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OTTAWA — Former Liberal foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy is accusing Prime Minister Mark Carney of taking a “bootlicking” approach to U.S. President Donald Trump at the expense of Canadian values.

“You have to be principled, you have to be tactical, you have to be pragmatic. But you also have to be tough and know what you stand for,” Axworthy said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“Flattery is always part of the game, but you can take it to the point where you actually become unctuous.”

Axworthy spoke to The Canadian Press after issuing an online broadside last Sunday against the Carney government.

Axworthy, whom prime minister Jean Chrétien appointed as foreign affairs minister from 1996 to 2000, oversaw the Ottawa Treaty that banned landmines in numerous countries. He has been a prominent voice on international relations, including through advocacy with the World Refugee and Migration Council.

In a blog post following the NATO summit — where alliance members agreed to Trump’s demand for a massive increase in the alliance’s defence spending target — Axworthy accused Carney and other world leaders of bending a knee to Trump.

“NATO now risks letting one craven, mendacious man set the tone for a strategy of unrestrained militarism,” Axworthy wrote, arguing it’s dangerous to let defence policy be decided by “the abusive, racist bullying of Donald Trump.”

He also argued that the summit did not adequately push to ensure Ukraine’s sovereignty and instead committed alliance members to a level of defence spending that will lead to cuts to social programs and likely foreign aid.

“A pattern is now set: Trump harrumphs, we comply. What else will we quietly surrender? Cultural industries? Environmental standards, agriculture security, Arctic sovereignty?” he wrote.

In the interview, Axworthy singled out NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte’s exchange with Trump during the NATO summit — which saw Rutte refer to the president as “daddy” — as an “embarrassing” moment.

He also said his concerns have been further bolstered by Carney’s decision to rescind the digital services tax that targeted American tech giants, as the prime minister and Trump undertake what he calls “secret” trade negotiations with no parliamentary scrutiny.

“When do we stop pretending it’s all part of some clever negotiating strategy that justifies bootlicking in hopes of tariff concessions?” he wrote in the blog post.

Trump suggested in March that the U.S. might sell allies fighter jets that lack the same capabilities as those used by the U.S. military. Axworthy told The Canadian Press it’s unwise to accept a situation where “the Pentagon controls the black boxes in your airplanes and your destroyers.”

Axworthy said he sees the Carney government pushing ahead with foreign policy and domestic legislation focused on economic security, while ignoring the need to invest in diplomacy to prevent conflicts and defend Canadian values abroad.

Instead of solely focusing on military spending, he said Ottawa could mobilize investment and governments of various countries to have better freshwater management, because numerous countries are on track for major droughts that can lead to armed conflict.

Axworthy said Carney’s major-projects legislation, Bill C-5, has undercut reconciliation efforts with First Nations and the government “ignored” Indigenous Peoples in its rush to get the bill passed.

“It’s way past (just) being consulted. They have to be partners. They have to be involved. They’re basically the third pillar of this country,” the former Manitoba MP said of Indigenous Peoples.

“You’re going to get the machinery working, but you’re going to leave a lot of roadkill along the way.”

The government fast-tracked the sweeping legislation and opted against shortening the 12-week summer break to give it more study.

Carney’s office has not yet responded for a request for comment.

The prime minister himself was extolling the virtues of Canadian democracy Tuesday.

“We find ourselves in a situation where our values are being tested by attacks on democracy and freedoms — attacks that we must resist,” Carney said in his Canada Day remarks.

“In a world that’s fraught with division … we’ve decided not to pull apart and fight, but to come together and to build.”

Axworthy noted that Carney came from a life outside politics and said that’s among the reasons why he endorsed Chrystia Freeland instead of Carney in this year’s Liberal leadership race.

“I don’t think he’s ever knocked on that door or gone to a constituency meeting until he became a leadership candidate,” he said in the interview.

Axworthy repeated an idea he floated in January — that Ottawa should work with the countries Trump has talked of absorbing to mount a campaign to promote rules-based trade and peace in the Arctic.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.

Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press


LOS ANGELES (AP) — A federal lawsuit filed Wednesday accuses President Donald Trump’s administration of systematically targeting brown-skinned people in Southern California during an ongoingimmigration crackdown that has put the region “under siege.”

The court filing in U.S. District Court alleges that federal agents have violently and indiscriminately arrested people without probable cause while carrying out “immigration raids flooding street corners, bus stops, parking lots, agricultural sites, day laborer corners.”

