Harsh reality as Canada faces hunger crisis
The day before Statistics Canada confirmed Canada had entered a technical recession, Mark Carney told New York business leaders Canada would have the second-fastest growth in the G7 this year.
Carney has yet to comment on the recession data. Poilievre is calling for an emergency parliamentary debate. And Canada's food banks are asking Ottawa to modernize an Employment Insurance system built for a workforce that no longer exists. The government issued 126,000 temporary foreign worker permits last year for skilled trades while 127,000 skilled trades workers sat unemployed. The gap between what this government says and what is actually happening has never been more measurable.
Today on The Really Big Show:
►Carney told New York business leaders Canada would have "the second-fastest growth in the G7 this year," one day before Statistics Canada confirmed Canada had entered a technical recession, with the economy shrinking in 3 of the 4 quarters since Carney became prime minister
►Poilievre called for an emergency parliamentary debate, saying "Mark Carney is now the only G7 leader to have plunged his economy into recession," as Carney has yet to comment on the recession data
►Food Banks Canada is calling on Ottawa to modernize Employment Insurance, saying the system has not been fully updated for decades and was built for a full-time employment era that no longer reflects Canadian working life, as food bank visits hit a record 4.1 million annually in Toronto alone with 50% of new users holding full-time jobs
►The Globe and Mail has acknowledged that 5 years after the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation announced 215 possible unmarked graves near a Kamloops residential school, "there has been no public confirmation of the discovery of any human remains," calling it "an extraordinary assertion that requires proof"
►Kerry-Lynne Findlay has won the B.C. Conservative leadership race on the fourth ballot with 51% of the vote, defeating commentator Caroline Elliott, and now leads the Official Opposition promising "more freedom, less government"
►Canada issued 126,000 temporary foreign worker permits for skilled trades in 2025, nearly identical to the 127,000 skilled trades workers who were unemployed that same year, with the immigration minister unable to explain the discrepancy when pressed in the Commons
►The federal government admits it has no system to track whether an estimated 500,000 illegal immigrants in Canada are working on federally-funded construction sites, with the Canada Border Services Agency confirming it does not investigate whether worker sites receive government funding
►Federal figures confirm China's EV quota will grow from 49,000 vehicles this year to 63,037 by 2031, equal to 51% of Canada's average annual battery electric market, contradicting Industry Minister Joly's claim it was "a small quota" representing less than 3% of total vehicle sales
►Public Safety Canada's own internal memo warns Chinese EVs allowed into Canada under Carney's deal could enable hostile states to track Canadians and surveil sensitive sites, as the government simultaneously approved 49,000 Chinese vehicles annually through 2031
►The federal government quietly expanded a secret contract with Palantir, Peter Thiel's controversial data analytics and surveillance company, from $14.4 million to $46.8 million through more than a dozen amendments, with the contract internally flagged as "not for public disclosure"
►Federal departments have updated media accreditation policies to prioritize outlets designated as Qualified Canadian Journalism Organizations, a government-administered tax credit program, raising concerns about whether subsidized status is becoming a de facto press credential
►Attorney General Fraser admitted Bill C-9's religious speech clause was added solely to secure Bloc Québécois support, drawing 200,000 Senate postcards, 171 Commons petitions and opposition from the Conference of Catholic Bishops
►Alberta is considering 3 potential pipeline routes through northern B.C. with terminals at Observatory Inlet, Nasoga Gulf, Kitimat and Prince Rupert, including one that follows the route of the previously rejected Northern Gateway project
►A federal appeals court ruled that unionized shipyard workers who refused to cross a colleague's picket line in solidarity were breaking the law, setting a precedent that could limit union solidarity actions across federal workplaces
The day Carney was promising New York the second-fastest G7 growth, Statistics Canada was finalizing the data confirming Canada was in recession. Which number should Canadians believe?
Let us know what you think in the comments.
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