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The Quebec government has used the notwithstanding clause of the constitution to shield the province's secularism law from the courts.

OTTAWA — There should be limits on the use of the notwithstanding clause that is being increasingly invoked by provinces to curtail people’s Charter rights, the federal government I argued in the challenge of Quebec’s secularism law at the Supreme Court.

In its first legal intervention in the lengthy challenge of Quebec’s controversial law, the federal government argued in submissions filed Wednesday that the Supreme Court should set out limits of Section 33 of the Charter of Rights, known as

the notwithstanding clause

.

The clause allows a government to override certain Charter rights for up to five years, at which point the use of the power must be reviewed.

If accepted by Canada’s top court, the government’s proposal could create the first ever substantive limit to the use of the increasingly popular notwithstanding clause.

The argument puts the federal government in direct opposition with Quebec, Ontario and Alberta, which have all argued against limits on the use of the notwithstanding clause.

In its submissions, Ottawa argued that the notwithstanding clause should not be allowed to be used so repeatedly that the rights it suspends are irreversibly damaged.

“The temporary character of the use of s. 33 confirms that it cannot be used to cause an irreparable impairment of the rights and freedoms,” the government argued in its factum. To do so would be akin to an “unauthorized” constitutional amendment, it added.

“The constitutional limits of the s. 33 power preclude it from being used to distort or annihilate the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter, or to reduce them to des peaux de chagrin, that is, to shrivel them beyond recognition, if not transform them into mere legal fictions,” reads the submission.

The government also argued that the notwithstanding clause cannot suspend Charter rights beyond explicitly spelled out in section 33.

Furthermore, Ottawa argued that courts still have the power to decide if a law violates Charter rights even if it includes the notwithstanding clause.

In its submissions, the government said that a decision by the court, even if it cannot strike the law down, serves to inform citizens and legislators about the impact of legislation,

“The right of citizens to vote includes the right to be ‘reasonably informed’,” reads the factum.

The factum was filed as part of a constitutional challenge of Quebec’s secularism law, known colloquially as Bill 21, is a flagship law passed by François Legault’s government in 2019

The law prohibits certain public sector workers, such as judges, police officers, teachers and prison guards, from wearing religious symbols at work and requires them to perform their duties with their faces uncovered.

However, the government has used the notwithstanding clause of the constitution to shield the law from the courts. Every five years, this provision must be renewed by Quebec’s legislature. It was renewed last year.

Interestingly, the Carney government explicitly declines to take a position on the constitutionality of Quebec’s controversial secularism law in its filing.

Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in 2021 that he was “deeply” opposed to the Quebec bill though his government would not get involved until a Charter challenge reached the Supreme Court of Canada.

The Supreme Court has not yet set a date for the appeal hearings. The case is exceptional in that the top court has allowed a record number of intervenors to plead their case.

Last year, Quebec’s Court of Appeal ruled that Bill 21 was comprehensively shielded by the Legault government’s pre-emptive invocation of the notwithstanding clause.

National Post, with files from Antoine Trépanier.

cnardi@postmedia.com

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Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.

OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre offered Prime Minister Mark Carney a backhanded compliment while grilling him on the size of the deficit in the upcoming budget — which led to Carney boasting about his economic expertise.

The federal government has confirmed the budget will be tabled on Nov. 4 — after it spent weeks saying that would be tabled in October. There has been a whirlwind of speculation about the size of the deficit which could be approaching $100 billion according to reports.

During question period on Wednesday, Poilievre repeatedly asked Carney “how big” the deficit would be in the upcoming budget but never got a clear answer.

The prime minister simply said it would “contain the biggest investment in this country’s future in a generation” for housing, energy corridors and infrastructure among other things.

“He says he’s a great fiscal expert. So, does he know the size of his deficit? Yes or no?” asked Poilievre again, in French, using flattery in an attempt to get a clearer answer.

Carney thanked him for the “compliment” before adding, with a grin, in French: “Yes, I am a great fiscal (and) budgetary expert. Yes, I am a great economist. Thank you, sir.”

Laughter and applause erupted among the Liberal benches after Carney’s response.

