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Prime Minister Mark Carney poses for a photo following ceremonies marking the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on Parliament Hill on Sept. 30, 2025.

Could it be just a year ago that Justin Trudeau announced his resignation as prime minister?

Mark Carney won the leadership on an accelerated schedule and began dismantling the Trudeau policy agenda even more quickly. The new prime minister boasted about the cancellation of the consumer carbon tax with the old prime minister sitting in the front row. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.

It was as if the Liberal party had, vis-à-vis Trudeau, adopted Katy Perry’s

Roar

as its theme song for 2025: “You held me down, but I got up/ Get ready ’cause I’ve had enough/ … ‘Cause I am a champion and you’re gonna hear me roar.”

The champion, after breaking up with Trudeau, roared to its fourth consecutive election victory. Trudeau was invited to the throne speech and, trying to keep the old flame flickering, greeted King Charles III in the Senate chamber wearing garish sneakers. The King and Carney instead wore their prominent Order of Canada medallions.

Canada’s sovereign announced plans to put Trudeau’s agenda in the rear-view mirror. Out went the capital gains tax increase, in came a middle-class tax cut. No talk of “phasing out” the oilsands, but instead a promise to build, build, build, which in Canada means natural resource infrastructure.

The government was soon smiling on the very LNG projects about which Trudeau said there was “no business case.” It signed — in Alberta! — an agreement to agree at some point to build a pipeline. As an added bonus, Trudeau’s designated mascot for environmental extremism, Steven Guilbeault, resigned from cabinet. Don’t let that door hit you either.

Trudeau’s economic and environmental policies have been cast aside, so much so that the Conservative opposition has understandably accused Carney of stealing its policies. A key question for 2026 will be whether Trudeau’s Indigenous policy will be next to go.

Trudeau’s premiership began with the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) report in 2015. He embraced even its most extravagant claims, fuelled as he was by two powerful factors — conventional liberal self-loathing for Canada’s history and his guilt over his father’s assimilationist views.

Trudeau never believed that Canada was truly a

“genocidal” nation

, but he did feel guilty that his father’s long premiership looked the other way on residential schools. As Chris Selley noted in these pages, “If Canada committed genocide, and if it were ever to be litigated, former prime minister Jean Chrétien’s never-ending-adulation post-retirement tour would surely grind to a halt: If the guy who was

minister of Indian Affairs

during a key period in the residential school system’s history and was co-author of the infamous, assimilationist ‘white paper’ isn’t in trouble, then who?”

Carney’s paternal legacy on the question is

altogether different

. He was born in the Northwest Territories because his father had made great sacrifices to educate Indigenous children in the remote north. He has not repeated the casual slanders-by-association that Trudeau and the TRC propagated.

Will Carney will chart a new course, better for Indigenous Canadians and better for Canada?

A promising sign came last month on the 10th anniversary of the TRC report. Carney issued a largely

pro forma
statement of support

, but there were not the high-profile rituals of abasement and reproach favoured by his predecessor. Most interesting, in detailing the latest billions of federal monies poured into reconciliation projects, the statement began by noting the “doubling (of) the Indigenous Loan Guarantee Program and building projects with greater Indigenous equity ownership.”

It’s a small thing, but highlighting investment and partnership, rather than expanded bureaucracy and dependency, is a welcome shift. Not a small thing was Carney’s decision to announce priority resource projects without engaging in years-long consultation with government-approved Indigenous leaders.

The Assembly of First Nations howled about that at its December meeting, but Carney knows that plenty of local Indigenous communities are eager for resource developments, while it remains in the bureaucratic interest of national Indigenous leadership to block them. Money generated by resource development goes directly to Indigenous entrepreneurs and workers and local bands; the spigot of TRC-driven settlements is controlled by an entrenched establishment whose self-interest depends upon a path of ongoing recrimination, not authentic reconciliation.

Carney’s decision not to give Indigenous officialdom a pre-emptive veto over Indigenous prosperity is a welcome break from 10 years of Trudeau stagnation. At this early stage, it is a possible indication of what may come; the test will be when actual resource proposals are advanced.

Carney was able to move as quickly as he did in casting aside the Trudeau-Guilbeault eco-agenda because of the Trump disruption. The B.C. courts have provided another disruption that will make it easier for him to adjust his predecessor’s course. Calling into question the property ownership of B.C. businesses and homeowners has already reset the political calculus, and not only on the West Coast.

The AFN’s foolish call last month for the “hate speech” criminalization of “denialism” regarding residential schools and unmarked graves is another example of being increasingly out of touch with ordinary Canadians of goodwill. Can it possibly be a crime to deny something that is not true, namely that mass graves of Indigenous children have been found in Canada? The protest against “denialism” is just evidence that, after 10 years, TRC-inspired claims are no longer the only opinions permitted in polite company.

Trudeau and the TRC were fabulous for Indigenous gatekeepers, who got to negotiate massive government transfers to their communities, even as their work set back the cause of genuine economic progress for Indigenous Canadians. Even more than the Trudeauvian policies he has already jettisoned, Carney should want to change that.

National Post


This image posted on US President Donald Trump's Truth Social account on January 3, 2026, shows what President Trump says is Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro onboard the USS Iwo Jima after the US military captured him on January 3, 2026. (HANDOUT / US President Donald Trump's TRUTH Social account / AFP via Getty Images)

The United States has a really bad record when it comes to regime change.

Time and again it’s sought to oust foreign leaders and replace them with more favoured replacements. The success rate isn’t great.

It was a disaster in Vietnam, at a horrendous cost in life. Cuba, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, … defeat, disappointment, debacle, take your pick. Again and again the U.S. has proved its ability to go where it wishes, overpower opponents and rid the planet of tyrants and terrorists as it sees fit, only to find the aftermath fails to match expectations.

Just four years ago the Biden administration orchestrated the most recent example, before Saturday’s dramatic events in Venezuela. The hasty and chaotic retreat from Afghanistan damaged Biden’s image so badly he never really recovered. The frantic U.S. flight was so beneficial to political opponents Trump officials are still making hay of it, just recently ordering a review of the withdrawal as “an important step toward regaining faith and trust with the American people and all those who wear the uniform.”

Yet, as the seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife demonstrate, presidents have difficulty resisting the potency American military power gives them, even if it means toppling a foreign leader with no guarantee of what might come afterwards. Overthrowing a government while hoping for the best has been a hallmark of past U.S. forays; it’s the toppling that grabs their attention, the future being left for later. It’s a big reason the outcome has so often delivered disappointment.

There’s no dispute that Maduro has been a calamity for his country. By all the evidence he’s been as grasping and pitiless a despot as you could find this side of Moscow. He’s been in power since 2013, holding onto office through a mix of corruption, violence and fixed elections, driving the economy into the ground, impoverishing millions and prompting a veritable stampede of desperate Venezuelans fleeing the country.

No one outside his small circle of avaricious cronies is likely to miss him much. His support from Russia, China and Iran drew mainly from his ability to irritate the U.S. This isn’t Trump’s first attempt to impose his will on a foreign power — far from it. But it’s the first time he sent an armada to deliver the message.

