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Bottles of Mexican Coca-Cola are displayed at a grocery store in Mount Prospect, Ill., Thursday, July 17, 2025.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — “Coke is it” was a popular TV ad for the famed soda back in 1982, featuring teens singing Coca-Cola’s praises around a piano. It was around that same time when the company started using high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) instead of cane sugar in their main product — and would soon launch the flop known as “New Coke” — so a better catchphrase might have been, “Which Coke is it?”

Fast forward 43 years, and for U.S. and Canadian consumers of Coke, it’s primarily the fresh taste of HFCS that they’re enjoying, unless they’ve paid a premium for Mexican Coke, which is made with cane sugar. The labels in the U.S. clearly state HFCS as an ingredient, but laws in Canada allow bottles containing HFCS to be labelled with “Sugar (glucose-fructose),” implying that it’s real sugar. It’s not.

Thanks to a public push from President Donald Trump over the summer, Coca-Cola agreed to roll out a cane-sugar version of its hit product. “I have been speaking to @CocaCola about using REAL Cane Sugar in Coke in the United States, and they have agreed to do so,” Trump posted on social media. 

Cane sugar Coca-Cola has now begun rolling out, but in another snub to Canada, there are no plans to bring it north of the border. 

“This will be a very good move by them — You’ll see. It’s just better!” the president’s post said. 

Taste the feeling

For decades, Coca-Cola has skillfully used nostalgia as a marketing tool. Its campaigns have featured everything from hippies offering to “buy the world a Coke, and keep it company” to pop stars and even Santa. Some brand experts say that Coke with cane sugar is another way to tap into this ache for the past.

According to Eran Mizrahi, CEO and cofounder of Source86, a global food and beverage sourcing and private‑label partner, the move is driven by “two major consumer drivers: nostalgia and health.”


“People are looking more and more for products that feel authentic and simple, and in my opinion, classic soft drinks like this one satisfy exactly that,” he said.

Baruch Labunski, founder of Rank Secure, a brand reputation management firm, agreed.

It’s all about connecting “real sugar to memories of simpler products,” he said. “This emotional connection drives mainly millennials and gen-Z to purchase. They … want a ‘cleaner’ version of the product.”

Coke isn’t alone in leaning on heritage-style beverages to grow demand. Pepsi has also launched a cane sugar version of its cola and many brands are looking to integrate more natural sweeteners into their drinks. 

But all this is just a “perception of purity,” Labunski added. “Coca-Cola is more concerned with emotional needs than actually reformulating healthful products. [It] is demonstrating that, in today’s market, the label is as important as the product.”

Beyond nostalgia is the push for healthier products, so is cane sugar better for us?

Open healthiness?

During a January 2024 TV appearance,
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now the Health and Human Services secretary,
referred to environmental toxins that became prevalent in the 1980s and 90s. “One of them is high-fructose corn syrup,” he said, adding, “We are poisoning our children.” On a radio show in 2023, he also said HFCS was clearly linked to the obesity and diabetes epidemics.

When I reached out to HHS for a comment this week, the response came by way of a link to a post on the social media platform X in which the department simply wrote “Thank you, @POTUS” in response to news about Coke’s new cane sugar variety.

But food scientists poke holes in arguments that “real sugar” is better than HFCS.

The HFCS version may taste sweeter than the cane sugar one but they are not that much different metabolically.

After digestion, both sucrose (sugar) and HFCS do the same thing: they both deliver glucose and fructose to the body, said Bryan Quoc Le, founder and CEO of California-based Mendocino Food Consulting.

“The body actually cannot use fructose very effectively, and that’s true for high fructose corn syrup. But that transition is very fast. The liver is able to do that very quickly. So, ultimately, all these sugars end up as glucose anyway,” he explained.

Loads of fructose can have an inflammatory effect on the liver, but that can happen with sugar as well as HFCS. 

So what about RFK Jr.’s argument about the rising obesity and diabetes? 

Le said those could be linked to the fact that HFCS, because it’s cheaper to make than cane sugar, was suddenly prevalent in a lot more products back then. 

“It being cheaper allows it to be used more frequently, but it’s hard for me to say, ‘yes, if you just turn everything into cane sugar, all these problems will go away.’ I think it’s just that people are eating more sugar because it has become cheaper to include high-fructose corn syrup in everything.”

As for consumers themselves, their physical responses may not matter as much as their emotional ones.

“They’re practically similar in terms of their metabolism, but regardless, consumer perception is very important,” said Le, “and I think nowadays people have very strong distaste for the idea of having high-fructose corn syrup versus cane sugar.”

But is there enough cane sugar to go around?

Sweet success

The new Coca-Cola with cane sugar is being rolled out in the U.S. in a limited fashion for now. “(We have) introduced a new 12-oz single-serve glass bottle in select U.S. markets,” the company says.

Le points out that efforts to replace HFCS may quickly be met with supply issues.

Sugar cane in the U.S. is primarily produced in just three states with warm, subtropical climates: Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. Hawaii was a player, but it stopped production due to labour and shipping costs to the mainland.

“There’s a challenge there: Corn literally grows everywhere,” Le says. “That’s what makes high-fructose corn syrup so nice to use — it can be produced in any part of the country.”

So for a huge rollout of cane-sugar Coke, Pepsi, or any other heritage-style beverage, Le says, “there’s going to be a lag period before there will be enough cane sugar for everything.”

And in the meantime, higher demand will also drive up the price of the limited supply of cane sugar.

Share a Coke

There is no indication from Coca-Cola that Canada will get the U.S.-style cane sugar Coke anytime soon, or ever, and the limited cane sugar supply could play a factor. 

So Canadians will continue seeing the HFCS variety and pricier Mexican Cokes on their shelves, but they may not mind too much. 

According to a 2023 report from the Conference Board of Canada, low-calorie non-alcoholic beverages made up nearly 60 per cent of all beverage purchases in Canada in 2021. That’s up from 44 per cent in 2009. By comparison, data shows that diet drinks hold just a third of the U.S. market, according to Persistence Market Research.

So many Canadians have something in common with Donald Trump: they prefer diet drinks.

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American and Canadian flags fly near the Palace Playland amusement park, April 2, 2025, in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, a summer seaside resort town popular with French-Canadian tourists.

Recent data from both sides of the border show that Canadians are travelling to the U.S. in much smaller numbers, thanks to an ongoing trade war, U.S. President Donald Trump’s talk of annexation,

more intrusive border crossing requirements

and a weak Canadian dollar.