“Surely, if he was such an expert, he would know the size of his own deficit,” shot back Poilievre. “It’s now halfway through the fiscal year. Six months have gone by, and he has announced $40 billion of additional spending.”

“Deficits drive up inflation, grocery prices, housing costs and interest rates. They drive out investment from our country and uncertainty that destabilizes our economy,” he continued. “We’re six months in. Does he even know the size of his own deficit?”

This time, Carney struggled to keep a straight face. “I know many things,” he said before adding with a chuckle. “I know many things… One thing I know is that Canadian interest rates are much lower than American interest rates.”

“They’re lower because this country’s fiscal situation is strong, because this government has a plan to grow this economy, and we will keep doing it.”

Poilievre replied: “The collapsing economy is bringing down interest rates, but the financial expert doesn’t even know what his own deficit is.”

Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner wrote on X shortly after the exchange in question period that Poilievre “really exposed an arrogant flavour” in the prime minister and noted that it was on the economy, a “terrain that Carney should be comfortable with.”

Later, Poilievre brought up the government’s appointment of the interim Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO), Jason Jacques, for a six-month term. He replaced former PBO Yves Giroux, who served in the role for seven years and did not see his term extended.

Jacques made a number of comments at a parliamentary committee on Tuesday, including that that his office has “a considerable degree of concern” over the lack of clarity on fiscal anchors and that his office has forecasted that the deficit will be higher than anticipated.

The PBO is expected to release its latest five-year forecast of the country’s finances next week. “I won’t get into the precise numbers, but in comparison to our last medium-term forecast, the deficit will absolutely be higher,” said Jacques.

 Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.

Carney said the government does indeed have fiscal anchors that are guiding the budgeting process.

“We are going to spend less so the country can invest more. We are going to balance the operational budget in three years. We’re going to have a declining level of debt,” he said.

Under former prime minister Justin Trudeau, the Liberal government set fiscal anchors — capping the annual deficit at one per cent of GDP and maintaining a declining debt-to-GDP ratio — to indicate Ottawa was responsibly managing public debt.

Jacques also revealed that Carney’s office called him over the Labour Day weekend to ask him if he was willing to serve a seven-year term as PBO, to which he replied that that decision was not up to the prime minister or his office — but up to parliamentarians

“It is ludicrous that you have somebody foisted on you who is selected by the head of the executive branch, and it could have been anybody,” Jacques told MPs, suggesting that they look into this “big legislative gap” to ensure that this situation never happen again.

Poilievre accused Carney of having made Jacques’s appointment as PBO “temporary so that he could hold a sword over his head and threaten him if he speaks the truth about the financial mess the prime minister has made.”

Carney said he was looking forward to consulting with the leaders of all parties in Parliament before appointing a PBO for a full seven-year term.

— With files from the Canadian Press.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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A University of Alberta faculty of law member has been put on non-disciplinary leave as a review is conducted into online comments made after the death of Charlie Kirk. (Stock Photo)

A law professor at the University of Alberta has been placed on non-disciplinary leave while the university conducts a review of online comments made in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s murder.

Law students were notified about the leave

in an email

from faculty dean, Fiona Kelly. However, the faculty member has not been identified by the university. Instead, Kelly wrote that there have “also been threats targeting faculty, staff and student groups.”

Due to “the violent nature” of the attack on Kirk and the fact it happened on a university campus, she writes, the administration seeks to ensure the safety of faculty, staff and students “particularly those who are the targets of online threats and vitriol.”

The university plans to monitor the situation as it evolves.

Kirk was killed on Sept. 10. During the aftermath of the killing, a U of A law professor who has described themself as “the first openly transfeminine clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada,”

Florence Ashley

, posted on social media app, Bluesky, about the death.

Specifically, there is a reference in the post to a New York Times column that praised Kirk as an effective practitioner of persuasion:

Charlie Kirk was practicing politics the right way

.

Columnist Ezra Klein wrote on Sept. 11: “The foundation of a free society is the ability to participate in politics without fear of violence. To lose that is to risk losing everything. Charlie Kirk — and his family — just lost everything. As a country, we came a step closer to losing everything, too.

