-information forced disclosure: public support for slashing the CBC, Canada Post and other Crown corporations. The Liberals never campaigned on it. They never told voters they were testing the idea. Source: Blacklock's Reporter / Western Standard.
Read More →Industry Minister Mélanie Joly says Cabinet granted Chinese state-backed automakers "unprecedented access" to Canada because "they are very popular." Asked about Uyghur slave labour, she said: "We're all in favour of affordability." On the same day, federal records confirmed Carney's Buy Canadian Policy still treats 100% foreign-owned companies as Canadian. Source: Blacklock's Reporter.
Read More →Statistics Canada accepted $72,000 from Heritage Minister Marc Miller's department for an advance copy of a hate crimes report — for "feedback" on "fact or presentation." The finished report downplayed antisemitism, even as Jewish Canadians remain the leading target of hate crimes in Canada. StatsCan denies political interference. Source: Blacklock's Reporter.
Read More →An audit identified 800 fraudulent foreign students in Canada's immigration system. The Liberal government has now admitted it cannot track them. Nobody knows where they are. The system that was supposed to catch fraud did — and then dropped the ball on enforcement. Source: Western Standard.
Read More →Mark Carney has named Louise Arbour — a former UN human rights official with a politically charged record — as Canada's next Governor General. No election, no vote, no public input. Critics ask: is this a merit-based appointment, or another Liberal ally installed in a constitutionally sensitive post? Source: National Post / Western Standard.
Read More →Parliamentary Budget Officer Annette Ryan released four reports calling out the Carney government's Spring Economic Update for missing key details on promised cuts, the $25B Sovereign Wealth Fund (funded with borrowed money), and $159B in unfunded defence costs. Conservative Deputy Leader Lantsman: Canadians are paying $3,400/year just in debt interest. Source: National Post / PBO.
Read More →Public Safety Minister Anandasangaree refuses to release the unclassified Rankin Report that guided Bill C-22 — Canada's new police surveillance law. Civil liberties advocates say there is "no legitimate reason" to keep it secret. The minister's direct answer when asked why: "I choose not to." Committee hearings begin today. Source: National Post / CCLA.
Read More →Carney launched "Buy Canadian" as economic patriotism. But the government's definition is so broad that 100% foreign-owned companies — including Chinese state enterprises — qualify. When Parliament asked for clarification, officials said: "We need to go back to what the Prime Minister said." Source: Blacklock's Reporter.
Read More →After a year as PM and a signed MOU with Alberta, Carney's answer on whether Canada will build a new pipeline to Asian markets is: "more probable than possible." Poilievre: "He still hasn't made up his mind. He's wasted an entire year." Source: CBC / Canadian Press.
Read More →Carney passed flagship "nation-building" legislation with promises of pipelines, ports, and energy corridors. MPs are now sounding the alarm: nearly a year after Bill C-5 received royal assent, not a single project has been approved. Zero. The law exists. The slogans exist. The shovels don't.
Read More →Global Affairs Canada's 2026-27 plan quietly removes all mention of "forced labour" — reversing years of government commitments. The Liberal MP who floor-crossed after Beijing says he doesn't "believe in reports." Carney's PCO told Parliament he didn't raise human rights with Xi. Then called it "submitted in error." Either way: damning.
Read More →Mark Carney gained a manufactured majority through floor crossings — now the Globe reports discussions to appoint his own principal secretary to the Senate to push his agenda. The chamber is already packed with 58 Trudeau appointees posing as "independents." The Globe's own editorial said it bluntly: "The notion that the Senate might thwart Mr. Carney is laughable."
Read More →The House ethics committee released 20 recommendations to tighten the Conflict of Interest Act — many written specifically for Carney's web of entanglements with Brookfield, Stripe, and 100+ other companies. The core message: divest. His response: silence. Experts say it goes nowhere. The PM governs with conflicts at scale and no one can make him fix it.
Read More →Conservative MPs met directly with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Washington and came back with real intelligence. Carney's response was contempt: he declared himself Canada's "one negotiator" and said Conservative trips "accomplish nothing." That's not leadership — it's a power grab.
Read More →Alberta's Environment Minister received a text message — that was Ottawa's entire "consultation" before announcing a $3.8B plan affecting hundreds of millions of hectares of Alberta Crown land. No meetings, no recognition of provincial jurisdiction. Alberta already manages 60% of its land sustainably. Ottawa refuses to count it.
Read More →A Pentagon contract notice reveals Canada quietly signed a deal for American HIMARS rocket systems months ago — no public announcement made. A press statement was prepared and deliberately pulled back. Carney campaigned on buying less American military equipment. The Pentagon's procurement database told the truth his government wouldn't.