What remains to be seen is whether once again it’s the toppling that’s captured Washington’s enthusiasm. If U.S. strategists have a well thought-out plan for supporting and advancing the shattered country Maduro leaves behind, they haven’t mentioned it beyond Trump’s assertion that “we’re going to run the country.” That plan didn’t start out well: while Trump told reporters Venezuelan Vice-President Delcy Rodriquez “was essentially willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again,” Rodriquez soon after gave a speech in Caracas declaring continued support for Maduro and denouncing U.S. actions as “a barbarity.”

Trump appeared to dismiss the possibility power could pass to Maria Corina Machado, officially considered the opposition leader, although she was banned from running in the 2024 presidential election and went into hiding soon after the vote in fear for her life. As an ardent free-marketer and avowed admirer of the U.S. president she might reasonably expect to be looked on favourably, yet nothing is ever certain in the Trump administration. Machado might be a skilled activist and protest organizer, but she’s untested as a ruler and rabble-rousers have a chequered history once in power.

Besides that, Machado won last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, an honour Trump believes should have gone to him. And while Machado is “a very nice woman,” Trump said Saturday, she “doesn’t have the support” in Venezuela to lead.

It’s entirely possible others will seek to fill the void. Machado may be better known, but it’s another figure,

Edmundo González,

who headed the opposition presidential ticket in 2024 and was recognized by the U.S., and Canada, as the winner.

There is no guarantee the Maduro establishment will disappear with him. While Trump posted a photo Saturday of Maduro being moved to the U.S. in handcuffs, the rest of his government remains in place. Rodríguez was sworn in as interim leader, surrounded by Maduro’s defence minister, attorney general and top legislators and judges.

Good governance may be far from the first item on the White House to-do list. The Trump team has made no bones that it’s overwhelming concern is in doing deals viewed as profitable to U.S. interests, which in Venezuela’s case would mean ready access to its massive oil reserves. The U.S. justified it’s actions against Caracas as a war on the drug trade, but even before Saturday’s intervention Trump accused Venezuela of illegally seizing U.S. oil.

“You remember they took all of our energy rights,” he told reporters. “They took all of our oil not that long ago. And we want it back.” After Maduro’s capture, Trump announced that “we’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country.”

Past U.S. experience suggests the most difficult part of Washington’s Venezuelan incursion.

Iraq remains host to 2,000 U.S. troops and an array of hostile armed militias loyal to Iran, with an insecure government caught between the two, struggling to avoid an explosion. More than a decade after its “liberation,” Libya is a divided country, riven by civil war, with competing warlords and rival governments at opposite ends of the country. Afghanistan, meanwhile, is back in the hands of the Taliban, 20 years and thousands of deaths after Washington and its allies set out to evict them.

Saddam Hussein is gone. Muammar Gaddafi is gone. Osama bin Laden’s remains were dumped at sea, all thanks to U.S. interventions. With Venezuela now in his hands, President Trump hopes to perform the difficult trick of repeating the same action over again while hoping for a different result.

National Post


Workers install a Canadian flag on the front of the Manitoba legislative building in Winnipeg on March 4, 2025. Letter writer John Harris says Canadians must demand more from their governments in order for us to live up to the potential with which we’ve been endowed.

‘Live up to the potential with which we’ve been endowed’

Re: Economic progress won’t be easy in 2026 — Jack Mintz, Jan. 2

Despite the huge increase in the number of public servants since 2015, despite the even larger increase in the cost of the public service, every day the National Post publishes articles, usually on the front page, pointing out areas of government incompetence or indifference.

The list of failures is long. They include failure to deport criminal aliens (or even keep track of them), failure to appoint enough judges to get the courts moving, failure to protect Jewish Canadians during this extended period of increasingly violent antisemitism, failure to get a trade deal with the U.S., failure to attend to a 44-year-old patient having heart attack in a hospital ER waiting room, a failure that resulted in an unnecessary fatality, failure of the police to investigate documented online hate, failure to grow GDP per capita by any significant amount for a decade, failures in federal procurement, particularly military procurement, failure to properly manage an immigration program designed to attract immigrants with needed skills and waiting jobs, and failure to contain separatist sentiment in Quebec and Alberta.

Indeed, it is hard to think of much that government touches in Canada that is successful. I’m certainly not an anarchist; government should play a positive role in society. My dismay is that citizens don’t demand better of our governments. There is daily praise for Prime Minister Mark Carney but I’m not sure for what, other than having raised the bar a bit from Justin Trudeau.

I, for one, can’t imagine why we accept mediocrity and are generally uncritical. We are a blessed country. We have almost unlimited resources, wealth beyond imagination compared with many other nations, an educated and skilled workforce, unlimited land and water, no real natural enemies on our border, oceans surrounding us on three sides and, Donald Trump’s musings notwithstanding, a relatively benign neighbour to the south. We should be thriving, not last in the G7 in terms of economic growth when population change is factored in.

It starts with government but it will take ordinary (and extraordinary) citizens to demand more and vote differently for us to live up to the potential with which we’ve been endowed. It’s a new year — let’s get started.

John Harris, Toronto


Grow up, Greta

Re: Greta’s journey from child climate activist to terrorist mascot — Terry Newman, Dec. 30

Greta Thunberg certainly loves all the attention she gets, doesn’t she? But every stunt she pulls just makes her more tiresome. She comes from a privileged family and rather than thumbing her nose at that, she should show some gratitude and pay it forward. It would be nice if she would finally grow up and do something useful and meaningful with her life that perhaps might benefit the western society where she actually comes from.

Glynis Van Steen, Burlington, Ont.


‘Hotbed of hatred’ must be faced down

Re: Car service for the Jewish community offers alternative amid antisemitic Uber incidents — Courtney Greenberg, Dec. 14

It’s come to this, has it? In order for Jewish people to feel safe in the Greater Toronto Area they need to use a Jewish ridesharing service? It’s disgraceful to say the least, and it tells us a lot about ourselves and the country we live in. We have allowed Canada to become a hotbed of hatred that must be faced down.

The people who are screeching through bullhorns in shopping malls and outside of churches and synagogues should be arrested and charged with hate crimes. We used to have people in charge who would not tolerate such behaviour. Where are the men and women of integrity and courage? We certainly are not electing them to public office.

Ted Mead, Winchester, Ont.


Breaking up is hard to do

Re: U.S. outreach, Alberta separatists will head to Latin America to rustle up support for their cause — Tracy Moran, Dec. 26

Most separatists see the exercise as an on/off switch. Flick the switch, and the next day you have your own country and total freedom. But the actual process of setting up one’s own country, especially in this country, involves convincing those who don’t want to separate in the first place, such as many Indigenous people (both in Alberta and Quebec), and the English and Jewish populations in Quebec. The challenges would be endless with regards to a currency, treaties, trade, etc. Most separatists haven’t really thought it through.