Klein continued: “You can dislike much of what Kirk believed and the following statement is still true: Kirk was practicing politics in exactly the right way. He was showing up to campuses and talking with anyone who would talk to him.”

Prof. Ashley — who has been criticized previously for

provocative social media posts

— responded to Klein’s column: “You do not, in fact, ever have to hand it to the Nazis. I utterly do not care for any ‘virtues’ that someone may perceive in them.”

In a subsequent post, Ashley suggests that the point of the first one was not to call Kirk a Nazi. Instead, it was a reference to an internet meme that it is not necessary to “hand it to them.”

It reads: “ “Are you saying Charlie Kirk is a Nazi?” No, I’m making an allusion to this meme:” The post shows a photo of an alleged ISIL member, with a the meme that “…you do not, under any circumstances, ‘gotta hand it to them.’”

The website

Know Your Meme

explains that this particular meme is used as a joke to make fun of a poster who appears to have praised a villainous person or organization.

However, who Ashley means by “them” remains unexplained. Meanwhile, the university has not identified Ashley as the person who has been placed on leave.

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Jewish community groups have raised concerns about the presence of flags from Hamas or Hezbollah, groups long listed on Canada's terrorist list, in protests staged against Israel.

OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government is planning to make it a crime to intentionally promote hate against an identifiable group by displaying designated terror and hate symbols in public, National Post has learned.

It comes as Justice Minister Sean Fraser is

preparing to table a bill

this week to make it an offence to wilfully and intentionally obstruct places of worship, schools, and community centres, which could also include other places where an identifiable group gathers, such as a gay bar and religious college or a daycare.

Fraser has signalled that the bill would go further than the commitments Liberals promised in their spring election platform, which also included making it an offence to “intentionally and wilfully” threaten those attending those locations.

A senior source speaking on background says the government is preparing to address hate and terror symbols being used in public by making it a crime to do so when those symbols belong to groups listed as designated terrorist entities and are used to promote hate against an identifiable group.

Public Safety Canada currently has dozens of groups listed as terrorist entities, which the government designates based on reviews by officials and police.

Being listed as a federal terrorist entity makes it a crime to provide them with financing or other material support.

Jewish community groups have raised concerns about the presence of flags from Hamas or Hezbollah, groups long listed on Canada’s terrorist list, in protests staged against Israel’s ongoing war with Hamas, triggered by its attacks against southern Israel in October 2023.

Owning or displaying such symbols in one’s home would not be covered by the offence, the source said, as it would not be considered an act of promotion or used in an act against an identifiable group, which would be the criteria.

To clarify what constitutes hate, the government is also planning to define what a hate crime and hatred are in the Criminal Code in an effort to help law enforcement know when to lay such a charge, the source said.

To further address concerns that some hate propaganda offences are not resulting in charges, the government is also planning to remove the requirement for police and Crown prosecutors to recieve the consent of an attorney general before laying a charge.

Doing so would remove a “barrier” to laying such a charge, the source said, to see matters move more quickly through the courts.

The Criminal Code lists hate propaganda offences as advocating genocide, the public incitement of hatred and the wilful promotion of hatred, all of which deal with statements made in public.

Laying a hate propaganda charge has required the consent of an attorney general to safeguard the Charter protections of freedom of speech and freedom of expression.

Ensuring those rights are upheld will be the lens through which civil society, community organizations and academics will be judging Fraser’s forthcoming legislation.

Earlier on Wednesday, Fraser expressed confidence in the government’s ability to respect Canadians’ freedom of expression while also taking action to prevent hate.

His predecessor, former justice minister Arif Virani, received widespread backlash for what civil liberties advocates and academics panned as draconian measures to address the rise in police-reported hate crime in the government’s former online harms bill, which failed to pass Parliament before the spring federal election.

It included stiffer punishments for hate-related offences and proposed allowing Canadians to file human rights complaints with the Canadian Human Rights Commission based on hate speech.

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Tyler Robinson, accused of killed Charlie Kirk, was convinced to turn himself in by his parents after they recognized his photo on the news.