But U.S. tourist destinations are fighting back with a variety of schemes to lure Canadians back across the border, either by tugging at their heartstrings or their pursestrings. Here are a few of them.

‘California loves Canada’ ad campaign

California rolled out an entire

“California Loves Canada”

campaign, with television ads and a logo featuring a maple leaf in the centre of a heart, superimposed over the state shape.

One 30-second ad rattles off Canada’s many contributions to Californian culture, including the Walt Disney Concert Hall (designed by Toronto-born Frank Gehry), wine-making — Signorello Estates in the Napa Valley is owned by Canadian-raised dual citizen

Ray Signorello Jr.

— and the historic Hotel del Coronado, which was designed by New Brunswickers

Merritt and James W. Reid

.

The ad also notes that Imax is a Canadian company, and that even the California roll was dreamed up by Vancouver sushi chef Hidekazu Tojo.

 California would like you to visit the Hotel del Coronado, and to know that it was designed by Canadians.

Maine revamps border crossing signs

This summer, Maine governor Janet Mills

announced new signage

welcoming Canadians from New Brunswick, Quebec and beyond. The signs feature crossed Canadian and American flags and the message: “Bienvenue, Canadiens!”

“I’m hoping that we can put out the welcome mat,” she said. “I can’t change the presidency. I can’t change the tariffs. Lord knows I would if I could change the rhetoric and the tariffs, but … we’re putting out bilingual welcome signs at all 13 border crossings between Maine and Canada.”

She added that she was planning to make her own road trip to Canada, “to make sure that my message is clear.”

New York state rolls out savings and TV spots

The North Country Chamber of Commerce covers northern portions of the state but also says it serves “the Akwesasne Territory and parts of southern Quebec.” This year it created a

“cross-border specials”

 campaign that included a

“Canadian residents rate”

at the Bluebird Lake Placid hotel, although both these summer deals have since ended.

The campaign also featured

a TV spot

(in English) aimed at Quebecers, released at the start of the summer travel season, and promising “a getaway that still feels like home.” The ad ends with a woman with a French-Canadian accent saying: “I was going to the U.S., but now I’m going to Plattsburgh and the Adirondack coast.”

Buffalo Bisons accept Canadian cash at par

The Buffalo Bisons (also known as the Herd) are a Minor League Baseball team and the Triple-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays, so there’s a certain logic in their “at par” pricing discount for Canadians.

“In appreciation for the great baseball fans of Southern Ontario … the Bisons continue their efforts to provide the absolute best value to their great fans coming from Canada,” the team said

on its website

.

Canadians with proof of residency get a 30 per cent discount, roughly equivalent to the exchange rate on the U.S. dollar.

Rochester writes: ‘Dear Canada, we’ve missed you’

Describing itself as “just down the QEW and across the border,” the New York city launched a “Dear Canada” ad campaign this year.

“We’ve missed you,” the ad states, “Your curiosity, your laughter, your love of a good IPA.” It signs off: “With love, Rochester.”

 Kalispell, Flathead Lake and Glacier National Park is seen from a lookout point in Lone Pine State Park, Montana.

Kalispell creates welcome pass for Canadians

When locals in this city of 25,000 noticed fewer Canadians arriving from B.C. and Alberta this year, they built an app called the

Kalispell Canadian Welcome Pass

. It can be loaded on a phone and offers discounts to travellers from Canada, including 10 per cent off at the Kalispell Grand Hotel, and two-for-one tickets to the local Glacier Museum of Art.

According to local reports, total border crossings from Canada to Montana fell 26 per cent between August 2024 and August 2025, while the local chamber of commerce noted credit card spending by Canadians in Kalispell had decreased by 39 per cent through the end of September compared to the same period last year.

“We miss you, Canada,” the city says on its website, adding: “For the last several months, our countries have been going through some things. But there’s one thing we know and it’s this – we miss you.”

Burlington (temporarily) renames one of its streets for Canada

The city, roughly 65 kilometres from the Canadian border, says a significant portion of summer business, over 15 per cent, is from Canadian tourists.

When those numbers started dropping this year, 

a group of city councillors

proposed (temporarily) renaming one of Burlington’s central avenues from Church Street to Canada Street, or Rue Canada.

Councillor Becca Brown McKnight donned a maple leaf shirt and handed out mini Canadian flags to the other councillors. The motion was passed unanimously.

A little more than an hour’s drive to the north (and just south of the border with Quebec), Jay Peak ski resort offers an

“at par” policy

for Canadian travellers, with Canadian money accepted at the same rate as American dollars.

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Colombia's President Gustavo Petro, left, and Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro shake hands, backdropped by a painting of independence hero Simon Bolivar, before a private meeting at the Miraflores Presidential Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 1, 2022.

BOGOTA, Colombia – Colombian President Gustavo Petro has a bold proposal in response to the United States’ mounting military presence in the Caribbean: A union between Colombia and Venezuela.

The South American leader is floating the idea of recreating Gran Colombia, a republic formed in 1821 that encompassed modern day Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Panama.

Analysts and political insiders downplayed the likelihood of such a move, but the proposal underscores the breakdown in relations between Washington and Bogota, historically the White House’s closest ally in the region. Petro’s comments are the latest in a bitter feud with U.S. President Donald Trump, who recently sanctioned Petro and his inner circle, alleging without proof that the Colombian is “an illegal drug dealer.”

In a fiery speech last week, Petro railed against Trump’s actions in South America, which have ranged from tariffs to a strike campaign against alleged drug boats, killing more than 70 people since September.

“America is not a continent of kings or princesses, princes or despots,” said the president in reference to Trump and his military manoeuvres in the region. “Every dictator who has appeared here has faced rebellion,” he continued, “isn’t it time, then, to talk about Gran Colombia again?”

Petro proposed the union as a solution to countering U.S. aggression, comparing the need to resist Trump with independence hero Simon Bolívar’s revolutionary struggle against Spain.

The next day, Petro doubled down on his comments, writing in an X post: “I propose to the peoples inhabiting this territory demarcated in 1819 to realize … the reconstruction of this idea … of a Gran Colombia.”

Despite Petro repeatedly suggesting recreating Gran Colombia, his interior minister and right-hand man, Armando Benedetti, downplayed the proposal as symbolic.

“It is very difficult to imagine that five or six countries … with so-called solid democracies, will somehow come together to form a single country,” the minister told the National Post.