Read More →The Liberal Party's 2025 campaign slogan "Canada Strong" appeared in federally-funded government advertising — violating Treasury Board rules against partisan misuse of public funds. MPs on the Commons government operations committee said it "literally violates the Treasury Board rules." The Privy Council promised to investigate.
Read More →On April 30, a federally-connected touring event called "Ask a Trans Person Anything" was held in Okotoks, AB. When former MRU professor Frances Widdowson showed up to ask questions, she was escorted out. The event is tied to organizations receiving federal WAGE funding — your tax dollars fund an echo chamber where inconvenient questions get you removed.
Read More →PrescribeIT launched in 2017 with a $40 million budget. It ballooned to $300 million over nine years — then was quietly cancelled. When Conservatives moved to investigate and obtain financial documents, Liberal MPs voted to move the entire health committee meeting in-camera, with zero explanation. No accountability. No transparency. Just a majority voting to keep the lights off.
Read More →Canada's Ethics Committee concluded Carney's blind trust is "insufficient" and recommended he divest his $10M+ Brookfield holdings. Four days later, he announced the $25-billion Canada Strong Fund — investing in infrastructure and green energy, the exact sectors Brookfield operates in. All funded with borrowed money. This is conflict of interest in plain sight.
Read More →Canada's spring economic update projects $536.2 billion in program spending — $7.6 billion higher than the fall budget, and $25 billion more over four years. Spending hits $575.4B by 2029–30. The Liberals revise their own forecasts upward every time. Carney promised fiscal discipline. The numbers say otherwise.
Read More →The CRA is refunding $647 million collected under the now-repealed Digital Services Tax — a 3% tech levy the Liberals created, then scrapped under US pressure. The $30 million spent building the collection system is gone. The $7.2 billion in projected five-year revenues? Never arriving. Another Liberal policy that launched loud and failed quietly — on your dime.
Read More →A new Angus Reid Institute poll finds two-thirds of Canadians say Carney is falling short on housing, and 70% say he's failing on cost of living — the two issues voters care about most. Half of Liberal supporters agree he's underperforming on both. After ten years of broken Liberal promises, the pocketbook reckoning has arrived.
Read More →The Liberal government is now weighing banning social media for Canadians under 16. Sounds reasonable — until you remember this is the government that passed C-11, C-18, and drafted Bill C-63. The pattern of Liberal internet control is unmistakable, and every new proposal expands their grip on what Canadians can see and say online.
Read More →The Carney government is banning cryptocurrency from federal elections, citing foreign interference. But Bitcoin is MORE traceable than cash — this is about locking political donations into banker-controlled channels. Meanwhile, Trump just made Bitcoin a U.S. strategic reserve asset. The contrast is damning.
Read More →Canada's spy agency just released its 2025 Public Report naming China and India as the primary perpetrators of foreign interference in Canada. Carney's response? A trade deal with China signed in January, a state visit to India in March, and diplomatic courtship of both. The CSIS alarm is being answered with trade delegations.
Read More →A new Fraser Institute report shows 50 years of Canadian trade diversification have failed — with China as the only real beneficiary. Yet Carney just signed a deal giving China more Canadian market access, cutting restrictions on Chinese EVs. CSIS simultaneously named China a top national security threat. Carney is ignoring both history and his own intelligence service.
Read More →Ottawa Police Detective Helen Grus investigated a cluster of unexplained infant deaths during Canada's mass vaccination campaign. She was charged with insubordination, found guilty, and silenced. The Liberal government has never been asked to answer for it.
Read More →Canada paid over $1.1 billion in Canada Child Benefit payments to temporary residents in 2025 alone. Over five years, the total has climbed to nearly $3 billion. The numbers keep going up — and Carney's Liberals have said nothing.
Read More →Chief Justice Richard Wagner called Freedom Convoy participants "anarchists" who held Ottawa "hostage" — then refused to recuse himself from the Carney Liberals' Supreme Court appeal of two rulings that found the Emergencies Act invocation was illegal. Carney's government is fighting in court to retroactively justify Trudeau's most authoritarian domestic act.
Read More →A BC mother briefly heckled a mandatory land acknowledgement at her daughter's school play — gave the teacher advance notice, sat quietly through the show — and the principal called child protective services. Government workers interviewed her children. This is the cost of dissent in Liberal Canada.
Read More →Youth unemployment surged from 10% to 13.8% in three years — the fastest non-recession increase on record, per the Fraser Institute. Nearly one in seven young Canadians who wants a job can't find one. Canada's youth unemployment rate is now 3.8 points above the United States. This is the Liberal legacy.