When she first saw photos U.S. law enforcement released of Charlie Kirk’s suspected shooter the day after his killing on a Utah Valley University (UVU) quad on Sept. 10, Tyler Robinson’s mother told police that she immediately thought the person resembled her son.

According to the

charging documents

released this week, when she called her 22-year-old son, the oldest of her three boys, he claimed to be at home sick for a second straight day.

Unsatisfied, she contacted her husband, who agreed that the pictured person resembled their firstborn.

“He also believed that the rifle that police suspected the shooter used matched a rifle that was given to his son as a gift,” the document reads.

 Tyler Robinson, accused of fatally shooting conservative activist Charlie Kirk, attends a virtual court hearing from prison in Utah, on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025.

After receiving no response to a request for a photo of the rifle, which investigators found in a wooded area near the campus, Robinson’s father called his son, who “implied that he planned to take his own life.”

His parents were able to convince him to come to their home in Washington, UT, not far from where he lives in St. George, which is about 400 kilometres from Orem, the site of the shooting.

“As they discussed the situation, Robinson implied that he was the shooter and stated that he couldn’t go to jail and just wanted to end it,” investigators wrote.

Asked about his motive, Robinson explained to his parents that “there is too much evil” and Kirk “spreads too much” of it.

Robinson’s parents persuaded him to speak with a family friend, a former deputy sheriff, and talked the young man into turning himself in to the police.

Robinson’s mother also told police that her son’s politics had started leaning “more to the left” over the past year — “becoming more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented” — and that he’d become romantically involved with his roommate, “a biological male who was transitioning genders.”

His shifting beliefs prompted debate with family, especially his father.

“In one conversation before the shooting, Robinson mentioned that Charlie Kirk would be holding an event at UVU, which Robinson said was a “stupid venue” for the event. Robinson accused Kirk of spreading hate.”

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Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet speaks to supporters at Bloc headquarters on Tuesday April 29, 2025.

OTTAWA — Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet says he’s willing to meet with leaders of Alberta’s growing pro-independence movement, following provincial counterpart Paul St-Pierre Plamondon’s whirlwind

Calgary visit last week

.

Blanchet said Wednesday that he was pondering his own goodwill voyage to Wild Rose Country before the Parti

 Québécois

leader beat him to the punch.

“I thought about it, but I understand since Paul (St-Pierre Plamondon) did it, it’s not necessary for me to do the trip,” Blanchet told reporters on Parliament Hill.

Blanchet said that he was nevertheless “very open” to the prospect of meeting and sharing ideas with Alberta separatists.

“We have to start, all independentist voices and leaders, to explain who we are, what we want, the way we would do it and what would be the morning after,” said Blanchet.

Blanchet’s comments come one week removed from St-Pierre Plamondon’s two-day visit to Calgary, where the PQ leader made contact and

reached a broad understanding

with leaders of the pro-independence Alberta Prosperity Project (APP).

St-Pierre Plamondon’s office

confirmed the next morning

that he’d made assurances to the APP delegation that, as premier, he’d respect the results of a successful referendum on Alberta independence, marking the

first time in history

that a PQ leader has publicly endorsed another province’s independence movement.

The PQ is heavily favoured to win the upcoming provincial election, expected for next fall, and St-Pierre Plamondon has promised to hold a referendum on Quebec’s independence in his first term as premier.

St-Pierre Plamondon has been critical of the Bloc, under Blanchet’s leadership, for straying too far from the goal of Quebec independence. He personally admonished Blanchet after

the recent federal election

to return to his “separatist roots.”

Blanchet, for his part, hasn’t hesitated to tweak Albertan politicians and the province’s budding separatists.

When asked in May if

he had any advice

for Alberta separatists, Blanchet said that their first challenge will be to “define oneself as a nation.”

“Therefore, it requires culture of their own. And I’m not sure oil and gas qualify to define a culture,” he joked.

Blanchet offered, during

a war of words

with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith last September, to personally coach her on how to better advocate for her province with Ottawa.

Jeffrey Rath, a lawyer with the APP, was quick to extend an open invitation to the Bloc leader.

“We would be pleased to meet with M. Blanchet. We see this as a furtherance of APP’s role to encourage dialogue on independence to better educate our fellow Albertans on how much better off we will be outside Canada,” said Rath.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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.