Separation always sounds good, but in reality it wouldn’t work. It would be like trying to separate Jell-O.

Douglas Cornish, Ottawa


In praise of Rob Reiner

Re: ‘The Princess Bride’ puts modern fantasy to shame — Geoff Russ, Dec. 23

Geoff Russ is justified in praising Rob Reiner’s 1987 film “The Princess Bride,” celebrating its romance, humour and enduring charm as an antidote to today’s often joyless fantasy genre. Yet Russ felt compelled to qualify his admiration by distancing himself from Reiner’s progressive politics, which he admitted to disliking intensely because he thinks they reflected a despairing nihilism.

His unease raises a familiar question in our polarized moment: how can an artist whose politics one rejects produce art that feels so affirming? A closer look suggests the answer is simple —good storytelling transcends ideology. Reiner’s films drew on humanistic values that resonated across partisan lines, offering shared moral ground even to those who opposed his views.

It may not be human nature to separate politics from art — but perhaps in the spirit of good will to try. In this seasonal celebration of light amid winter’s darkness, Reiner’s films remind us that forgiving ideological trespasses can kindle shared hope. Disagree with the director if you must, but let the movie affirm life. That choice enriches us all.

Tony D’Andrea, Toronto


‘Show some mercy!’

Re: Justin Trudeau’s life after politics: Shopping at Canadian Tire, dating Katy Perry … and those sneakers — Kenn Oliver, Dec. 29

I thought I was safe from seeing the vacuous stare of our former prime minister until I opened the Dec. 30 edition of the National Post. I am pretty sure that I speak for the majority of Canadians when I ask that we be spared from this ordeal as we are still trying to recover from Justin Trudeau’s almost 10 years of failed leadership as the worst prime minister in Canadian history. I urge the media to show us some mercy and give us a much-needed break.

Bob Erwin, Ottawa


Appalled by antisemitism

Re: Canadian Jews are being targeted simply because they are Jewish — Harley Finkelstein, Dec. 31

I read article after article, letter after letter, about violence against, and intimidation of Jews in this country — a situation that has resulted in Jewish peoples’ inability to live in peace and safety. I wonder if most Canadians are as appalled as I am, that this situation continues unfettered by the laws that should be preventing its escalation.

I think of Jewish parents trying to explain to their children that this country, their country, will not protect them from this intimidation, will not offer them the same protection that every Canadian citizen is entitled to.

I used to wonder how the Nazi “cleansing” could possibly have occurred among a civilized population. I am seeing firsthand how that could have happened. The majority did nothing — said nothing.

It is past time for the collective Canadian voice to speak up, to insist that all Canadians be protected from intimidation and violence, from the raucous gangs who take over our streets with hateful chanting and threats. If we don’t, who are we?

Theresa Moylan, Victoria, B.C.


Names of prominent Jews adorn university buildings, professional schools, hospitals and other public buildings across Canada, seemingly disproportional to our population. The reason for this is simple — charitable giving (tzedakah) is one of the 613 commandments to which we Jews are obligated. You might say that it is in our DNA.

Since the horrific terrorist attack of October 7, 2023, demonstrations of Jew-hatred on campuses and in our streets have been unrelenting, with meagre response by law enforcement.

Kudos to the National Post and Harley Finkelstein, one of Canada’s most successful entrepreneurs, for bringing to light the failings of our leaders and justice system that have allowed this non-stop hatefest to poison our Canadian landscape. It is past time that other influential Jewish leaders do the same. Remove your names from the university buildings that carry them, defund your favourite academic institutions; lobby your MPs and city councillors; let them know that their inaction in addressing this dangerous scourge is unacceptable.

Susan Silverman, Toronto


The tragedy of the Hanukkah massacre at Bondi Beach in Australia is that it was both predictable and preventable. Prior to this horrific, senseless event, both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Rabbi Eli Schlanger, who was murdered in cold blood at Bondi, had written to Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, warning of danger to Australia’s Jewish community.

Albanese ignored the warnings. Politically inconvenient, one supposes. Fifteen people, including a Holocaust survivor, a respected and loved Rabbi and a 10-year-old girl, paid with their lives for Albanese’s callous disregard.

Ottawa may be thousands of kilometres away from Canberra, but when it comes to Israel and Jewish communities, there is very little daylight between Albanese and our prime minister. The two men are mirror images of each other.

Like Albanese, Mark Carney recognized a non-existent Palestinian state in violation of the 1933 Montevideo Convention, which laid out the conditions that must be met before statehood could be conferred on any entity, and the Oslo Accords, which stipulated that statehood for the Palestinians must result from a negotiated settlement. None of these conditions has been met, but that didn’t deter Carney, whose actions have been widely seen as a reward for decades of Palestinian terrorism. Carney’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Anita Anand, in the first week of her tenure, lost no time in communicating to Canadian Jews, via her hostility to Israel, that they have no friends in Cabinet.

In the wake of the Bondi massacre, Carney gave a stirring speech in which he vowed to protect Canada’s Jews. “Words, words, words,” says Hamlet to Polonius in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, a stark reminder that words are cheap. What matters is action.

And it is not at all clear what action, if any, Carney will take. The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has warned Carney that “A violent extremist attack in Canada, including one targeting the Jewish community, remains a realistic possibility.” Carney has to make a choice — either move to curb the rampant Jew-hate polluting our streets and every aspect of our lives, and thus risk antagonizing the members of his caucus who signed the “Vote Palestine” declaration prior to last spring’s election, or gamble like Albanese did, that nothing will come of the CSIS warning.

I wouldn’t bet on this one …

E. Joan O’Callaghan, Toronto


Guard food sovereignty

Re: Canadians should thank Trump for targeting supply management — Gwyn Morgan, Dec. 9

With the importance of national food sovereignty in sharp focus for many Canadians, it’s shocking to see Gwyn Morgan promote a misleading narrative about supply management.

Supply management keeps production aligned with demand, helping to ensure a reliable, high-quality supply of dairy, eggs and poultry from Canadian farms for Canadians.

Chicken prices are up just 1.5% year-over-year, according to Canada’s consumer price index, and 2025 production is expected to be 2.7% above last year, despite pressures from avian influenza. Canadian farmers are expected to lift turkey production 3.8% in 2026 due to a buoyant market and competitive pricing. The prime turkey cut, breast meat, is currently priced well below the U.S. market. While Americans experienced drastic egg shortages and skyrocketing prices caused by avian influenza, our national egg supply and retail egg price stayed stable.

On dairy, the prices Canadians pay on the most often consumed dairy products (yogurt, cheese, and butter) were lower or comparable to those in the U.S. Plus, the U.S. heavily subsidizes its dairy production, leaving consumers to pay twice — once through their taxes and again at the store.

Suggesting that Canada should give up its food sovereignty plays into foreign interests. Instead, let’s continue to recognize supply management as a vital part of Canada’s future.

