The Really Big Show with Jim Csek & Iain Burns

Carney goes full MAGA as Canada enters recession

3 h 6 min · 29. Mai 2026
Episode Carney goes full MAGA as Canada enters recession Cover

Beschreibung

Canada is in a technical recession. The Prime Minister was in New York telling Americans that "Canada Strong will help make America great again." And the first Chinese-made EVs under Carney's 49,000-vehicle tariff deal have arrived off the coast of Vancouver. Join Jim and Iain as they wrap up the week with the latest in Canadian news. Real GDP has now failed to grow for 2 consecutive quarters and business capital investment has fallen for 5 consecutive quarters. The pipeline Carney and Smith announced requires more than $100 billion in total private sector commitment with no confirmed builder, no approved route and no final investment decision. And a Labour Minister who quashed a legal strike by claiming a medical emergency has been caught by access to information records that show no such emergency ever existed. Today's show covers: ►Statistics Canada confirms Canada has entered a technical recession after real GDP was unchanged in Q1 2026, following a 0.2% decline in Q4 2025, with business capital investment falling for a 5th consecutive quarter and the household saving rate at its lowest since early 2024, though April is tracking a 0.4% rebound ►Carney told the Economic Club of New York that "Canada Strong will help make America great again," arguing Canada's energy and critical minerals make it a more valuable partner than rival, with U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra responding that "a lot of Americans can get behind that kind of message" ►Imperial Oil's CEO says the Alberta-to-B.C. pipeline will require more than $100 billion in total investment including production growth, shipping commitments and the government-mandated $16.5 billion Pathways carbon capture project, with no confirmed builder, no approved route and no final investment decision ►The finance department confirms Carney's $25 billion Canada Strong Fund will cost taxpayers $750 million annually in debt interest once fully deployed, as Canada has not balanced a budget since 2007 and has no surplus to invest ►The first Chinese-made EVs under Carney's 49,000-vehicle import deal have arrived off Vancouver, with a ship carrying Lotus luxury EVs starting at $119,900 moored outside the Port since Sunday, as U.S. lawmakers from Michigan propose banning Chinese-connected vehicles from the United States and cite Carney's tariff cut as a direct CUSMA irritant ►Toronto's Daily Bread Food Bank CEO told a Commons committee that food bank visits hit a record 4.1 million last year, feeding 1 in 10 Torontonians, with the fastest growing demographic being employed, post-secondary educated Canadians aged 19 to 44 who have "done everything right" ►Canada needs 480,000 new homes annually but only 247,000 are expected this year, construction starts are projected to fall another 18%, and the government's $13 billion Build Canada Homes program will produce just 5,200 units annually according to the PBO ►The Supreme Court of Canada has allowed a New Brunswick ruling to stand confirming Aboriginal title cannot be declared over private land, with B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma saying the decision creates a "clear path" for the province to win its appeal of the Cowichan Tribes decision ►Labour Minister Patty Hajdu insists she quashed Air Canada's 2025 strike to prevent a medical emergency, but access to information records show no such emergency existed, Air Canada's own letter cited lost tourism revenue, and her deputy minister told a Commons committee he has no record of any such briefing ►The Lawrence Bishnoi gang delivered a letter to Abbotsford police boasting it had 1,000 soldiers willing to carry out shootings in B.C., with RCMP testimony confirming every individual identified in the investigation is either a temporary foreign worker or international student "relatively new to Canada" ►Conservative MP Chak Au told a Commons committee that shoplifting has hit $9.2 billion annually, up from $5 billion in 2019, with violence in shoplifting incidents up 76%, while Public Safety Minister Anandasangaree said he was "not an expert on shoplifting" and did not agree it constitutes a national crisis ►Calgary city council voted 10-5 to rescind its 2021 climate emergency declaration, making Calgary one of the first major cities in the world to reverse such a declaration ►Liberals claim they lack the authority to overturn the CRTC's decision to triple the mandatory Canadian content levy on streaming platforms to 15%, despite having created the regulator's expanded mandate through their own Online Streaming Act in 2023 Let us know what you think in the comments. The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed. 🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media. #canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #nowmedia #thereallybigshow #recession #chineseevs #albertapipeline #foodbanks

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Canada’s next crisis could be a very sick loonie

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Gestern1 h 59 min
Episode Carney FAILS on campaign promises Cover

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Canada’s economy, affordability crisis, trade uncertainty, energy future, immigration policy, and public-sector accountability all collide in this episode of The Really Big Show. The discussion opens with Mark Carney’s broken campaign promises, including his claim that he was the best person to negotiate with Donald Trump and protect Canada’s trade relationship with the United States. With CUSMA uncertainty growing, Mexico appearing to move ahead in talks, and Canadian businesses facing more instability, the hosts argue Canada is being left exposed at the worst possible time. From there, the conversation turns to Canada’s stalled resource economy, the lack of private-sector confidence in major projects, and the push for electrification. The hosts question whether Carney’s energy strategy actually addresses affordability, reliability, and economic growth, or simply distracts from the urgent need to get Canadian resources to market. The episode also digs into public-sector entitlement and government waste, including massive executive expenses, business-class travel, a growing federal bureaucracy, and billions spent on outside consultants. At a time when Canadians are struggling with groceries, rent, mortgages, and taxes, the segment asks why government officials keep spending like there are no consequences. Finally, the show looks at Canada’s new immigration category for foreign military recruits and raises concerns about national security, military readiness, and whether the government is truly rebuilding the Armed Forces or just shifting numbers around to satisfy NATO spending targets. It is a full breakdown of a country facing serious pressure on multiple fronts: weaker investment, higher costs, trade uncertainty, energy grid questions, government waste, and leadership that seems more focused on spin than results.

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