Since Mark Carney became a candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada, images appearing to show him with Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein and Klaus Schwab have started to circulate on social media.
Canada’s national carbon tax on consumer fuels is likely in its final weeks after both major contenders to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader have promised to scrap it.
Carney also committed to developing a “Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism” —essentially a tariff — on products in certain sectors imported from countries that don’t have an equivalent industrial carbon levy.
Canadian politics could be heading for an extremely rare situation: a prime minister who doesn’t have a seat in the House of Commons.
Liberal Leadership hopeful, Mark Carney addressed key Indigenous issues for the first time at a campaign stop in Atlantic Canada Friday.
In a policy statement provided to the Star, Carney said the “divisive” current consumer carbon levy “isn’t working.”
Mark Carney, the former central banker who’s running to lead Canada, said the government should be open to curbing electricity exports to the US if it needs to retaliate against tariffs from the Trump administration.
Most Liberal leadership candidates are vowing to end or at least freeze the existing carbon price charged on fossil fuel purchases.
Federal Liberal leadership hopeful Mark Carney, former governor of the Bank of Canada, is pledging to scrap the country’s consumer-facing carbon tax in favour of industry-targeted emissions reductions.
Here’s what the activist media is reporting on this week.
To Mark Carney’s supporters, the 59-year-old former governor of the Bank of England has the perfect CV to fill Justin Trudeau’s shoes as leader of the Liberal Party and prime minister of Canada. After graduating from Harvard and Oxford and spending 13 ...
Restricting the flow of energy to the U.S. is one measure being discussed in Canada in the event of a trade war, but it’s controversial. The premiers of Alberta and Saskatchewan have said they’re against moves to curb energy sales to the U.S., which are the primary source of the U.S.’s trade deficit with Canada.