Roger Pelissero, Chair, Egg Farmers of Canada; David Wiens, President, Dairy Farmers of Canada; Tim Klompmaker, Chair, Chicken Farmers of Canada;  Darren Ference, Chair, Turkey Farmers of Canada; and Brian Bilkes, Chair, Canadian Hatching Egg Producers.


National Post and Financial Post welcome letters to the editor (250 words or fewer). Please include your name, address and daytime phone number. Email letters@nationalpost.com. Letters may be edited for length or clarity.


Venezuelan citizens in Colombia celebrate during a rally after the confirmation of Nicolas Maduro's capture this early morning in Caracas on January 3, 2026 in Bogota, Colombia. (Photo by Andres Rot/Getty Images)

The capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicholás Maduro and wife Cilia Flores by U.S. forces is cause for global celebration, though caution is warranted so long as the Maduro regime’s remaining leadership clings to power.

Overnight strikes on the South American country were limited to

military-related infrastructure

, including the headquarters of the Venezuelan armed forces and a handful of air fields and ports. In the ensuing chaos, American special forces infiltrated Maduro’s 

fortress-like compound

, detained him and his wife, and then transported them to New York to face drugs and weapons charges.

Other high-ranking members of the regime — such as the vice president, interior minister and Attorney General — were

left untouched

.

U.S. officials, particularly Republicans, have long maintained that Maduro is 

not Venezuela’s legitimate leader,

 given his history of election fraud. They have instead characterized him as a narco-terrorist who personally leads the 

Cartel of the Suns

, a criminal organization operated by the Armed Forces of Venezuela that specializes in drug trafficking, money laundering and terror financing.

Maduro is also widely despised by Venezuelans for his economic ineptitude, corruption and cruel autocratic rule. Since he took office in 2013, the country’s socialist economy has 

shrunk by three quarters

— a collapse generally unheard of outside of wartime — and 

almost eight million refugees

 have fled abroad due to starvation and abject poverty. The country’s elections are now entirely rigged, and political dissidents 

widely jailed and tortured

.

In a press conference on Saturday morning, Trump indicated that the United States will

“run” Venezuela

 “until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition,” and that he wants American 

oil companies

to enter the Venezuelan market, which has struggled under socialist policies, and “start making money for the country.”

While Trump declared that he is not afraid to launch a second wave of strikes, and even place American boots on the ground if necessary, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that 

no further military action

is anticipated for now — so escalation will apparently depend on whether the Venezuelan government agrees to cede power.

Caracas’ remaining leaders immediately 

condemned

 the American bombings and Maduro’s detainment, suggesting that they won’t be eager to listen to Trump’s proscriptions. They benefit from the fact that, unlike other autocrats, Maduro always relied on a constellation of influential domestic allies to maintain power, and was thus never indispensable to his own regime.

But even if these residual Madurists can, in the absence of their leader, retain control over the Venezuelan state, they will likely be weakened by some degree of factionalism. Presumably, any reasonable person in their position would also think twice about resisting Washington now that it is clear just how far Trump is willing to go, and how easily uncooperative leaders can be detained and imprisoned.

So despite the regime’s structural resilience, there is good reason to be optimistic.

In his Saturday news conference, Trump

claimed

 that Rubio had been talking with Venezuela’s vice president, Delcy Rodriguez, and that she may be willing to work with the United States in some transitional capacity. Yet, 

four sources told Reuters

that Delcy had actually flown to Moscow following Maduro’s detainment — a story which the Russian foreign ministry denied as “fake” — so her candidacy remains uncertain.

Meanwhile, Venezuela’s exiled opposition leader, Maria Corina Machado, 

posted a public letter 

suggesting that she and her pro-democracy allies would be willing to take power if permitted. “Venezuelans, The time for freedom has come!… Let us remain vigilant, active, and organized until the democratic transition is complete,” went the letter, warning citizens to prepare for further communications.

They would clearly have popular support. In the country’s 2024 presidential election, which was widely-condemned as fraudulent, preserved tally sheets showed that the opposition candidate, Edmundo González, probably won with 

around 80 per cent

 of the vote before the final numbers were seemingly fudged to give Maduro a narrow “victory.”

Pushing for an opposition-led transitional government would be the ideal, and most ethical, outcome — but so much is still up in the air. It remains entirely possible that the surviving Madurists will try to preserve their power by any means necessary, including brutal crackdowns, until removed by the American military.

Despite these uncertainties, the Venezuelan diaspora, engorged by millions of refugees who recently fled Maduro’s madness, is 

celebrating

. Street parties were held on Saturday in major cities 

throughout Latin America

and Spain. “We are free. We are all happy that the dictatorship has fallen and that we have a free country,” said one Santiago-based reveller to Reuters, mirroring the joy seen in countless social media posts that have flooded online.

Within Caracas, where criticism of the government is grounds for arrest, some of Maduro’s supporters have rallied in defence of their detained president. Yet, 

footage of the event

 suggests that the crowd 

is small

, quiet and unenthusiastic, in stark contrast to the 

frenetic and bustling energy

 of the international anti-Maduro crowds.

Western policymakers, particularly American ones, also have many reasons to celebrate.

Ever since socialist populist Hugo Chavez was elected Venezuela’s president in 1999, the country has been 

a thorn in the West’s side

. A staunch opponent of Washington, Chavez propped up Cuba’s failing economy with discounted oil, established a 

strategic alliance with Iran

, purchased large volumes of 

Russian weapons

 and accepted 

oil-backed loans

 from China that gave Beijing a foothold in Latin America.

As Chavez’s protege and successor, Maduro only continued these policies which is why, last year, Russia supplied

several air defence systems

to Caracas, which were destroyed in Saturday’s American operation.

By taking Maduro out, and indirectly demonstrating the superiority of America’s military technology, the Trump administration effectively struck another blow against the global anti-western axis and showed that American power has not diminished as much as some critics would like to believe. So long as the United States follows through, and ensures that a just transition is implemented, the world will be a better place for Venezuelans and their democratic supporters alike.

National Post


NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 11: Flowers are seen on names of victims of the  9/11 terror attack during the annual 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum on September 11, 2024 in New York City.  (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

New York City’s newly elected mayor, Zohran Mamdani, rang in the New Year and his term at city hall by

saying

in his inauguration speech that his administration will “draw this city closer together” and “replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.” But “rugged individualism” is the characteristic trait of Americans, especially New Yorkers. It’s this nature of individualism that makes the United States the most innovative country in the world.

The very individualistic people of New York are by no means frigid or lacking in warmth for their fellow citizens. New Yorkers regularly support each other in times of crisis. During the COVID pandemic, residents

cheered

frontline workers from their balconies. Ordinary citizens became heroes pulling together aid to help their

neighbours

any way they could.

Likewise, during hurricane Sandy, the city’s residents

came together

in solidarity to support those affected by flooding and power outages caused by the severe storm. But perhaps the most obvious sign that New Yorkers do not need lessons in solidarity from Mamdani is the great collective efforts its residents displayed in the aftermath of the horrific terror attack on 9/11.