A photo of Charlie Kirk and his wife and children was left with a note at a vigil held in Winnipeg on Sept. 16.

A vigil was held for Charlie Kirk in Winnipeg on Tuesday, with a crowd of more than a thousand people “full of kindness,” says one woman who attended.

Mellissa Gladue, 31, told the National Post that she was drawn to the event because of her admiration for Kirk, how he spoke openly about his Christianity, and was able to debate people openly. The resident of Niverville, about a 30-minute drive from Winnipeg, went to the vigil with her fiancé outside of the Manitoba Legislative Building around 7:30 p.m. CT (6:30 p.m. ET).

“Charlie Kirk was the epitome of Christians across the world. He was brave enough to speak the bold truth about the gospel and not being afraid to have public debate and discussion on values aligning with Christianity,” said Gladue. “It is not easy as Christians to go against the norm and debate God with people who may not believe.”

 Mellissa Gladue attended a vigil for Charlie Kirk in Winnipeg on Sept. 16.

She said she didn’t know what to expect when she arrived at the legislature building, but people of all backgrounds and ages were there, “hugging, praying, laughing, crying.”

Kirk was killed on Sept. 10

after being shot at an event he was hosting at Utah Valley University in Orem, UT. The political influencer was known for debating a wide range of topics such as religion, racism and abortion, and for his promotion of Christian values. He was a divisive figure due to some of his stances. The 31-year-old was a husband and father of two. The man suspected in his murder,

Tyler James Robinson

, is being held without bail and has been charged with aggravated murder. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

The Winnipeg vigil was organized by Patrick Allard, per

local radio station CHVN-FM

. He shared a photo of the event on Facebook with the message, “We are all Charlie Kirk.”

We are all Charlie Kirk

Posted by Patrick Allard for St. Johns MLA on Tuesday, September 16, 2025

In 2023, Allard

ran as an independent candidate for St. Johns

, a provincial riding in Winnipeg, according to Elections Manitoba. He was described by CHVN-FM as an “outspoken critic of COVID-19 lockdowns and vaccine mandates.”

“Feels like a lot of love is in the air,” Allard said, speaking to those in attendance on Tuesday night, CHVN-FM reported. On Facebook, Allard posted about another vigil being held on Sept. 20 in La Broquerie, a predominantly French-speaking community southeast of Winnipeg.

Also on Tuesday evening, a vigil was held in Regina, Saskatchewan, with roughly 200 people in attendance,

local radio station CKRM reported

. The event’s organizer Marlissa Butz told the publication that she was deeply affected by Kirk’s death.

 Charlie Kirk hands out hats before speaking at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025.

“I couldn’t sleep, and I was just crying for his wife,” she said. “And I have an 18-month-old on my own, and to think about if his dad wasn’t there, and how do I explain that to him.”

Earlier this week, other vigils were held for Kirk across Alberta.

CTV News reported

that hundreds attended a Calgary vigil. Some held signs or candles, and many were singing and praying. Vigils were also held in Edmonton and Red Deer,

per CityNews

.

U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra reposted a video of the vigil in Calgary. “Thank you, Calgary, for standing with us,”

he wrote on X

.

A large-scale memorial for Kirk is scheduled for

Sept. 21 in Glendale, Arizona at State Farm Stadium

. According to the stadium’s website, it has “a fixed seating capacity of 63,400, expandable to over 73,000 for larger events.”

The event is first come, first serve, with doors opening at 8 a.m. MT.

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The Court of Appeal building in Calgary, Alberta on Aug. 16, 2012.

The Alberta Court of Appeal has upped the sentence of a child pornographer and child abuser, saying the trial judge made a mistake when refusing to accept a joint sentence submission from the defence and the Crown and declining to view the images made by the accused pedophile.

The accused, who is unnamed and referred to as R.P.A., amassed a collection of child pornography beginning in 2014 and sexually abused his daughter, named only as K.S. in court documents, between 2016 and 2022, and made child pornography featuring her, “mirroring some of the abuse depicted in his acquired collection,” the court ruling says.