Read More →Carney's Liberals handed $200 million in Defence contracts to an obscure Nova Scotia spaceport company — a penny stock that surged after the announcement, with a lease backdated by a full year and local residents calling for an Auditor General investigation. The media has barely noticed.
Read More →A detailed analysis of the actual legal text of Carney's ethics screen reveals a loophole big enough for Brookfield to drive a trillion dollars through. The "general application" exemption explicitly allows Carney to set green energy, carbon market, and infrastructure policy — the very policies that enrich his former employer. The ethics committee wants divestment. The Liberals said no.
Read More →On International Workers' Day: $130 billion in new Liberal spending, $225 billion added to the national debt, housing at $817K, 9.8 million Canadians food insecure, and a PM who has never worked a day outside finance or government. This is what a Liberal majority actually looks like for ordinary Canadians.
Read More →Liberal MPs used their freshly minted majority to move a health committee meeting behind closed doors — blocking public scrutiny of PrescribeIT, a government program that grew from $40M to $300M before being cancelled. Two Liberal MPs walked past reporters without a word. No explanation was ever given.
Read More →Finance Minister Champagne called it "fiscal discipline." The numbers say: $37.5B in new spending, $54B added since Budget 2025, debt rising to $1.629 trillion, and $80.7 billion per year in interest by 2031. Canada will soon spend more servicing Liberal debt than on national defence.
Read More →Finance Minister Champagne told Canadians Canada leads the G7 in net debt. What he didn't say: that comparison only works because Canada counts CPP assets while other countries don't. Strip out the accounting advantage and the real picture emerges — $1.629 trillion in debt by 2030 and $80.7 billion a year in interest charges. That's not fiscal discipline. That's creative accounting.
Read More →Canada's Immigration Ministry issued a temporary resident permit to Mehdi Taj — president of Iran's Football Federation and a former IRGC commander. The IRGC is a designated terrorist organization in Canada. His delegation flew to Toronto before the permit was cancelled mid-flight. Immigration Minister Lena Diab says she's "accountable" but had no idea it happened until after the fact.
Read More →Mark Carney told parliament that "affordability is the best it's been in over a decade." A Statistics Canada report published the same week found 9.8 million Canadians in food-insecure households. 34% of Canadians borrowed money to buy groceries last year. Someone is living in a different country — and it isn't Statistics Canada.
Read More →Carney talks about building Canada. But Statistics Canada says 207,700 skilled tradespeople are unemployed. BuildForce reports 19,100 construction jobs vanished in one year. 275 major projects sit in regulatory limbo. And the spring fiscal update just cut vocational training grants. Liberal nation-building is a speech — not a policy.
Read More →Carney dismissed Conservative MPs who met with U.S. Trade Representative Greer as having learned "nothing new." He claims to be the sole negotiator for Canada. But his monopoly has produced no deal, 50% steel tariffs, and a July 1 CUSMA review deadline with no plan. Meanwhile, the Conservatives brought back real intel: America First is unmovable — but energy is an opening.
Read More →A BC court handed 300+ hectares of Richmond land to the Cowichan Tribes. Carney now claims he "fundamentally disagrees." But his government's 2018 litigation directive told federal lawyers not to use extinguishment — the one argument that could have won. The City of Richmond has been fighting the appeal largely alone.
Read More →Jonathan Wilkinson — Trudeau's Natural Resources Minister, architect of Net Zero legislation — gets a Brussels posting with a diplomatic passport. No competitive search. No public justification. Just the Liberal patronage machine running on schedule.
Read More →Carney's spring update confirms $536.2B in program spending — $25B above last year's projections — with no path to balance. Meanwhile, Canada's real economic wound is internal: a decade of Liberal regulatory chokehold that stalled investment, killed productivity, and has nothing to do with Trump's tariffs.
Read More →A health committee locked away without explanation. An MP says Liberals tried to recruit her. Another MP says the government is "dominating" every committee. The pattern is unmistakable.
Read More →Carney’s spring fiscal update brought a $66.9B deficit and $37.5B in new spending. Pierre Poilievre delivered his verdict in Question Period: “More costs, more debt and more bills on the national credit card. This Prime Minister is just another Liberal.” And the $80 billion annual interest bill coming by 2031 proves it.
Read More →A landmark Fraser Institute report studied every Canadian trade diversification effort for 50 years. The verdict: all of them failed. Canada is still 80% dependent on U.S. exports. And Carney's answer — a China pivot — is alarming security experts who warn it trades one dangerous dependency for another.