Medical professionals, police officers, pastors, clergy and church groups

sprang

into action. Volunteers rushed to the area where the Twin Towers used to stand, to help emergency response workers, some later choosing to

become volunteers

themselves. Firefighters who searched through the rubble risked, and in some cases later succumbed to, lung diseases caused by the debris they breathed in.

This year, on the attack’s 24th anniversary, New York volunteers continued to show their collective warmth by

preparing

millions of meals for their fellow residents.

If Mamdani’s blatantly false comments suggesting that New Yorkers needed a lesson in warmth from his administration weren’t insulting enough, his actions have made it clear that his idea of collective warmth has limits and do not extend to the loved ones of 9/11 victims or Jews.

Of all the people Mamdani could choose as his legal counsel, he picked Ramzi Kassem, a lawyer who

defended

al-Qaida terrorist Ahmed al-Darbi in court. While al-Darbi did not participate in the 9/11 attacks, he was convicted in connection with the attack on a French oil tanker in 2002, and was part of the same terrorist network that made no secret of its hatred for America.

To call this move tone-deaf is an understatement. There’s no way that Mamdani is unaware of how it looks to those who lost loved ones or volunteered on 9/11.

If his history of defending an al-Qaida member wasn’t troubling enough, Kassem, who’s now 47, penned anti-Israel articles for his campus newspaper when he was a student. He also represented

Mahmoud Khalil

, who was detained by immigration authorities for his anti-Israel activities at Columbia University.

Kassem can also be seen in a video

advising

pro-Hamas protesters on a video conference titled, “Emergency Session: A Survival Guide to Arrests and Jail Support.” In the video, he counsels the students to think carefully with “fellow organizers and fellow protesters” about their “individual risk factors,” when it comes to the “consequences of arrest.”

He advised them that riskier roles, where they are more likely to get arrested, should be filled by “U.S citizens, as opposed to green-card holders or visa-card holders or brothers and sisters who may be undocumented.” Everyone has a right to a legal defence, but Kassem is counselling students about who should commit the most serious crimes in order to avoid the most severe consequences.

Not only are Kassem’s interests niche, they raise serious questions about his ability to provide legal counsel to Mamdani that serves the best interests of all New Yorkers.

There are other signs Mamdani is not interested in a warm, fuzzy collective of New Yorkers living in solidarity with Jews. On Day 1, he

revoked

the widely recognized International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism.

Even more troubling, not 24 hours after being sworn in as mayor of the city that boasts the largest Jewish population in the world outside of Israel, Mamdani began

scrubbing social media posts

that acknowledged rising antisemitism and the city’s commitment to address it from the mayor’s official X account, in a move that may be illegal, as the posts are considered part of the public record.

One of the now-deleted posts discussed the creation of the Mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism “to make fighting hate a policy priority.”

Another now-scrubbed post once read: “New York City isn’t just talking about the rise in antisemitism — we’ve taken action. Today, we released the first-ever municipal report on our efforts to combat antisemitism. It’s bold. It’s detailed. It’s a blueprint for 2026.”

The removal of these posts caused the National Jewish Advocacy Centre to write Mamdani a letter expressing alarm: “It is difficult to overstate how disturbing it is that one of your very first acts as mayor of New York City, on your very first day in office, was to delete official @NYCMayor tweets addressing the protection of Jewish New Yorkers.…

“At a moment of unprecedented antisemitic intimidation, violence and exclusion in the city the decision to erase official statements affirming the safety and protection of Jews is not merely tone-deaf, it is shameful. It sends a message, whether intended or not, that Jewish New Yorkers are uniquely (undeserving) of continuity, clarity or reassurance from their own government.”

Mamdani’s insensitive choice of counsel, as well as the immediate scrubbing of his predecessor’s posts, suggests he has a revised blueprint for Jewish New Yorkers in 2026 that already appears more frigid, and is not in the interests of the collective.

National Post

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Twitter.com/TLNewmanMTL


24 Sussex Dr. in Ottawa.

The inferior national newspaper has seen fit to bid farewell to the old year by printing

another op-ed

bemoaning the uninhabitable state of the prime minister’s traditional primary residence at 24 Sussex Dr. I wonder if this is going to become an actual political cause in 2026 — whether our sudden Trump-era panic about state capacity and national self-reliance is going to be pressed into the service of rebuilding or rehabilitating 24 Sussex.

On one hand, it might be nice if anyone in Ontario, at any level of government, could demonstrate an ability to actually create new housing. On the other, I’m not sure that it would be good news if the first fruits of Canada’s renewed determination to build “infrastructure” ended up being what amounts to a third official home for the PM (who has the 16-room suburban retreat at Harrington Lake, and who is currently occupying Rideau Cottage on the viceregal grounds, as his forerunner did).

Globe contributor Chris Westdal, a lifelong member of the foreign service, takes the usual flag-waving approach in appealing for a rebuild of 24 Sussex, suggesting that national pride is at stake. “Is there any other state on earth that has or would let the residence of its leader fall to vermin?” he asks, apparently unaware of the catastrophic rodent problems at the eternally miserable 10 Downing St., or of the countries that don’t provide an official residence for their head of government at all. (There aren’t too many of these, since the distinction between “government” and “state” is less pertinent to republics, but they do include two important peers of Canada, Ireland and Switzerland.)

He pleads that 24 Sussex is “incontestably an iconic national symbol — the best-known address in the land.” I am almost reluctant to attempt an answer beyond “Come off it, bro.” This assertion might have been true in my raw youth and Westdal’s, when Canadian reporters were still imperial-influenced and used 24 Sussex as a metonym as their British colleagues still use 10 Downing.

But that habit has fallen by the wayside as the house itself has been abandoned. (We speak now of the “PMO” as the locus of power.) If we joined hands on a journalistic street mission and asked some ordinary Canadians to draw 24 Sussex from memory, how does he suppose they would do? Could you describe its exterior colour without peeking?

Westdal does write about the 24 Sussex problem, or pseudoproblem, with flair; and he shrewdly avoids the classic error of blaming flint-hearted, austere voters for the bureaucratic torpor of the National Capital Commission (NCC). (Along with, perhaps, the questionable original quality of the building itself, which was never meant to be a permanent state monument.)

The disrepair of the PM’s residence is, in fact, “an insult made by our leaders to our people. I’m sure I’m far from alone in resenting the assumption clearly made by our political leaders that I am so blinded by resentment, so immature and bereft of pride, that I would punish at the ballot box any government that built a fine new residence for our leaders.”

Let’s set aside the weird bit about Westdal being resentful about being thought resentful. I don’t suppose my position on the matter represents that of the general public, but I do take a certain odd pride in Canada having arrived at a constitutionally appropriate equilibrium by accident. Leaving aside all cost issues completely, it makes perfect sense that our prime minister should inhabit a guest cottage behind the viceregal palace, and not in some

boreal version

of the White House, which is both source and symbol of the toxic American cult of the chief magistrate.