He was arrested in 2022 and, on the first day of his trial in 2024, pleaded guilty to charges of sexual interference, making child pornography and possessing child pornography. The graphic collection of child abuse material comprised thousands upon thousands of images and video recordings, including 288 of his daughter, who was four years old when the abuse began.

In the sentencing hearings — the Crown and defence had both called for 18 years imprisonment — the judge expressed concern that similar cases had ended with lower sentences. The Crown “invited (the judge) to view the child sexual abuse material (CASM) to better understand the severity of the offences,” but the judge, Jordan Stuffco, declined.

“Given the explicit descriptions of the CSAM, I did not need to view the images. It was clear the offender committed grave, disturbing offences. Viewing the images would objectively add nothing to what the offender admitted,” Stuffco wrote in his sentence.

The judge also found that sentences of higher than 14 years were “reserved for offenders committing crimes ‘more depraved and egregious than those perpetrated by the offender in the case at bar,’” the Court of Appeal noted. In his sentence, Stuffco concluded that the joint submission was “unhinged and so far out of the appropriate range it offends the public interest test and reflects a breakdown of the proper functioning of the administration of justice.”

The three-member panel of the Alberta Court of Appeal concluded that Stuffco had wrongly opted for a sentence of 14 years less 198 days served.

The judge also erred, the Court of Appeal concluded, in declining to admit as evidence and view the images and videos of child abuse that R.P.A. had kept and created.

“In the case of possession or making of child pornography, the images

are

the crime, so they are by definition relevant,” the court wrote.

However, the justices note that across the country, some judges are refusing to view child sexual abuse material at trial, arguing that they could be prejudiced by viewing such content, that written descriptions appropriately cover off what the material includes and that it contributes to the revictimization of those depicted.

“In short, it appears from a review of these decisions that a presumption has emerged that viewing child sexual abuse material is inherently and deeply prejudicial,” the Court of Appeal wrote.

Other judges, however, have concluded that viewing the material is important to get a full picture of what crime was committed as written descriptions might diminish the shockingness of what occurred.

While the Court of Appeal declined to make a declaration that a judge must always view such images, it did conclude that there are times that the images must be viewed: “In this circumstance, there may be no words that adequately convey the gravity of the offences and the moral culpability of the offender.”

In the end, the Court of Appeal concluded that the judge, in determining that the joint submission was too harsh — a major disagreement between himself and counsel for the Crown and the accused — should have viewed the image submissions.

“He should have done so to ensure that he was not failing to grasp something about the nature and gravity of the offences that could only be appreciated by viewing the material,” the justices wrote.

“As she grows over the next four years, baby teeth are lost, fewer hairbows are worn, and the normalization of the abuse becomes evident.”

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The Public Health Agency of Canada has identified 29 as posing “significant risks.”

A vicious organism so “armed to the teeth” it can dodge most drugs thrown at it and a fungus with a kill rate of up to 60 percent lead a new list of pathogens federal health officials say pose the greatest threats to Canadians.
 

The updated list of “high impact” superbugs making people sick, sometimes fatally sick, includes a family of bacteria that cause E. Coli and Salmonella, as well as extremely drug-resistant gonorrhea.

All in, 29 pathogens made the watchlist, whittled down from 68 initially flagged by Public Health Agency of Canada expert working and advisory groups.
 

Those selected were scored and ranked based on their treatability (or lack thereof), transmission, case fatality ratio — the proportion of confirmed cases that are fatal — and the impact on marginalized groups like Indigenous communities, people who inject drugs, gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, the homeless and new immigrants and refugees from conflict or disaster-affected regions.

It’s the first update since an initial list was published a decade ago, in 2015. Since then, new threats have emerged, including Candida auris, a drug-resistant fungus spreading in hospitals that can cause infections of the blood, heart, nervous system and organs, and Mycoplasma genitalium, a sexually transmitted infection.

Resistance is also rising in already known bugs, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, a serious infection that can lead to life-threatening meningitis, pneumonia or sepsis, with kids and the elderly at greatest risk.

The pathogen watchlist “reflects the current reality in Canada,” said Dr. Gerry Wright, a professor of biochemistry and biomedical sciences at McMaster University in Hamilton.
 