Sergio Guzmán, director at Colombia Risk Analysis, a Bogota-based political consultancy, also noted the impracticalities of the proposal, which he described as having been “part of Petro’s imaginary and pipe dreams for decades.”

Indeed, it is not the first time the president has proposed a return to Gran Colombia; he also invoked the idea earlier this year to justify attending Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa’s inauguration.

The notion of Gran Colombia and the rhetorical figure of Simon Bolívar, the region’s independence hero, are important parts of Petro’s leftist ideology, according to Guzmán: “Petro shares that sort of Bolivarian vision of a grand unity … and will strive for this, regardless of what anybody says and thinks, because this is part of his political identity.”

Since Trump assumed office in January, he has clashed with Petro on a slew of issues, from deportations to drugs.

Relations deteriorated dramatically in September, when the Trump administration began bombing boats in the Caribbean and decertified Colombia as a partner in the war on drugs.

Later that month, Petro had his U.S. visa revoked during a visit to New York in which he called on American troops to disobey orders over the war in Gaza.

In October, the Colombian president stepped up his criticism of Trump, accusing him of “murder” over a boat strike he said killed an innocent Colombian fisherman. In response, Trump declared Petro “an illegal drug dealer” and “a thug,” adding him to the Clinton List of sanctioned individuals, alongside members of his inner circle. Petro, his wife and son, and minister Benedetti had their U.S. assets frozen as a result.

According to Guzman, there is little room for bilateral relations to deteriorate further: “I don’t think it can get any worse … (and) I don’t think it’s gonna get any better.”

Latin America Reports

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International lawyer Raphael Lemkin helped draft the Genocide Convention, which maps out prevention and punishment for the crime of genocide.

Raphael Lemkin coined the very word “genocide,” but his legacy is now at the centre of a bitter fight over that term: Family members and Jewish leaders say the American institute bearing his name is betraying everything he stood for — by turning the charge of genocide against Israel itself.

“They seem to, what’s the word, be apologetic for what Hamas has done,” Joseph Lemkin, a cousin of Raphael’s, told the National Post, of the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention. “This is what Raphael Lemkin would stand for? Being an apologist for Hamas? Attacking Israel for defending itself?”

In an Oct. 31 letter obtained by the National Post, the European Jewish Association (EJA) urged U.S. federal authorities to examine whether the institute’s words and actions were aligned with its non-profit status.

The Pennsylvania-based institute, named after Holocaust survivor and scholar Raphael Lemkin, is legally required to remain non-partisan and apolitical. Yet, the authors of the letter say it has “taken openly political positions.”

“This isn’t really an honest academic institute,” Lemkin told the Post. “It comes off as more of a political organization than any sort of legit research organization.”

Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-Jewish lawyer who lost 50 relatives in the Holocaust, introduced the world to the word “genocide” in 1944 by merging the Greek “genos” (race, tribe) and the Latin “cide” (killing), first mentioned in his book, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress.

His advocacy after the Second World War led to the incorporation of genocide as an international crime in the 1948 UN Genocide Convention, transforming how the world addresses and seeks justice for mass violence.

Meanwhile, The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention was founded in August 2021 as a non-profit. It was named after Raphael Lemkin without his family’s permission, according to the EJA.

Its website says

 it is “nonpartisan,” and works globally to promote grassroots genocide prevention. Its website highlights coverage of trans issues and conflicts in Israel, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine and elsewhere in the world.

In March, it issued a “Letter to the American People” that suggested its worldview: “Many of you have reached out to the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention and Human Security to ask what you can do in the face of what appears to be an authoritarian coup against the U.S. Constitutional order, driven and overseen by a President and a billionaire who gave the Nazi salute at the President’s inauguration, and deeply infected by the genocidal thinking of many conservatives and evangelicals, targeted mainly at immigrants of colour and trans people (for the time being). We have watched these developments with dismay, and like many of you, we’ve had some dark days. The disturbing political developments have impacted our U.S.-based team members in different ways depending on where they exist within the dynamics of oppression. So, we have been trying to figure out the same things as everyone else. We are with you.”

In its letter, EJA points to several statements made by the institute that they feel violate its obligation to be nonpartisan.

On Oct. 13, 2023, days after Hamas’s massacre of 1,200 Israelis and before Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, the institute issued a “Genocide Alert,” condemning what it said was an “endorsement” on the part of western leaders for Israel “to effectively commit genocide.”

On Oct. 18, 2023, also before Israel’s ground invasion, it called on the International Criminal Court to indict Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for genocide.

EJA board member Harley Lippman, in the letter, said: “Why is this organization not speaking out for persecuted Christians, Yazidis, or other victims of real genocides? Why only Israel? Why promote narratives that fuel antisemitism instead of fighting genocide everywhere?”

Lemkin was a staunch Zionist, Lippman told the Post, as evidenced by him being an editor and columnist of Zionist World, a publication supportive of the State of Israel.

EJA’s latest warning follows a Sept. 7 letter to Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, and the Pennsylvania Bureau of Corporations and Charitable Organizations, from the legal firm Sherman, Silverstein, Kohl, Rose and Podolsky, retained by EJA, and Joseph Lemkin.

The letter asserts that the Lemkin Institute is in violation of several laws, such as using Lemkin’s name and likeness in violation of both statutory and case law, and identity theft.

“The Lemkin Institute is not authorized by Raphael Lemkin’s family, his Estate, or any custodian of his legacy to rely upon his name for any purpose,” it said.

“The issue is not whether the Lemkin Institute’s attacks on Israel and the United States are based on incorrect facts and wrong conclusions, but whether the Lemkin Institute may make these arguments in Lemkin’s name. Under the law, it may not.” The letter asserts the institute caused reputational damages.

Alan Milstein, one of the firm’s attorneys, told the Post that the authors of the letter “have a valid claim that the use of the Lemkin name was inappropriate,” and suggested legal escalation is possible.

“Everyone in my immediate family, my sisters, brothers, my mom, everyone that we know that’s somewhat close and knowledgeable about Raphael, is very supportive of our effort to distance, and condemn” the institute, Joseph Lemkin, a New Jersey attorney, told the Post.

“Of course everyone has the right to say what they want, but then to hang your hat on someone’s name that absolutely wouldn’t agree with this, and tying our family to what they’re saying, was just so offensive.”

Last August, the institute condemned Israel for eliminating Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh. In a statement, it said that, “Many analysts speculate that this was a purposeful attack by Israel to incite” what they believe would be “an all-out regional war in the Middle East.” In a Sept. 18 post on X , the institute said it “condemns Israel’s terrorist attacks against Lebanese people,” referring to targeted attacks against pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah, a designated terror entity by the U.S. and Canada.