It makes historic sense that our House of Commons speaker lives better on the public dime than the prime minister (as he always has, here and in the United Kingdom). And while it seems faintly ludicrous that the Opposition leader’s official residence happens to be habitable and decent in an era when the prime minister’s isn’t, I am not sure this isn’t a perfectly proper way to arrange the incentives, either.

The NCC is supposed to present a menu of choices for the future of 24 Sussex early in the new year, creating a slight suspicion that Westdal has been recruited to warm us up for the

most expensive option

— one that attributes a sacred status to the 24 Sussex street address, and that would require us to build a full-service “residence” that can also accommodate receptions and parties held for diplomatic purposes. (If it needs to be stated explicitly, this is “public” “infrastructure” that the public will never be allowed to enter, approach too closely or even get a good look at, and, yes, this does matter.)

The first assumption incorporated here, about the importance of the 24 Sussex address, is downright silly. As to the second, you may have heard that the president of the United States has found it necessary to build a gigantic ballroom adjacent to the White House precisely because his official home is not capacious enough for executive entertaining. This project has armies of critics, but the fundamental reason for it is established and long-recognized.

Westdal, who has spent his adult life in diplomacy, insists that the building where the PM sleeps and his children do laundry or homework must also be where he receives foreign dignitaries. Someone should explain why, and by “explain” I don’t mean “assert belligerently that it is the case.”

One hopes the eventual choices suggested by the NCC are genuine and creative. The practical objections to secure, comfortable Harrington Lake as a year-round residence seem to boil down to the PM having a commute into official Ottawa. And, then again, if we construct a new palace at 24 Sussex, the need for extreme privacy will make it five or 10 times more expensive than it would otherwise be.

Assuming we can all be made to swallow that logic, the NCC has other Ottawa properties that might be repurposed affordably. I wonder if there is any legitimate reason that Laurier House, a building of greater historic and architectural distinction than 24 Sussex, could not be brought back into a role it fulfilled for a half-century. Then again, maybe it’s full of rats and asbestos, too.

National Post

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New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani waves during his public inauguration ceremony, in New York on Thursday.

It took less than 24 hours for Zohran Mamdani to prove he is the worst possible nightmare for already nervous New York Jews. Mere hours after becoming New York’s new mayor on Thursday, the 34-year-old Democratic Socialist began enacting the strident anti-Israel (and, many insist, antisemitic) ideological agenda that fuelled his election victory.

Two key executive orders implemented by outgoing mayor Eric Adams

have been scrapped

since Mamdani took office. The first barred municipal agencies from boycotting or divesting from Israel. This is a tactic that Mamdani has championed since his college days as essential to his quest to dismantle Zionism.

The second revoked the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism, which equates elements of anti-Zionism with antisemitism.

Mamdani has long been opposed to Israel’s status as a Jewish state. And revoking both Adams-era orders so early in his tenure signals a no-holds barred approach to Israel.

Make no mistake: Zohran Mamdani knows exactly what he is doing. Rather than ban the two initiatives on their own, for instance, Mamdani ordered an end to all executive orders issued by Adams since he was indicted on federal corruption charges in September 2024.

This provided him with the cover of a “fresh start” — as his office described it in

a press release

— for his administration from Day 1. This is true. But what is equally true is that Mamdani insists that any “fresh start” must include placing Israel directly in his cross-hairs.

The reaction to Mamdani’s moves was swift and predictable — yet impressively strident. Israel’s Foreign Ministry

described them

as pouring “antisemitic gasoline on an open fire,” while former mayor

Adams declared

that Mandani’s “new era … isn’t new … and isn’t (the) unity” he promised to deliver as a candidate.

Coun. Inna Vernikov, meanwhile,

wrote

on social media that, “the pro-Hamas antisemites emboldened by” the mayor “are coming,” in the wake of Mamdani’s dubiousness on Day 1.

In many ways, the “pro-Hamas” antisemites are already here and, as evidenced by

the synagogue melee

Mamdani so poorly failed to condemn in November, they’re already bolder than ever. The question is: what happened next?

Mamdani showed unanticipated restraint in his decision to spare New York’s Office to Combat Antisemitism, which Adams established in May. This makes sense: retaining the office allows Mamdani to claim a Jewish safety “win” — one that appears leadership-like but avoids direct engagement with Israel.

This, ultimately, is the new mayor’s main goal: to decouple Israel from Judaism — along with antisemitism from anti-Zionism. An Office of Antisemitism operating within an administration that separates Israel-hate from Jew-hate does just that.

The executive order roll-back wasn’t the only move Mamdani has made that has raised the ire of already suspicious New York Jews. The first was Mamdani’s appointment of

Ramzi Kassem

as his chief counsel on Wednesday.

Kassem rose to fame last year for defending detained Columbia University campus organizer Mahmoud Khalil during his extradition battle with the Trump administration. Kassem will now help develop legal strategy for New York City.

Then, on Thursday, Mamdani’s office deleted posts from the mayor of New York’s official X account about combating antisemitism.

The posts were originally made by Mayor Adams as part of his effort to calm Jewish New Yorkers enduring high levels of antisemitic hate crimes — prompting questions about Mamdani’s motivations for removing them. A suitable explanation has yet to be delivered.

Finally, there was Mamdani’s

bellicose inauguration speech

, in which he promised that, “Palestinian New Yorkers … will no longer have to contend with a politics that speaks of universalism and then makes them the exception.” Most would be hard-pressed to encounter these supposedly silenced Palestinians, but such sentiments are certain to sit well with Mamdani’s pro-Gaza base.

The scrubbing of executive orders and social media posts further added to the feeling many New York Jews have that Mamdani in oblivious — if not outright indifferent — to their concerns. Many, of course, had anticipated a Mamdani attack on the overtly pro-Jewish agenda that anchored Mayor Adams’ four years in office.

Indeed, while Mamdani has made clear that he will never visit Israel — and has threatened to arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he were to step foot in New York City, home of the United Nations General Assembly — Adams has made repeated trips to Israel, including in November, when he met with Netanyahu .

But even the most cynical skeptics could not have anticipated such severe Mamdani measures so early in his mayorship. Packed with dozens of functionaries so hostile to Israel that the Anti-Defamation League launched a dedicated “

Mamdani Monitor

” to keep tabs on them, the new administration has taken its first shots — and Israel and the Jews who support it now clearly understand there is nowhere to hide.

National Post

David Christopher Kaufman is a New York-based journalist and former New York Post editor and columnist. Sign up for his Substack newsletter, Counterintuitive.


As 2025 began, federal records showed that there were 4.9 million visas set to expire in the coming 12 months, with Conservatives pressing the Liberal government on how it would deal with those who didn’t leave willingly.

“The vast majority leave voluntarily, and that’s what’s expected,” was the 

official committee testimony

of then Immigration Minister Marc Miller.

As to how many ended up doing so, the short answer is that Ottawa doesn’t really know.

Despite Statistics Canada noting a slight contraction of the Canadian population at the end of 2025 – and border authorities reporting an uptick in “enforced removals” – Canada does not keep exit statistics on foreign visa holders.