The lawsuit asks the court to block the Trump administration’s “ongoing pattern and practice of flouting the Constitution and federal law” during actions in and around Los Angeles.

”These guys are popping up, rampant all over the city, just taking people randomly and we want that particular practice to end,” Mohammad Tajsar, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, told the Los Angeles Times.

In addition, the complaint claims that those arrested are held in “dungeon-like” conditions without access to lawyers.

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said in an email that “any claims that individuals have been ‘targeted’ by law enforcement because of their skin color are disgusting and categorically FALSE.”

McLaughlin said “enforcement operations are highly targeted, and officers do their due diligence” before making arrests.

“All detainees are provided with proper meals, medical treatment, and have opportunities to communicate with lawyers and their family members,” she said.

The complaint centers around three detained immigrants, several immigrant rights groups and two U.S. citizens, one who was held despite showing agents his identification. It comes days after the Trump administration sued Los Angeles to overturn what it called an “illegal” sanctuary city law.

Tens of thousands of people participated in recent rallies over immigration raids and the subsequent deployment of the National Guard and Marines. Los Angeles prosecutors have charged more than 40 people in connection with protest-related violence and vandalism. Among the latest people charged were a man and woman accused of assaulting police horses and a 17-year-old boy who faces felony counts, including attempted murder and assault against an officer.

At least 14 people are facing separate federal charges on allegations of assaulting police officers with cinder blocks and Molotov cocktails, and conspiracy to impede arrests.

The Associated Press


Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic candidate for the New York mayoralty, poses for a selfie with a supporter on July 2 in New York City.

It may not have garnered a lot of attention in Canada, but America’s largest city and global financial centre appears set on choosing its very own version of Justin Trudeau as its next mayor.

Zohran Mamdani is a man with a

brand

, a New Yorker with a remarkably similar look, sound and feel to Canada’s ex-prime minister. Handsome as all get-out, in a particularly boyish, non-threatening sort of way, he’s young, hip, well-coiffed and strategically-attired, his

wardrobe

carefully selected to suit the setting and deliver the message he’s chosen to project that day. Born in Uganda to a pair of glam

parents

— his father a professor of post-colonial studies, his mother an Oscar-nominated filmmaker — he fizzes with energy, has an excellent smile, is absolute murder at selfies.

At 33, Mamdani is made for magazine covers. He excites the young, is thoroughly left wing, thinks

billionaires

shouldn’t exist and promises a cornucopia of popular

goodies

for the city’s struggling middle- and working-classes should he be elected New York mayor as expected in November. Free buses. Frozen rents. City-owned grocery stores stocked with lower-priced offerings, paid for by higher corporate taxes and levies on the wealthy.

What could go wrong? Not much, as far as the coalition of youth, migrants and educated leftists who pushed Mamdani to a stunning victory in the Democratic mayoral primary — and thus the favourite in the fall election — are concerned. His meteoric rise to political stardom — a year ago he was a little-known member of the state assembly — carries broad echoes of the dramatic burst of popularity that carried Trudeau to the prime ministership in 2015. His meticulously calculated social media strategy, online presence, branding, logo, videos and even the wild colours of his campaign materials — dreamed up by a pair of Philadelphia designers — blew the competition away. It didn’t hurt that the “competition” came in the form of the stodgy, discredited, 67-year-old former governor Andrew

Cuomo

.

If anything should have been clear to Democrats following their disastrous presidential defeats of 2016 and 2024, it’s that chaining themselves to tattered scions of outdated family dynasties is anything but a formula for political triumph in the current state of U.S. politics. But no, after watching Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris crash and burn, establishment Democrats went ahead and bet their fate on Cuomo, son of another former governor, just four years after he

resigned

when investigators concluded he’d sexually harassed at least 11 women since being elected to the state’s highest office.

While Canadians may not see New York’s choice in mayors as particularly relevant, even with the city’s US$116-billion

budget

and a population bigger than all but two provinces, Mamdani’s rise signals that U.S. Democrats are nowhere near sorting out the dilemma of Donald Trump and the never-ending diet of disruption he represents well beyond U.S. borders.

Clinton, Biden and Cuomo were all dyed-in-the-wool representatives of a moderate, centrist, middle-of-the-road sort of politics that looks to be dead and buried among Republicans and increasingly feeble within America’s only other major party. A successful takeover of Democratic leadership by its more radical representatives would all but guarantee an escalation of today’s ruthless partisanship to levels hitherto unimagined.