With no new drugs coming on the market, “things are going to get to the point that we’re going to be seeing a lot more people staying in hospital or even dying, because the antibiotics are not working.”

Antimicrobial resistance, a top global health threat, happens when infections caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites can’t be stopped by the antibiotics, antivirals and other drugs designed to kill them.
 

Infections get harder to treat, increasing the risk of the disease spreading, serious illness and death — an estimated 14,000 deaths in 2018 alone.

Canada’s “pathogen prioritization list” ranks organisms across four tiers, from high priority to low.
 

The high priority group includes carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales, a family of bacteria that normally reside in the human gut but that can cause infections.

Enterobacterales, which include E. Coli and Salmonella, can cause urinary tract, abdominal and bloodstream infections. They’re spread via person-to-person contact (dirty hands, wounds, stool) or contaminated medical equipment and devices.
 

Carbapenems are powerful antibiotics — “the last station on the penicillin highway,” Wright said.
 

“If you look at your IV bag and you see the word carbapenem, you know you’re in trouble. It’s not something that’s given all the time, and resistance to that class of drugs has spread like wildfire over the last 20 years or so around the world.”

Second on the utmost priority list is highly drug-resistant gonorrhea, a sexually-transmitted infection that has become immune to nearly every antibiotic used against it.

In 2022, Canada’s national gonorrhae rate was three times what it was three decades ago, the highest recorded in 30 years. The rates are highest in males 20 to 39, and females 15 to 30. It spreads easily, is associated with travel-related sexual contact and increases the risk of HIV.

“If you can’t treat gonorrhea, it can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease or infertility in the future,” said Dr. Kanchana Amaratunga, medical advisor to Canada’s antimicrobial resistance task force.

Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas — another “super bad bug,” Wright said — was also ranked high priority.

“It’s a vicious organism, really intrinsically drug-resistant. It doesn’t seem to care too much about any antibiotics. It’s very well armed to the teeth and causes all sorts of things like pneumonia,” Wright said.

It’s also seriously problematic for people with cystic fibrosis who have a lot of mucus in their lungs. “It loves to hang out in those types of (moist) environments.”
 

Wright’s lab at McMaster is working hard at trying to kill Pseudomonas. “Because if you’ve got something that will kill Pseudomonas, it will probably kill everything else.”
 

Rounding out the high priority group are drug-resistant Acinetobacter — a bug that clings to materials like IV bags, IV poles and dialysis lines that causes blood, wound and other infections — and Candida auris, a deadly fungus that can colonize or get into the skin via needles or catheters and can linger on hospital sinks, bed rails and curtains. It severe cases, C. auris can cause organ failure. It’s particularly lethal for people with weak immune systems and has a death rate ranging from 30 to 60 percent.

It wasn’t included in the old list and has “now emerged as a critical public health threat” owing to its resistance to multiple anti-fungals, high morbidity and how easily it can spread in healthcare settings, according to the task force.

The new list relied on data from 2017 to 2022, which means a natural time lag, the team said. It’s urging updates every three to five years, not once a decade.

Microbes can evolve rapidly, within hours. However, unlike the heydays of the 80s, “It’s now a completely different kettle of fish,” Wright said. “There are very few drug companies working in the field.”
 

“They can’t make money on it,” he said. “Antibiotics cure disease. If you’re a large pharma company, you like to be controlling chronic diseases, because then people take your drugs for a very long time,” meaning a guaranteed revenue stream, he said.

In work published recently in the journal Nature, Wright’s lab isolated a protein from a bacterium taken from a soil sample collected from his technician’s backyard in Hamilton. In lab mice, “It has activity against almost all of the pathogens that we care about on that list.” He’s now trying to develop it into a drug candidate.

That’s going to take time, and a lot of money. “And no matter what drug you bring into the country, resistance is inevitable,” Amaratunga said.

Both she and Wright emphasized the need for prevention, including judicious and appropriate use of antibiotics, beefed up surveillance, early detection and vaccines.

Nearly all (68 percent) of cases of invasive pneumococcal disease in Canada, which soared by 82 per cent between 2021 and 2022, are caused by vaccine-preventable strains.