In 2023, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada estimated that between “20,000 and 500,000 persons” were

living illegally in Canada

. Known officially as “undocumented migrants,” these were foreign nationals with “no authorization to reside and/or work in Canada.”

“Some may have overstayed their temporary status, while others may have remained in Canada following a rejected asylum claim,”

read a backgrounder

submitted to the House of Commons Committee on Citizenship and Immigration.

In 2024, meanwhile, the immigration minister estimated that the population of foreigners living illegally in Canada

could be as high as 600,000

.

At the close of 2024, an order paper question by the Conservatives confirmed that a total of 4.9 million visas and immigration permits were set to expire by the end of December 2025.

At the time, the Liberals noted that this figure included everything from tourist visas to temporary work permits for visiting performers.

“We are talking about 4.9 million documents, sometimes many that apply to one person. They are tourists. The vast majority of the people leave the country, including artists who come to this country, such as Bruce Springsteen and others,” Miller told the House of Commons in November 2024.

Nevertheless, it also included a record high number of temporary migrants who had entered the country on student visas or as temporary foreign workers – and were now actively being told those visas would not be renewed as part of an effort to “turn off the taps” on migration numbers.

At the start of 2025, Statistics Canada said there were 3,138,129 temporary migrants in the country; more than double the 1,413,706 the agency had charted only three years prior, at the start of 2022.

As everyone from

the Bank of Canada

to

the OECD

has recorded, this influx was unlike anything in Canada’s history. It made Canada the fastest growing country in the G7, with the Bank of Canada

noting it represented

an “unprecedented surge in immigration” composed primarily of low-skilled migrants from the developing world.

As of the most recent figures, Canada’s population of temporary migrants

has dropped to 2,847,737

. This was

largely credited

for a 0.2 per cent drop in the Canadian population charted in the third quarter of 2025.

But it means that of the 1.5 million migrants who surged into the country following the end of COVID lockdowns, approximately 1.3 million are still here.

At the close of 2025, the Canada Border Services Agency released figures showing that their officers were removing record rates of unauthorized foreign nationals from the country.

Although deportation orders didn’t quite hit the highs charted during the first months of COVID lockdowns, the CBSA broke records for what it called “enforced removals.” This is a category that includes deportations, as well as foreigners who left following a deportation order, or who were turned away at the border and given an exclusion order.

For 2025, the total “enforced removals”

came to 18,785

, as compared to 17,357 the year prior, and 15,207 in 2023.

Throughout 2025, a common critique of the Conservatives was that if even a small portion of Canada’s record-high temporary migrant population refused to self-deport, the feds lacked capacity to remove them by force.

As one example, in October Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada told a House of Commons committee that 47,175 people who had entered Canada on student visas were “non-compliant.” Meaning that they had never registered at a university as promised, and their current location remained unknown.

Even if CBSA could find them, at current rates of enforced removals it would take more than two years just to account for this one category of delinquent migrants.

In June, Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel Garner told the House of Commons “by the end of this year, nearly five million people will be in Canada with expired or expiring visas, and the government has no plan for how it is going to get them to leave.”

This prompted a reply from Immigration Minister Lena Diab, who said “we take our immigration system very seriously on this side of the aisle, as I know all Canadians do.”

She added, “for that reason, we are strengthening the integrity of our system while maintaining the humanitarian ability that we have in this country.”


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered the ultimate Boxing Day troll by

recognizing

the state of Somaliland — a country that few people have heard of, and even fewer have given a passing thought to — provoking widespread international condemnation.

There are

legitimate strategic reasons

for Israel to recognize the fledgling statelet. Somaliland’s president announced his intention to join the Abraham Accords, which would expand the list of countries that have normalized relations with Israel. The country is close to Yemen and could allow Israel to attack Houthi targets if it were allowed to establish a military presence there. It is also located at the mouth of the Red Sea, which is often used to deliver weapons and fighters to Israel’s enemies.

But it’s hard not to see the move as a troll directed at world leaders who are still patting themselves on the back for recognizing a nonexistent Palestinian state in the fall.

Israel and Somaliland do share some commonalities. Like Israel, Somaliland is a byproduct of the collapse of the British Empire following the Second World War. It became

a British protectorate

in 1884 and a Crown colony in 1920. It briefly gained independence in 1960 before joining with the Trust Territory of Somalia, which was governed by Italy under a United Nations mandate, to form the Somali Republic.

In 1991, as the Soviet Union was breaking apart like a jigsaw puzzle in an earthquake, Somaliland once again declared its independence. But unlike the alphabet soup of Soviet republics that were welcomed into the community of nations, Somaliland was universally shunned.

Despite this, it has operated with de facto independence since Bryan Adams’ “(Everything I Do) I Do It for You” was topping the charts. It holds democratic elections that have

been praised

by western observers. It operates its own police force and

judicial system

, has its own army, its own currency and issues its own passports. It has

a constitution

asserting its sovereignty that was overwhelmingly adopted in a democratic referendum.

While the border between Somalia and Somaliland is in dispute, most of its territory is clearly defined. And, despite its problems, it is far more stable and

free

than neighbouring countries, including Somalia.

“Palestine,” on the other hand, does not have clearly defined borders or an established government. It is split between Gaza and the West Bank. Half of Gaza is controlled by a genocidal terrorist organization that has so far refused to disarm, while Israel controls the other half. The West Bank is also split into

three areas

, with Israel and the Palestinian Authority, a weak authoritarian government, having varying degrees of control over each. And the West Bank’s borders have yet to be settled under international law.

Somaliland is, in other words, much closer to the

internationally accepted definition

of what constitutes a state than “Palestine” is, or ever has been.

Nevertheless, Netanyahu’s announcement was bitterly condemned by regional and global powers, resulting in a

hastily planned

UN Security Council

meeting

on Monday, where only the United States was willing to stick up for the Jewish state.

A

joint statement

issued by numerous countries — including Qatar, Jordan, Egypt, Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkey and Yemen — unequivocally rejected and condemned the move “in the strongest terms,” claiming it would have “serious effects on international peace and security,” and is a “grave violation of the principles of international law.”

Yet these countries were saying very different things when France led the charge to recognize a Palestinian state earlier this year. Qatar

praised Canada

for recognizing a Palestinian state in September and called on other countries to “take similar steps that reflect their commitment to international law.”

Saudi Arabia also

said

that such recognitions “confirm the international consensus on the inherent right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, the establishment of their state, the ability to live on their land in security and peace, and the fulfillment of their aspirations for stability and prosperity,” while claiming that it would lead to “lasting security and peace.”

For those keeping track: Palestinians have a right to self-determination, but the Somalis of Somaliland do not; recognizing Somaliland is a violation of international law that threatens peace and security, while recognizing Palestine is in keeping with international law and will lead to peace and harmony.

International law, however, is not so clear cut. Articles 1 and 2 of the

UN Charter

discuss the need to maintain “international peace and security” and prohibit using force to subvert the “territorial integrity or political independence” of member states. But Israel is not threatening to use force and it’s not at all clear that recognizing a country that has existed for more than three decades will lead to violence.