According to the Lemkin Institute, Hezbollah is a “political party and a service provider for southern Lebanon,” while Israel is a “genocidal state that is completely out of control and supported by a western world that is, in large measure, too racist and Islamophobic to care.”

When reached by the National Post, The Lemkin Institute claimed to have not received the latest letter from EJA, but pointed to an Oct. 14 online response when asked about the controversy.

Its statements regarding media reports were “defamatory,” they said, adding it was “inflammatory language” to assert that their organization defends Hamas, backs Hezbollah, and targets America.

“We believe that this is a coordinated effort by genocide deniers who wish to bully and shut down free speech and genocide prevention work impacting Israel,” they said.

Benjamin Lemkin, Joseph’s older brother, told the Post from Jerusalem he is “not against people who want to criticize Israel.”

“Israelis, as you probably know, are the biggest critics of their own government. I champion that freedom of speech,” he said.

“It would appear they (the Institute) have whitewashed what Hamas is doing, and have done – a real genocide. They have accused Israel of all kinds of terrible, terrible things, in Raphael Lemkin’s name.”

If Raphael, who died in 1959, were alive today, he said, “he’d definitely would have been outraged. It is an abuse of his work, in this manner.

“It is a besmirching of what Raphael represented, that much is clear. This is a terrible thing that they’ve done to the Lemkin name. They distort, and present a false picture, of what Raphael Lemkin stood for.”

Benjamin Lemkin would like to see “the name disappear,” from the organization, as well as to receive compensation.

“We think that the law is clear,” Lemkin told the Post, “that you cannot hijack someone else’s name. Much less the one as revered as Raphael Lemkin, to raise money and peddle propaganda, mislead the public and foment antisemitism.”

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A Russian policeman guards the monument for the victims of political repressions in front of the FSB security service (former KGB) headquarters in Moscow on Oct. 29, 2025

A Cold War KGB agent deemed “inadmissible to Canada on security grounds” has won another shot at staying in this country.

Vladimir Popov contacted the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) shortly after he arrived in Canada on a visitor’s visa in August 1995 to tell the Canuck spy agency he’d been a member of the Soviet Union’s Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti (KGB) from 1972 until 1991, according to a new Federal Court review. The judge examined Canada’s public safety minister’s March 2024 decision that denied Popov ministerial relief that would allow him to stay in this country because the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) “was not satisfied that (his) presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest.”

Justice Anne Turley found the minister’s decision to be unreasonable.

“The application for judicial review is granted and the matter is remitted for redetermination,” Turley wrote in a decision out of Ottawa, dated Nov. 12.

Liberal Dominic LeBlanc was minister of public safety when Popov was denied relief.

His decision “suffers” from “flaws,” Turley said.

“While the minister repeatedly states that (Popov’s) evidence and submissions about his conduct since coming to Canada in 1995 were considered, the decision itself reflects no meaningful engagement with that evidence,” said the judge.

“The minister further fails to explain why the evidence was insufficient to establish that (Popov’s) continued presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest. This lack of justification renders the decision unreasonable.”

Popov, a Russian citizen, made a refugee claim here in November 1995, almost four years after the fall of the Soviet Union, said her decision.

“The Refugee Protection Division concluded that (Popov) had established a well-founded fear of persecution based on his political opinion,” it said.

“He was thus granted Convention Refugee status.”

Popov applied for permanent residency in Canada in August 1997.

“This application is currently still pending,” Turley said.

The CBSA interviewed Popov in May 1998. It issued a report a decade later alleging he “was inadmissible” to Canada due to his KGB membership.

In December 2008, Popov applied for ministerial relief, “asserting that his presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest,” said the decision.

In March 2024, LeBlanc “accepted the CBSA’s recommendation and concluded that he was not satisfied that (Popov’s) presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest,” it said.

The Russian challenged that decision “on grounds of procedural fairness and reasonableness,” said the decision.

Turley found “that the ministerial relief decision is unreasonable for its lack of justification.”

The minister is required to consider “more than just national security and whether the applicant is a danger to the public or to the safety of any person,” said the decision.

LeBlanc’s “overarching error in the ministerial relief decision is the failure to engage with and assess (Popov’s) evidence and arguments,” Hurley said.

“It does not suffice to summarize arguments made and then state a peremptory conclusion, because that does not assist in understanding the decision made and its rationale,” Hurley said. “This is precisely what was done here.”

LeBlanc’s assessment reads “as a charging document for (Popov’s) past membership” in the KGB, said the judge.

“The ministerial relief decision refers to other factors including (Popov’s) expressed commitment to democratic values and human rights, his cooperation with Government of Canada officials, his lack of a criminal record in Canada, and his exemplary conduct and work history in Canada,” Hurley said.

“There is, however, no engagement with nor assessment of this evidence. In each instance, after setting out that the evidence was ‘considered’ or ‘taken into account,’ there is simply a conclusory statement that the evidence is insufficient to overcome the predominant national security and public safety considerations.”

 Then federal public safety minister Dominic Leblanc in December 2024.

The judge gave examples to illustrate LeBlanc’s approach.

“The CBSA has considered Mr. Popov’s assertions that he has now distanced himself from the KGB and its goals. His expressed commitment to democratic values and human rights and freedoms, including through his claimed refusal to participate in KGB-led anti-government coups in Russia in 1991 and 1993, as well as through his cooperation with GOC (Government of Canada) officials and publicly exposing the activities of the KGB and sharing criticism of Russian President (Vladimir) Putin at risk to his own safety, have also been taken into account,” said one example. “The CBSA is of the opinion, however, that these factors are not sufficient to overcome the other predominant national security and public safety considerations of this case — in particular, Mr. Popov’s admitted long-term, active, and informed role with the KGB.”

According to another example from LeBlanc’s decision, “the CBSA has also duly considered Mr. Popov’s other statements regarding his activities and establishment from his arrival in Canada to the present, including his statements to the effect that: he has learned English and established himself in his community; his wife and son are leading ‘exemplary lives’ in Canada; they file their taxes; they support a variety of community non-profit organizations; and he, his wife and son purchased a home in 2006. The supporting documents and letters of support he submitted in this respect have also been taken into account. Nonetheless, the CBSA is of the opinion that these factors are not sufficient to establish that Mr. Popov’s presence in Canada would not be detrimental to the national interest in light of the predominant national security and public safety concerns in this case — in particular, his prior voluntary, informed, high-level, dedicated role in the KGB for 19 years, through which he personally recruited over 30 KGB informants and engaged in various activities which would have benefitted the KGB as a whole — an agency notorious for its violent tactics, engagement in anti-Western espionage, including against Canada, and brutal suppression of Soviet dissidents.”