Among mainstream Americans, and in dozens of foreign capitals, a hope has persisted that some day the Trump presidency would end, the spark of the MAGA movement would fade and the world could return to something resembling “normal.” But a headstrong and energized U.S. left bent on battle with the hardened forces of Trumpism would all but guarantee normality had nothing to do with the political future.

The Democratic establishment was in turmoil well

before

the Mamdani

surprise

came along. Former vice-president Harris’s loss to Trump in November left it in disarray, with no clear successor and no obvious plan. The New York Times reported its national committee was “in chaos … plagued by infighting and a drop in big donations.” The party is so busy battling within itself it had little energy to spare for Republicans.

The few signs of life have belonged to its most extreme elements. Firebrand Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders have headlined a series of well-attended rallies targeting the rich and old guard. Mamdani, like Sanders, identifies himself as a democratic socialist, and

overcame

Cuomo’s once-healthy lead despite Cuomo’s overwhelming support among the party’s senior figures.

Current New York Governor Kathy Hochul, head of the state’s Democrat apparatus,

withheld

her endorsement and repeatedly mispronounced Mamdani’s name. Billionaire Michael Bloomberg, who ran for the presidential nomination as a Democrat, gave US$8.3 million in Cuomo’s support. City developers were said to be “gripped by hysteria” at Mamdani’s plan to freeze some rents, while Wall Street was reported as

seized

by

panic

at the

prospect

of a socialist running the city.

Given he would be the city’s first Muslim mayor, Mamdani faced predictable anti-Islam

attacks

and allegations of antisemitism. Though he

supports

the Palestinian movement and has harshly

criticized

Israel, accusing it of war crimes, he denies being antisemitic and received support from a number of Jewish leaders. That in itself reflects the fissures troubling Democrats as the party’s traditional sympathy for Israel comes under strain over its actions in Gaza.

Mamdani still has to win the election, but as the Democratic nominee in the heavily Democratic city he would need to suffer a monumental collapse to lose. Cuomo is keeping his

name

on the ballot even without official sanction. Current mayor Eric Adams is running again, but as an independent after his backing collapsed amid a series of scandals. The Republican candidate, Curtis Sliwa, is a radio talk-show host and paramilitary

enthusiast

who

twice

tried unsuccessfully to launch a citizen-based anti-crime

squad

in Toronto. Not much competition there.

It’s difficult to believe a detour into glitz, glamour and left-wing economics is the route to a better and more stable U.S. It certainly didn’t work for Canada, and there’s no sign that a quorum of Americans is open to socialist theorems that have failed again and again elsewhere. A credible opponent offering a menu of common decency, civility and shared purpose would seem a better antidote to Trumpist exhibitionism and greed. But America as yet doesn’t seem to have such a person, and New York isn’t America.

National Post


The exterior of a circa 1913 building with gothic and Tudor revival features with a sign outside that says Canada Revenue Agency, National Headquarters. Connaught Building.

Companies that paid the now-defunct digital services tax will have to wait for Ottawa to pass new legislation before they can get their refund, the Canada Revenue Agency has confirmed.


Peter Guthrie wears a grey suit and is surrounded by reporters holding microphones inside the Alberta legislature.

Peter Guthrie and Scott Sinclair, ousted from Danielle Smith’s caucus, hope to relaunch Tories as opposition group in fall.


WINNIPEG — The former head of Manitoba Hydro was paid just over $881,000 last year, despite being dismissed six weeks into the year.

Jay Grewal’s earnings in previous years, where she had worked a full year, ranged from $500,000 to $546,000.

The amount last year, revealed in an annual Manitoba Hydro compensation report, suggests a large lump sum payment when Grewal was let go as president and chief executive officer.

Crown-owned Manitoba Hydro is not releasing details, saying only that Grewal was paid out according to the terms of her contract and that no severance was issued.

Grewal was appointed by the former Progressive Conservative government and ruffled feathers last year when she said Manitoba would reach out to independent producers to supply power from wind and other sources.

The NDP government said new energy resources would have to be publicly owned.

The two also appeared to be at odds over the government’s aim of having Manitoba Hydro at net zero emissions by 2035.

The NDP replaced the Manitoba Hydro board soon after winning the October 2023 election, and the board parted ways with Grewal.

Grewal, who could not be reached for comment, was replaced by Allan Danroth in the summer of last year.

Danroth was paid a total of $192,454 for the months he worked, the compensation report says.

The Canadian Press applied under Manitoba’s freedom of information law last year for details of Grewal’s package after she was let go.