National Post
 

 

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Minister of Justice Sean Fraser arrives to a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, June 3, 2025.

OTTAWA

— As Justice Minister Sean Fraser prepares to table his bill to legislate against the obstruction of places of worship, schools, and community centres, he says he wants to see it passed quickly. 

That bill, which would fulfil commitments made in the Liberal platform, is expected to be tabled this week

, making it the first major piece of legislation to be introduced by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals since returning for the fall sitting of Parliament. 

While Fraser says he has not initiated conversations with other parties to see it pass the House of Commons by unanimous consent, as was the case when the Liberals passed their last bail reform package back in 2023 under his predecessor, former justice minister Arif Virani, Fraser says he would “invite” conversations to happen between House leadership.

“My goal here is to have the expeditious passage of the legislation,” he told reporters on his way into the Liberal caucus meeting on Wednesday.

“Should parliamentarians wish to engage in a meaningful debate

I think it’s important that they’re given the opportunity to voice the concerns of their community, and I wouldn’t want to shortcut that process. However, if everyone in the House accepts that this is the right path forward, I don’t see need to delay unnecessarily when we know hate is such an important issue to address.”

Fraser pointed to the rise in hate-related violence across the country, which police services report has only increased since the Oct. 7 attacks against Israel and its ensuing war with Hamas.

Jewish leaders and groups have specifically called for the federal government to create “safe access zones” or “bubble zones” around places of worship, schools and community centres, citing the frequency of protests and other violence against such places.

The federal government has also found itself on the receiving end of criticism from several prominent groups calling for more action from officials to stem the reported rise in antisemitism.

Melissa Lantsman, a deputy leader of the Conservatives, said in a statement that the party will assess the legislation once it is tabled, but says the Liberals have been guilty of inaction while the Conservatives have spent the past two years proposing ways to keep places of worship and those inside safe.

No one should be afraid to worship in peace, but that is exactly what the Liberal government has allowed over the last (two) years of their inaction while our communities called out for help,” she said on Wednesday. 

Conservatives will always stand to protect all Canadians from religious discrimination and violence.”

Civil liberties groups have challenged jurisdictions that have enacted similar measures to the ones Fraser is preparing to introduce, with the Canadian Civil Liberties Association launching a Charter challenge over a Vaughan by-law, calling it an “anti-protest law,” saying non-violent protests were a function of democracy.

Fraser says that Ottawa is operating on guidance from the Supreme Court of Canada when it comes to approaching discussions regarding “hate-oriented crime” and “the right to free expression.”

“We think we’ve done a good job to specifically accommodate Canadians’ right to free expression,” he said on Wednesday.

Toronto Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith told reporters the “devils in the details” of the forthcoming bill and that the government is right to move on ways to combat antisemitism.

“As parliamentarians, we’ve got to do our work and to review that legislation, to provide that accountability function and to approve it where we can, and we’ve got to make sure we strike the appropriate balance between protecting free speech and protecting people’s safety and accessing and attending faith services. I think we can do that.”

Besides making it an offence to “intentionally and wilfully obstruct” places of worship, schools and community centres, the Liberals in their platform also promised to make it a crime to “intentionally and wilfully” threaten those attending these locations.

Fraser also signalled on Tuesday that the Liberals intend to go further than what the platform committed to when it comes to addressing hate.

The minister has left the door open to possibly including some of the provisions contained in the since-defeated Online Harms Act, which the Liberals failed to see passed before the spring federal election.

Those included allowing human rights complaints to be filed with the

Canadian Human Rights Commission based on hate speech and introducing harsher punishments for hate-related offences. It also proposed creating a new peace bond to deter individuals from committing a possible hate crime, the circumstances of which would be determined by a court. 

At the time, civil liberties groups, academics, and the Opposition Conservatives roundly criticized the measures as infringing on free speech.

Legislating against the obstruction of places of worship and schools is one of the three bills Fraser plans to introduce this sitting. Next month, he says, the government will introduce a package of reforms to the bail and sentencing system, which would be followed by a series of changes to better protect against intimate partner violence and children from crimes online.

National Post

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