The issue of international law as it applies to the Palestinian territories is also a matter of intense debate. Israel’s presence and settlements in the West Bank are often cited as violations of international law. But the fact is that the West Bank’s borders have yet to be settled under the Oslo Accords, the relevant international legal statutes, largely due to Palestinian resistance.

Moreover, some international legal experts make a compelling argument that Israel is not an occupying power at all.

Natasha Hausdorff

, a British lawyer who specializes in international law, summarized the argument nicely in a 2020 article published in the

Jewish Chronicle

.

Hausdorff argues that, “The universal rule for determining borders for emerging states, ‘uti possidetis juris,’ dictates that such states are established with the same boundaries of the prior administrative entity in that land, unless otherwise agreed.…

“Under this principle of international law, as the only state to emerge from the British Mandate, on 14 May 1948 Israel automatically inherited the mandatory boundaries as its own borders. The eastern border ran along the Jordan River all the way south to the Red Sea, originally dividing the British administrative units of ‘Palestine’ and ‘Transjordan.’ ”

Thus, Hausdorff argues, the West Bank and Gaza have been sovereign Israeli territory since 1948, even when they were occupied by Jordan and Egypt, respectively. “Since the application of this fundamental principle to determine Israel’s borders at the moment of independence in 1948, there has not been a single agreement to alter territory or borders,” she continues. And, in the “absence of a final settlement” of the Oslo Accords, “sovereignty and borders have remained unchanged.”

By recognizing Somaliland, Netanyahu is forcing Israel’s detractors to confront the hypocrisy of their own arguments in favour of conjuring a Palestinian state out of thin air. I do hope that one day we will see a Palestinian state existing side-by-side with Israel in peace and prosperity. But that’s not going to happen until world leaders, including our own prime minister, recognize the complexities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and confront their own biases against the Jewish state.

National Post

jkline@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/accessd


B.C. Premier David Eby is smudged with tobacco by Mitchell Tourangeau during a gathering to mark the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, on Tuesday, September 30, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

In September, the British Columbia Supreme Court threw private property into

turmoil

. Aboriginal title in Richmond, a suburb of Vancouver, is “prior and senior” to fee simple interests, the court

said

. That means it trumps the property you have in your house, farm or factory. If the decision holds up on appeal, it would mean private property is not secure anywhere a claim for Aboriginal title is made out.

If you thought things couldn’t get worse, you thought wrong. On Dec. 5, the B.C. Court of Appeal delivered a different kind of upheaval. Gitxaala and Ehattesaht First Nations claimed that B.C.’s mining regime was unlawful because it allowed miners to register claims on Crown land without consulting with them. In a 2-to-1 split decision, the court

agreed

. The mining permitting regime is

inconsistent

with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP). And B.C. legislation, the court said, has made UNDRIP the law of B.C.

UNDRIP is a declaration of the United Nations General Assembly. It consists of pages and pages of Indigenous rights and entitlements. If UNDRIP is the law in B.C., then Indigenous peoples are entitled to everything — and to have other people pay for it. If you suspect that is an exaggeration, take a spin through

UNDRIP

for yourself.

Indigenous peoples, it says, “have the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired … to own, use, develop and control, as well as the right to “redress” for these lands, through either “restitution” or “just, fair and equitable compensation.” It says that states “shall consult and cooperate in good faith” in order to “obtain free and informed consent prior to the approval of any project affecting their lands or territories and other resources,” and that they have the right to “autonomy or self-government in matters relating to their internal and local affairs, as well as ways and means for financing their autonomous functions.”

The General Assembly adopted UNDRIP in 2007. At the time, Canada sensibly voted “no,” along with New Zealand, the United States and Australia. Eleven countries abstained. But in 2016, the newly elected Trudeau government

reversed

Canada’s objection.

UN General Assembly resolutions are not binding in international law. Nor are they enforceable in Canadian courts. But in 2019, NDP Premier John Horgan and his Attorney General David Eby, now the Premier, introduced Bill 41, the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (

DRIPA

). DRIPA proposed to require the B.C. government to “take all measures necessary to ensure the laws of British Columbia are consistent with the Declaration.” The B.C. Legislature unanimously passed the bill. (The Canadian Parliament passed a

similar bill

in 2021.)

Two years later, the legislature passed an amendment to the B.C.

Interpretation Act

. Eby, still B.C.’s Attorney General, sponsored the bill. The amendment read, “Every Act and regulation must be construed as being consistent with the Declaration.”

Eby has expressed

dismay

about the Court of Appeal decision. It “invites further and endless litigation,” he said. “It looked at the clear statements of intent in the legislature and the law, and yet reached dramatically different conclusions about what legislators did when we voted unanimously across party lines” to pass DRIPA. He has promised to amend the legislation.

These are crocodile tears. The majority judgment from the Court of Appeal is not a rogue decision from activist judges making things up and ignoring the law. Not this time, anyway. The court said that B.C. law must be construed as being consistent with UNDRIP — which is what Eby’s 2021 amendment to the Interpretation Act says.

In fact, Eby’s government has been doing everything in its power to champion Aboriginal interests. DRIPA is its mandate. It’s been making covert agreements with specific Aboriginal groups over specific territories. These

agreements

promise Aboriginal title and/or grant Aboriginal management rights over land use. In April 2024, an

agreement

with the Haida Council recognized Haida title and jurisdiction

over Haida Gwaii

, an archipelago off the B.C. coast formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands. Eby has said that the agreement is a

template

for what’s possible “in other places in British Columbia, and also in Canada.” He is putting title and control of B.C. into Aboriginal hands.

But it’s not just David Eby. The Richmond decision from the B.C. Supreme Court had nothing to do with B.C. legislation. It was a predictable result of years of Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) jurisprudence under

Section 35

of the Constitution. That section guarantees “existing” Aboriginal and treaty rights as of 1982. But the SCC has since championed, evolved and enlarged those rights. Legislatures can fix their own statutes, but they cannot amend Section 35 or override judicial interpretation, even using the “notwithstanding clause.”

Meanwhile, on yet another track, Aboriginal rights are expanding under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. On the same day as the B.C. Court of Appeal decision on UNDRIP, the Federal Court released two judgments. The federal government has an actionable duty to Aboriginal groups to provide

housing

and

drinking water

, the court declared. Taxpayer funded, of course.

One week later, at the other end of the country, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal weighed in. In a claim made by Wolastoqey First Nation for the western half of the province, the court

said

that Aboriginal title should not displace fee simple title of private owners. Yet it confirmed that a successful claim would require compensation in lieu of land. Private property owners or taxpayers, take your pick.

Like the proverb says, make yourself into a doormat and someone will walk all over you. Obsequious devotion to reconciliation has become a pathology of Canadian character. It won’t end well.

National Post

Bruce Pardy is senior fellow with the Fraser Institute, executive director of Rights Probe and professor of Law at Queen’s University.