Read More →74 bipartisan U.S. Congress members are demanding Ottawa end supply management. The U.S. Trade Representative calls it the top trade irritant. Butter faces a 313.5% tariff. Canadian families pay double for dairy. Carney refuses to act — because dairy board votes matter more than grocery bills.
Read More →Four days after the Ethics Committee told Carney to sell his Brookfield holdings, he announced a $25B fund investing in Brookfield's exact sectors — energy, infrastructure, AI, renewables, critical minerals — using 100% borrowed money. Every sovereign wealth fund in history was built from surplus. This one is built from debt. This isn't industrial policy. It's a portfolio strategy.
Read More →Canada's productivity has flatlined for a decade under Liberal rule. Carney's spring economic update — despite a $66.9B deficit — contains no serious fix: just new agencies duplicating existing ones, misleading G7 comparisons, and a projection that Canada will still run a $56B deficit by 2031. Ten years. $554 billion in new debt. No results.
Read More →Parliament erupted as Conservatives dismantled Carney's budget number by number — $37B in new deficit, record debt interest, every household paying $3,400 more, and a PM who has "been wrong about everything." Poilievre led the charge. The Liberals held the line. Canadians foot the bill.
Read More →9 cities face 30–50% price drops. $675 billion in mortgages renewing at double the original rate. Average home prices rose 82% under Liberal government. The man who pioneered Canada's era of ultra-cheap money is now PM promising to fix the crisis he helped build.
Read More →While Canadians can't afford rent, the Carney government handed $200 million — $54,000 per day — to a penny-stock rocket company in Canso, Nova Scotia (pop. 739). The company pays $13,500/year to lease the land from the province. The federal deal backdates payments by a year. Locals call it "a scam." Minister McGuinty never wrote back.
Read More →The government that legalized and expanded assisted dying also funds the organization that promotes it. 16,499 Canadians died by MAID in 2024 — nearly 1 in 20 deaths. Miriam Lancaster was 84, had a fractured sacrum, and was offered death before physiotherapy. The numbers, the cases, and the questions the Liberals won't answer.
Read More →Kelly DeRidder refused. But her account confirms what critics have alleged — the Carney government is running an active floor-crossing recruitment operation. This isn't MPs spontaneously switching sides. It's organized recruitment.
Read More →The government received a revenue windfall this year. It spent it — and then added $37.5 billion more. Finance Minister Champagne called that "restoring fiscal discipline." The national debt is now $1.333 trillion and rising to $1.63 trillion by 2031, with debt service costs hitting $80.7B/year.
Read More →Five MPs crossed the floor to hand Carney a manufactured majority — the first time in Canadian history a PM manufactured a majority this way. Now Gladu's constituents are organizing a lawsuit. And Gladu called for byelections herself before she crossed.
Read More →Parliament's ethics committee recommended this week that PM Carney must sell his Brookfield Asset Management investments within 60 days. Liberal MPs rejected the report and called it "partisan." Then, in the same week, the Liberals announced they are seizing majority control of all House committees — including the Ethics Committee that produced the report and the same watchdog committees that exposed ArriveCAN and the Winnipeg lab scandal.
Carney's conflict-of-interest screen now covers more than 100 corporate entities. Even the Privy Council clerk sold his own Brookfield shares to manage the screen. Carney has not.
Read the Full Story →Canada went from $616 billion in debt to $1.17 trillion in under 10 years. We break down exactly what the money was spent on — and what remains to show for it.
Read the Full Debt Analysis →Average home prices from $450K to $817K. Record immigration with no housing plan. Nine years of promises and zero results. We document how young Canadians became permanent renters.
Read the Housing Analysis →The $54 million app that should have cost $250,000. GC Strategies, the RCMP investigation, and the Auditor General's "glaring disregard for basic management practices."
Read the ArriveCAN Deep Dive →The "link tax" that made Meta ban all Canadian news from Facebook and Instagram. Millions of Canadians lost access to local news. Legacy media won. Canadians lost.
Read the Censorship Analysis →From $20/tonne to $80/tonne to zero. Carney eliminated the consumer carbon tax on Day 1. If it was wrong, why did Trudeau fight so hard to defend it? And why does the industrial carbon tax remain?
Read the Carbon Tax Analysis →$3.8 billion committed. 540 million additional hectares targeted. Indigenous Protected Areas, carbon credits, and the largest shift in Canadian land use since Confederation — with almost no public discussion.
Read the 30x30 Analysis →If you have information about Liberal government wrongdoing, waste, or corruption — we want to hear from you. Anonymous submissions welcome. Submit a tip →