LeBlanc is correct, “when he states that he is ‘entitled to ascribe more weight to some factors over others,” Hurley said.

“That said, this does not mean that the minister can simply, as was done here, baldly conclude that personal factors do not outweigh the ‘predominant national security and public safety concerns.’”

According to the judge, “it was incumbent on the minister to ‘come to grips with the considerable body of evidence put forward by’” Popov. “Here, the applicant submitted a voluminous amount of evidence and submissions concerning his life after the KGB. In particular, he specifically addressed his disassociation from the organization and expressed regret over his past involvement. He publicly condemned the KGB — publishing two books that exposed its operations, delivering multiple public speaking engagements, and appearing in interviews on television and digital platforms. These relevant and significant factors are not meaningfully engaged with in the ministerial relief decision.”

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Conservative MP-elect Jamil Jivani arrives on Parliament Hill ahead of a Conservative Party of Canada Caucus meeting in Ottawa, on Tuesday, May 6, 2025.

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OTTAWA — Conservative MP Jamil Jivani doesn’t yet have a critic assignment, but he’s still finding plenty of ways to keep himself busy.

One glance

at the link-heavy website

for the Yale Law graduate’s new “Restore the North” initiative conjures up the image of an overachieving high school senior anxiously padding his college application portfolio with extracurriculars.

The homepage is littered with nearly a dozen boxes leading to different sign-up sheets, including petitions to

reverse Liberal immigration policies

, crack down on

open-air drug use

and make

oral nicotine products like Zyn

more widely available. Shouts of “Free the Zyn!” even broke out in the House of Commons last week after Jivani raised the

issue of nicotine pouches

in question period.

“(These things) are tied together in so far as I’m involved in all of them, and they all sort of reflect the sentiments that I’m hearing from Canadians, and young Canadians in particular,” said the 38-year-old Jivani, when asked whether there was common thread to the causes listed on his website.

Jivani has lately been spending a lot of time meeting young Canadians where they’re at, kicking off a campus tour with fellow Conservative MP Ned Kuruc last month.

He’s staying put in Ottawa next week to host a conference on another cause he says is close to his heart: eradicating what he sees as a

leftist form of racism

that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas — a fellow Yale Law alum —  has called “the soft bigotry of low expectations.”

Jivani sat down with the National Post for a wide-ranging interview about the upcoming

National Forum to End Liberal Racism

, how

his much-publicized friendship

with Yale classmate JD Vance helped shape his views on affirmative action and how he keeps himself busy to avoid the “drama” on Parliament Hill.

He explained that, even with the House set for a hectic week, it was important for him to carve out time to convene a conversation about the prevalence of

so-called positive discrimination

like diversity quotas in government policies and procedures, especially those related to hiring and promotion.

“The idea behind ending Liberal racism is to acknowledge that a lot of what the federal government does right now is out of line with core values that I think a lot of Canadians have, which is that people should be treated fairly and equally. There are a series of policies the federal government has when it comes to hiring for jobs or in government programs that distribute grants and other resources to the public that are exclusively … based on belonging to certain identity groups,” said Jivani.

Jivani says these discriminatory policies do a disservice to everyone involved.

“On one end, it excludes a lot of people (from opportunities), and that is, in and of itself, a classic case of discrimination. On the other side, for people from the identity groups who may be included in these … policies, it is a gesture towards us that indicates a stamp of inferiority,” he said.

Jivani notably takes issue with

voluntary self-identification boxes

on government job application forms, which he says convey a clear message that minorities are less capable than other candidates.

“But for claiming to be part of an identity group, the government might not hire you,” said Jivani.

Conservative MPs Shuvaloy Majumdar, Sandra Cobena and Vincent Ho will also make presentations at the forum, set for Tuesday evening in downtown Ottawa. Jivani has invited all Liberal MPs to attend, but says none have RSVPed yet.

Jivani’s personal crusade against what he calls Liberal racism is, at first glance, a U-turn from his

2018 book Why Young Men

, where he writes at length about how bonds with Black peers and mentors like professor Andrea Davis, now head of diversity, equity, and inclusion

at Wilfrid Laurier University

, helped him excel at university despite an unstable childhood. Yet, he says his core beliefs remain fundamentally the same, if tempered somewhat by life experience.

“What I learned, I think, from the time I wrote my book till now is just being a lot more sensitive to how race can be used to mask some of the very serious issues in our communities and in our country,” said Jivani.

He added that, even at the time, he was uncomfortable with the excessive focus on race in the media coverage of the book, noting that the absence of a racial qualifier in its title wasn’t an oversight.

“There were people in the media who wanted to make my book about race, when, if you read the book, it talks about boys and young men of all different racial and cultural backgrounds, with the effort of showing actually we have a lot of the same challenges,” said Jivani.

 Conservative MP Jamil Jivani: “The idea behind ending Liberal Racism is to acknowledge that a lot of what the federal government does right now is out of line with core values that I think a lot of Canadians have.”

Jivani’s friendships with working-class white classmates like Vance, who wrote about his own hardscrabble upbringing in the

best-selling memoir Hillbilly Elegy

(later a movie), helped reshape the way he views fairness.

“My view is that a lot of the issues can be best understood based on class, based on, you know, broader social dynamics. Like, for example, being the first person in your family to attend a post-secondary or to graduate from university,” said Jivani.

Jivani said he’s all for helping disadvantaged youth pursue higher education and break into professions but adds that race is a poor proxy for need.

Kwesi Opoku, a longtime friend of Jivani’s, says that the push against diversity quotas “sounds a lot like Jamil.”

“Jamil’s a lot of things. He’s a really brilliant guy, he’s very thoughtful but he’s really, at his core, just a regular-shmegular Black guy,” said Opoku.

Opoku said he thinks Jamil’s views are shared by much of the Black community, even if this fact isn’t widely discussed.

“The vast majority of Black people, although it doesn’t get spoken about, are not in support of affirmative action (and) DEI policies. Most Black folks see themselves as not inferior, being able to compete with anybody.”

Another friend and former Conservative staffer, said that Jivani was doing a “massive service” to Canadians by heading off a far uglier discourse about race, one increasingly being driven by young men.