The request was refused under a section of the law that allows the government to not release personal information about a third party.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025

Steve Lambert, The Canadian Press


WASHINGTON (AP) — Roughly 11.8 million adults and children will be at risk for losing health insurance if Republicans’ domestic policy package becomes a law.

The losses won’t come all at once. The GOP’s “ One Big, Beautiful Bill Act ” makes changes that will whittle away at enrollment through federal health care programs like Medicaid and Obamacare over a decade in order to wrest nearly $1 trillion from Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program.

The bill is likely to reverse years of escalating health insurance rates in the U.S., gains that have also been marked by record spending on federally-funded health care coverage. Roughly 78 million adults and children are enrolled in Medicaid’s programs while 24 million people are enrolled in the ACA’s marketplaces.

Medicaid is a joint federal-state venture that is administered by the states. The program goes by different names in some states, like Medi-Cal in California, BadgerCare in Wisconsin, or MassHealth in Massachusetts.

A look at some of the ways in which people may lose health care coverage under the GOP’s plan:

Medicaid or Obamacare enrollee? Your income and eligibility will be checked closely and more often.

Under the GOP’s plan, states will need to verify a person’s income to check Medicaid eligibility every six months.

People who are homeless or transient may miss notices from the government to fill out paperwork more frequently, said Martha Santana-Chin, the CEO of L.A. Care Health Plan, which provides Medicaid for millions of Los Angelenos. They’ll lose their coverage if they don’t respond.

“The life experience of these individuals is not necessarily one that allows them the luxury of having to work through onerous paperwork,” Santana-Chin said.

When Texas increased income eligibility checks between 2014 and 2019, for example, thousands of kids lost coverage in the state. Critics faulted the frequent checks, too, for the state having the highest rate of uninsured children in the nation at the time.

States will also be required to check enrollees’ addresses and death records more frequently.

People enrolled in the ACA’s marketplace coverage will also be subject to more scrutiny over their reported income and face penalties if they end up earning more than they expected when signing up for the coverage. They’ll have to wait for the government to verify their information, too, before getting coverage.

It will be a sharp contrast from employer-based coverage, where people are re-enrolled every year unless they opt out.

Is your child enrolled in coverage?

States will be allowed to delay kids from enrolling in the Children’s Health Insurance Program in some cases.

They will be allowed to temporarily block parents from enrolling their children if they are behind on paying the premiums for the coverage. Those premiums for kids’ coverage can run as much as $100 a month in some states, according to health policy research firm KFF. States will also be able to introduce a waiting period for kids who are being transitioned from private health insurance plans to Medicaid.

The Biden administration prohibited states from locking out parents from enrolling their kids in coverage over missed payments or a waiting period when transitioning from private health insurance.

Are you an immigrant? Getting coverage may get harder.

The bill narrows the definition of who qualifies for lower Obamacare, restricting access for thousands of refugees and asylum seekers who come to the U.S. every year.

States that offer Medicaid coverage to cover immigrants who may not be here legally will also receive less money from the federal government. Several states allow immigrants to enroll in Medicaid, paid for only using state tax dollars. But the bill threatens that coverage by lowering the rate the federal government pays for all legal residents from 90% to 80%.

That will lead some states to drop their program for immigrants entirely rather than lose federal funding. Already, California has announced a freeze on any new enrollment for the state funded Medi-Cal for all immigrants. Illinois, meanwhile, halted its program this month.

Able-bodied? You’ll have to work, volunteer or go to school.

Most coverage losses are expected to come from the GOP’s proposed work requirement. People aged 19 through 64 will be required to work, volunteer or go to school for 80 hours per month in order to qualify for Medicaid under the new law. They’ll be exempt if they’re disabled, pregnant or parent a child who is 14 or younger.

Ultimately, some people will decide they don’t want to work and don’t need the coverage, said Michael F. Cannon, director of health policy studies at the libertarian think tank Cato Institute.

“It can encourage people who don’t value Medicaid coverage not to sign up for it,” Cannon said. “And that saves the government money.”

Most Medicaid enrollees already work, attend school, have a disability or are caregivers, which should exempt them from the requirement. Only about 8% of enrollees report not working or being unable to find work.

In some cases, people will lose coverage even if they’re working. They will fall victim to bureaucratic errors, overlooked forms, or trouble getting all of the documents — like proof of employment and tax forms — together to prove to the government that they’re working. Verifying work will be especially difficult for people who don’t have access to the internet, a computer or phones.