“(Jivani) will get

dismissed by mainstream pundits

as pandering to radicals and reactionaries … but if you go and look at how he engages with them, he doesn’t just agree with them, he pushes back,” said the friend.

He pointed to a recent event at

a Toronto-area campus

where Jivani rebutted arguments put forward by attendees associated with the anti-immigration Dominion Society.

Jivani said that his busy calendar hasn’t given him too much time to dwell on the recent intrigue inside the Conservative caucus, such as the recent double-whammy of a floor crossing and resignation. Nova Scotia MP Chris d’Entremont crossed from the Tories to the governing Liberals and Conservative MP Matt Jeneroux announced that he would be resigning his seat.

“I don’t mean to say it dismissively, because I understand there’s a lot of attention on the drama, but like I just don’t care, dude. I’m just focused on getting my job done,” said Jivani.

Jivani did care enough to call

d’Entremont an “idiot”

after learning of his defection to the Liberals on budget day.

He also said he’s “not worried at all” that his growing public profile will create the impression that he’s after Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s job.

“We’re a team. Every event I go to, there are multiple MPs there, including the National Forum to End Liberal Racism … I’m proud to be part of the team,” said Jivani.

He added that the team already has a captain and he doesn’t see that changing.

“We’ve had our leader (Poilievre) since the election and, from my standpoint, we got, you know, over eight million votes. We got lots of people who sent us here and want us to work hard on their behalf.”

Cole Hogan, a conservative strategist who specializes in digital campaigns, says that Jivani’s expanding digital footprint

— spanning three websites, dozens of videos and a recently launched YouTube series — echoes Poilievre’s own cultivation of a personal sub-brand under the Conservative umbrella.

“In 2021, and even before that, Pierre was sort of doing his own thing. And he would do the longer form YouTube videos at first,” said Hogan.

A flurry of digital content targeting Canada’s

then exploding inflation crisis

positioned Poilievre as the clear favourite to succeed Erin O’Toole as Conservative leader after the party’s loss in the fall 2021 election.

Hogan added that the multiple online petitions that Jivani has launched could help him gauge potential support for a future leadership run.

Alex Marland, a political science professor at Acadia University who recently co-authored a book on

party loyalty in Canadian politics

, said that Jivani’s freelancing is indicative of the fact that the Conservatives recently lost an election and are looking for a message that will put them over the top.

“So in my view, the main thing is its proximity to an election. So the closer you get to an election, the more urgency of unity of message there is. And when you just had an election, there’s often a party that doesn’t win is itself trying to reposition and recalibrate and figure out what its messaging is,” said Marland.

Marland added that the attention Jivani is getting for his personal initiatives is likely a good thing for Canadian democracy, given our political system’s tendency toward the centralization of power.

“It’s really important to make sure that individual MPs get attention, not always the leader,” said Marland.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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A Canadian passport is shown in this image.

Some Canadians could be denied a U.S. visa due to obesity or other medical conditions.

“Short-term, visa-exempt visitors should see little change at the border,” lawyer Rosanna Berardi told National Post on Friday. She is the managing partner at

Berardi Immigration Law

.

“Applicants with notable medical conditions should be prepared to show strong financial capacity and private insurance to reduce the risk of refusal.”

Earlier in November, a directive was sent via cable to embassy and consular officials on behalf of the State Department. They were given instructions to screen foreigners who want to live in the U.S. for a wide range of conditions, as well as age and likelihood that they “might rely on public benefits,”

KFF Health News reported

.

These people risk becoming a “public charge,” in the eyes of the federal government, or a strain on American resources.

“Under U.S. immigration law, a person is inadmissible as a ‘public charge’ only if they are likely to become primarily dependent on certain government cash benefits or long-term institutional care. That definition has not changed,” said Berardi.

However, she said, the Nov. 6 guidance from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio instructs officials “to treat chronic health conditions, limited finances, low-skilled employment or limited English, prior public assistance, and weak affidavits of support as red flags.”

“You must consider an applicant’s health,” said the cable, according to KFF Health News. “Certain medical conditions — including, but not limited to, cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases, cancers, diabetes, metabolic diseases, neurological diseases, and mental health conditions — can require hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of care.”

“Officers are now told to scrutinize medical exams more closely and weigh these factors heavily in the ‘totality of the circumstances,’ effectively raising the bar for applicants with significant health issues and modest financial resources,” said Berardi.

While 99 per cent of Canadians don’t require a visa to enter the U.S., said Berardi, there is a small group that does. “The only Canadians required to apply at a U.S. consulate are E-1 and E-2 treaty applicants and K-1 fiancé(e) visa applicants,” she said.

Treaty Trader (E-1) and Treaty Investor (E-2) visas are for citizens of countries with which the United States maintains treaties of commerce and navigation,

according to the U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Canada

.

“Canadian citizenship does not create an exemption from the public-charge ground, but most Canadians apply for entry directly at the border and avoid consular review entirely,” Berardi said.

“The new guidance will have its greatest impact on the small group that do need visas — especially E-1/E-2 applicants and anyone seeking a family- or employment-based immigrant visa.”

Permanent residents of Canada, who

must have a visa

to enter the U.S., “will feel the effect even more.”

In a statement to National Post, the Canadian Snowbird Association said it was aware of the new U.S. visa guidance “related to certain chronic health conditions.”

“At this time, there is no indication that Canadians entering the United States as tourists, who do not need to pre-apply for a visa, will be affected by this policy,” the statement said.

“The vast majority of Canadian snowbirds also travel to the U.S. with comprehensive private travel medical insurance, which further reduces any concern that they would be viewed as a potential burden on the U.S. health-care system.”

The directive appears to be part of a continuation of the Trump administration’s crackdown on the “flow of immigration,” The Washington Post reported.

“It’s no secret the Trump Administration is putting the interests of the American people first,” Tommy Pigott told National Post in an emailed statement. He is the principal deputy spokesperson for the State Department.

“This includes enforcing policies that ensure our immigration system is not a burden on the American taxpayer.”

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Jason Jacques, Interim Parliamentary Budget Officer prepares to appear before the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, on Parliament Hill  in Ottawa, on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025.

OTTAWA — Ottawa’s fiscal watchdog called out the Carney government Friday for using an “overly expansive” definition of investments that shifts about $94-billion in spending over the next five years to the more palatable capital side of the ledger.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO), an independent offer who scrutinizes government raising and spending of tax dollars, said in a new report on this year’s budget that the government’s inclusion of such items as corporate income tax expenditures, investment tax credits and operating subsidies should not be considered capital spending.