That’s how some people lost coverage in Arkansas, which tried to enact work requirements in 2018. Roughly 18,000 people were pushed off Medicaid within seven months. A federal judge later blocked the requirement.

Enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid? It will be harder to apply

Millions of people qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid, often because of a disability.

The GOP bill will roll back requirements of the ways the Biden administration streamlined enrollment for those people, including a rule that required states to automatically enroll people into coverage if they qualify for supplemental income because of a disability.

“By rescinding these rules and no longer requiring states to make some of these simplifications, it’s likely that some people will lose coverage because they get caught up in these paperwork burdens,” said Jennifer Tolbert, director of state health policy at KFF.

Amanda Seitz, The Associated Press




Data from Flightrader24.com shows the point where the Boeing aircraft suddenly dropped and reduced speed.

A Japan Airlines flight from Shanghai to Tokyo made an emergency landing this week after plummeting almost 8 kilometres in less than 10 minutes. Once the plane was safely on the ground, passengers were given 15,000 yen (Cdn $142) in compensation, plus a free night’s accommodation, according to reports.

According to

People magazine

, Monday’s flight JL8696 was operated by Spring Japan, a low-cost subsidiary of Japan Airlines, and was scheduled to fly from Shanghai to Tokyo, a two and a half hour journey.

However, about an hour into the flight the plane

descended rapidly

from a cruising altitude of about 11,700 metres down to just 3,000 metres while reducing its speed from 880 kph to 560 kph. It then levelled out at the new altitude and, about 45 minutes later, made an emergency landing in Osaka, Japan.

None of the 191 passengers and crew on board the Boeing 737-800 was injured. Reports said the pilots contacted air traffic controllers when the aircraft triggered an alert about an irregularity in the pressurization system that maintains cabin air pressure.

Reports noted that oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling during the descent, and that passengers feared the plane might crash.

According to the Hong Kong news site

The Standard

, one passenger said she drafted a farewell note to her husband during the descent, while another described the cabin falling eerily silent as the masks dropped and she imagined she might perish. A third recalled being on “the verge of tears” as they scribbled a will and wrote down details of their insurance and bank card PINs.

The aircraft was diverted to Kansai International Airport in Osaka and landed at about 8:50 p.m. local time. It then spent about an hour on the tarmac before passengers were able to deplane.

Spring Japan subsequently posted a

notice on its website

, cancelling the Shanghai-to-Tokyo run and its return flight for the next two days, citing “aircraft scheduling.” It apologized for the inconvenience and offered full refunds within 30 days, or no-charge rebooking in the same time period.

The Associated Press reports that an investigation into the cause of the incident has begun as of Wednesday morning. National Post has reached out to Spring Japan for more information.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency says taxpayers who already paid the now-defunct digital services tax will have to wait for Ottawa to pass new legislation before they can get their refund.

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced late Sunday that, in a bid to restart trade negotiations with the United States, Canada was dropping the tax on global tech giants.

The first payment was due Monday and could have cost American companies like Amazon and Uber billions of dollars.

A CRA spokesperson says the agency already collected some revenue from the digital services tax before Ottawa’s reversal but didn’t cite an amount.

MPs are now on their summer break and the spokesperson says they’ll need to pass legislation formally revoking the tax when Parliament returns in order for taxpayers to get their money back.

The CRA waived the requirement for taxpayers to file a DST return ahead of the June 30 deadline and will not ask for any related payments in the meantime.

— With files from Anja Karadeglija

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press


OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to meet with automotive sector CEOs this morning.

The sector is a key front in the trade war between the United States and Canada.

A spokeswoman for the Prime Minister’s Office said the CEOs of Ford Canada, Stellantis Canada and GM Canada will be in attendance, along with Brian Kingston of the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association.

U.S. President Donald Trump has said repeatedly that the U.S. does not need Canadian cars and he wants to see automotive companies move all production to the U.S.

The U.S. has imposed 25 per cent tariffs on vehicles manufactured in Canada, with a carve-out for components built in the U.S. through the highly integrated vehicle supply chain.

Canada and the U.S. are back at the bargaining table after Trump called a halt to trade talks over Canada’s plan to impose a digital services tax on multinational tech firms — a plan the Carney government called off Sunday evening.

Carney has said he wants a new Canada-U.S. trade deal in place by July 21 and if that deadline isn’t met, he’ll boost Canadian trade countermeasures.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.

David Baxter, The Canadian Press