The PBO report, which also shed new light on Ottawa’s dire fiscal situation, said the government’s “new framework adopts a definition of capital investment that expands beyond the current treatment” used internationally. “The government’s definition of capital investment is too broad.”

The Carney government’s first budget, unveiled last week, marked the first time that Ottawa had separated capital and operational or day-to-day spending. While debates about accounting practices are unlikely to stir many heated debates in Canadian cafes and pubs, economists say it’s important because the new method could lead to more spending.

The government argued that it’s more informative to account separately for day-to-day spending and those capital items that are made with a long-term focus. In his post-budget “road show” this week, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne has said the government’s new fiscal practices are in line with what some other countries are doing.

Some economists, however, have questioned the government’s decision to create that distinction, arguing that it’s simply accounting optics and that all types of expenditures must be paid for. A recent report by the C.D. Howe Institute, a leading think tank, criticized the move and questioned the motive. “The large deficits projected in this update cannot be downplayed or disguised by dividing the budget into two new categories.”

Some also worry that the government will pile as many expenses as possible into the “investments” side of the ledger, because they might seem more politically palatable to voters and because the government wants to meet its new goal of balancing its operating expenses within three years.

But Benjamin Tal, the deputy chief economist of CIBC World Markets, said he likes the government’s new accounting because it adds clarity and doesn’t believe it will encourage extra spending.

Capital spending includes many items that are physical assets such as infrastructure, housing, military equipment and even software that are often seen as “investments.” These types of items are often seen as more fiscally responsible because they provide enduring assets and often include sales for Canadian companies. Some capital spending, such as spending on ports, rail and other transportation routes that are designed to make exports more efficient, can also boost productivity and the economy.

Operational costs include big-ticket “day-to-day” items such as transfers to provinces and territories, program spending and salaries for hundreds of thousands of public servants and millions of citizens who receive social service payments.

Carney has started a process to trim operational spending, notably slicing into the growth of the public service, to help pay for increased capital spending.

While acknowledging that there’s some subjectivity in distinguishing between capital and operational spending, PBO Jason Jacques recommends that Ottawa set up an independent expert body to sort through how spending items should be categorized.

The new report also shed further light on Ottawa’s escalating pile of red ink. The Carney government’s first budget, released last week, projected an average deficit of $64.3-billion between this fiscal year and 2029-30, more than double what was projected about a year ago in the 2024 Fall Economic Statement.

The PBO report also said that the federal government now has “limited room to cut taxes or increase spending” if it wants to keep the federal debt-to-GDP ratio stable over the next three decades. “This is different from the last three years, when fiscal policy provided more flexibility to deal with future risks,” said Jacques.

In its first budget, the Carney government forecast a deficit this year of $78.3-billion, the third-highest in Canadian history and the largest ever in a non-pandemic year. The Carney government’s forecast calls for modest dips in the annual deficit over each of the next four years, although the cumulative effect will be another $320-million of new debt before the end of the decade.

The federal government has now accumulated $1.27-trillion in debt, almost half of which has been added over the last five years. With the budget’s updated forecast for this fiscal year, Ottawa is now on pace to amass $593.1-billion in debt over that five-year span, or 46.7 per cent of the total debt accumulated in Canadian history.

The federal government also said this week that it intends to hire a permanent PBO. Jacques, a veteran of the PBO office, has been filling the position on an interim basis since September. In his first few weeks on the job, Jacques was highly critical of government spending, calling it “stupefying,” “shocking” and “unsustainable.”

National Post

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Stafford and Karen Gordon. This picture shows the gold chain that they say was lost along with their luggage.

An Oshawa couple says they have lost personal belongings worth thousands of dollars and of great sentimental value, after an American Airlines flight attendant took one of their carry-on suitcases away to fly as checked baggage during a trip to Jamaica.

Stafford and Karen Gordon were travelling from Toronto to Jamaica in August for a memorial service for Stafford’s sister-in-law, but also to mark their 34th wedding anniversary. Stafford had a new suitcase purchased from Costco for $150, and filled with items that included snorkelling gear, watches, expensive shoes and a gold chain his wife had given him two decades ago. Karen had a metallic pink carry-on that she had used before and was fond of.

Stafford told National Post he was stowing both bags in the overhead compartment when a flight attendant told him there wouldn’t be enough room, and took his wife’s pink bag.

“When the guy grabbed onto the bag she said: Please don’t let him take my bag. He’s going to ruin it,” Stafford recalled. “So I took my bag back down from the overhead, and I stuffed hers in instead. And the guy took mine and started walking, exiting the plane.”

 Karen Gordon with her pink suitcase, and Stafford and Karen Gordon on a flight several years ago, with the chain visible.

Both spouses said they remember the flight attendant being some distance away before he stopped to call back and ask for their seat numbers, which they gave him. Then he took the bag to the exit. They never saw it again.

Karen was upset but decided not to make a fuss at the time. “You’re scared that they’re going to tell you you have to come off the plane,” she said.

She also joked that “my name is Karen, and I do speak up for myself,” referring to a term for women who complain about service.

“And as we sat down, Stafford said to me, I don’t think he heard the number I gave him, and we had no tags on our bag. So we knew there was a problem.”

There was. At a transfer in Miami, the Gordons said an American Airlines employee ensured them tha bag had been tagged and was en route to Montego Bay, Jamaica. But on arrival there, it was nowhere to be found.

“We went from carousel to carousel to carousel,” Stafford said, recalling how hot the airport was. “We were just back and forth for hours. We watched the carousels come in. We checked every pile of luggage, until we went to visit the American counter. And they said they had no record of it.” The representative also told them there was no one else to speak to, either in Canada or Miami.

The couple reached out to the airline for assistance, but were told it would not reimburse them for anything purchased to replace lost items, nor for any individual item worth more than $100 without a receipt.

But the Gordons said there was much more of value in the bag, including Aldo shoes, Stafford’s suit for the memorial, two expensive watches and the chain.

“I had a 14-karat gold chain that my wife had bought for me 20 years ago. And at the time, I think my wife paid nearly 300,000 Jamaican dollars, which is equivalent to $3,000 Canadian,” Stafford said. He added that a jeweller had recently appraised it at $8,000.

 Stafford and Karen Gordon on their anniversary, Sept. 3, 2025, at their hotel in Jamaica.

Gábor Lukács, founder and co-ordinator of

Air Passenger Rights

, told National Post that, under the Montreal Convention, the maximum a passenger can receive for lost luggage on an international flight is

1,519 Special Drawing Rights

, or SDR.

That’s a currency used in international air travel situations, and it amounts to about $3,000. In the end, Gordon said he was compensated $1,272 by American Airlines.

An Oct. 12 email shared with National Post says this is “

for the shirts, shorts, pants, and snorkeling set.” It adds: “Please note that without receipts, we are unable to reimburse you for the watches, chain, Oakley sunglasses, cologne, shaving set, Aldo shoes, and Harry Rosen cufflinks, as these items are each valued over $100.00.” It includes a link to information about liability limits.

Lukács added that the limit “assumes there’s no willful misconduct by the airline.” The Gordons said the flight attendant “forcefully removed” the luggage from them.

“One thing I would do in such a situation always is make an excess value declaration on the spot,” said Lukacs. “Make sure you document it, because if you do make an excess value declaration, then there is no limit. Whatever you declare as an excess value becomes binding on the airline.”

That didn’t happen on the Gordons’ flight, but Karen remains incensed at the way American Airlines handled the situation.

“There was no dialogue, there was no communication, there was nothing,” she said. “There was just them telling me: We’re only paying you this, and that’s it. Because you don’t have receipts. And I’m like, if you’re going to travel, don’t you just go in your closet and take things down? Are you going to have receipts for everything that you own? It doesn’t make sense.”

She added: “The other thing is that I never checked (Stafford’s) bag. I didn’t even give it to you. You took it from me, right? So your policy really shouldn’t apply to me, because I never gave you (the) bag.”

National Post has reached out to American Airlines for comment but has not yet received a reply. A

CTV News

story on the event included this response form the airline: “Our goal is to provide a positive travel experience for all our customers. Our team has been in touch with the passenger to learn more about their experience and address their concerns, and we are working with them to come to a resolution.”

An email from American Airlines dated Oct. 24 and shared by the Gordons notes: “

Upon further review, as there was no receipts submitted for the items over $100.00 which is required, we believe our previous response was accurate and a reason hasn’t been found to reconsider the resolution of the claim. While we understand this isn’t the outcome you desired, please note there will be no further escalation from our office of this claim.”

Lukács said a legal challenge might be the only next step, and points to the flight attendant not tagging the bag when it was taken away.

“It hasn’t been litigated, per se,” he said. “I can’t pull you a case law on failing to tag a baggage qualifying (as reckless conduct), but it gets awfully close to it. I could very well see a small claims court judge say: You know what? You didn’t tag his baggage. That’s probably why it was lost.”

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Bartender Rob Montgomery prepares a Caesar at the Miller Tavern in Toronto, adding Worcestershire Sauce.

Canadians have been searching online for ways to pronounce a handful of words, from food to locations to everyday objects and everything in between. The number one search overall this year was for Worcestershire sauce, new research says.

The popular condiment, often used in meat dishes like in stews or in burgers, has British roots and

originated in Worcester, England

. It keeps the historical pronunciation, which to Canadians, may seem tricky. It appeared in 13,9200 searches, according to researchers at Unscramblerer, an online tool that find words from scrambled letters.

Experts analyzed search data from Google Trends for phrases such as “how do you pronounce” and “how to pronounce” starting on Jan. 1 until Nov 12, 2025. Not only was Worcestershire sauce the number one search for Canadians overall, it also topped the searches in the Yukon and Alberta.

Equally tricky for Canadians is the pronunciation of the Irish name, Saoirse. That was the most searched word for residents living in Nova Scotia. American-Irish actress Saoirse Ronan may be the inspiration for the search. In a Wired interview, she explained it’s pronounced like “sir-shah.”

It seems that residents in Prince Edward Island were curious about how to pronounce an area west of Toronto, known as Etobicoke. That was their number one search so far this year. The pronunciation of the administrative district was

notably butchered

by one man featured in a Netflix docu-series released in 2019, Don’t F—K with Cats, about a Canadian serial killer.

Quebecers, interestingly enough, wanted to know how to pronounce Montreal. Meanwhile, residents of New Brunswick were curious about how to say Qatar, a country in the Middle East.

In British Columbia, residents searched for how to pronounce Indigenous. In the Northwest Territories and Newfoundland and Labrador, residents were curious about French cuisine, looking up ways to say charcuterie and croissant, respectively.

Foods were also top of mind for people in Saskatchewan, whose top search was gnocchi, and in Nunavut, whose top search was acai. The latter is a kind of tree that provides dark purple berries, which have become

a popular snack

that originated in Brazil. The berries are often frozen and blended into a smoothie bowl with a variety of toppings. Its berries have been called a superfood for their high levels of antioxidants.

 Acai berries sit in a bowl at a market amid the nearby COP30 U.N. Climate Summit, Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.

Residents of Ontario and Manitoba looked up common words that have multiple pronunciations. In Ontario, the most searched word was schedule, which can be pronounced with a hard “ch” (like in the word character) or with a soft ch (like in the word avalanche). In Manitoba, residents were curious about how to say vase.

According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary

, most Canadians pronounce the “s” like a “z.”

Other words that Canadians searched in general included Dachshund, a dog breed from Germany, at 84,000 searches as well as gyro, a Greek dish, at 71,000 searches. Both of those words take on their original pronunciation from German and Greek respectively.

 Dachshunds Sweet Pea and Pea Soup were loving the attention from the Canada Day crowds on Tuesday July 1, 2025 in Cornwall, Ont.

Another search appeared to be influenced by this year’s World Series, when the Toronto Blue Jays faced off against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Canadians looked up how to say the last name of Blue Jays pitcher Trey Yesavage 10,800 times. In a video introducing himself, the athlete

pronounced his last name

in 2024.

In another video created ahead of the World Series, a speech expert broke it down.

Here’s a list of the top 15 words that Canadians searched this year:

  1. Worcestershire sauce (13,9200 searches)
  2. Croissant (86,400 searches)
  3. Dachshund (84,000 searches)
  4. Charcuterie (82,600 searches)
  5. Schedule (74,400 searches)
  6. Gyro (71,000 searches)
  7. Acai (70,900 searches)
  8. Quebec (67,200 searches)
  9. Aoife (66,000 searches)
  10. Cacao (65,000 searches)
  11. Qatar (58,800 searches)
  12. Niche (41,200 searches)
  13. Montreal (28,700 searches)
  14. Indigenous (20,400 searches)
  15. Yesavage (10,800 searches)

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