LP_468x60
on-the-record-468x60-white

Jolene Van Alstine has been on an exhausting journey through Saskatchewan's health-care system, in search of treatment for a rare and debilitating parathyroid disease. After enduring years of extreme pain and nausea, and unable to get treatment, Van Alstine decided to apply for a medically assisted death.

For nearly a decade, Jolene Van Alstine has been on an exhausting journey through Saskatchewan’s health-care system, in search of treatment for a rare and debilitating parathyroid disease.

What began as a search for a diagnosis, turned into a years-long wait to see an endocrinologist and an ongoing struggle to get the surgery she needs to treat her condition. After enduring years of extreme pain and nausea, and unable to get treatment, Van Alstine decided to apply for a medically assisted death.

Her story spread across social media after she appeared in the legislature to implore the government to help her get access to the surgery she needs, or else she would choose a medically assisted death.

It was Van Alstine’s understanding at the time that she had been approved for a Jan. 7 MAID appointment after a doctor assessed her. However, she learned late this week that a second doctor must sign off on any requests. The earliest she anticipates getting a MAID appointment at this point would be March, her husband, Miles Sundeen told National Post.

The couple is now hopeful Van Alstine won’t have to go through with her plan to die, as U.S. conservative commentator Glenn Beck has offered to pay for her to get surgery in the U.S. Sundeen and his wife have been in touch with Beck, who is looking for a surgeon willing to do the complex operation Van Alstine needs.

Saskatchewan’s health minister is also now helping Van Alstine find treatment in Canada.

National Post spoke with Miles Sundeen about Van Alstine’s condition and the fight to get her treatment. This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

How would you describe Jolene’s medical journey over the past 10 years?

It’s very difficult just getting in to get a diagnosis, and then the wait times for specialists, especially in Saskatchewan, to see an endocrinologist, was extensive. After seeing an endocrinologist, to get a referral to a surgeon to remove parathyroid glands, was a long wait. It’s a long wait for surgery. She’s had three surgeries now over the last four or five years, but it’s taken a great deal of time to work through the process every time.

How optimistic are you right now?

Well, we did go before the legislature here in Saskatchewan with the NDP a couple weeks ago, and we did have a meeting with Jeremy Cockrell, the health minister. He committed to helping us find help outside of the province of Saskatchewan. There are no endocrinologists in Saskatchewan taking new patients, and there’s not surgeons able to do the surgery, especially with Jolene’s complex case, but he’s committed to try and help us now. The plan that was devised with him was to get a referral from our family doctor to three clinics across Canada. One is in Hamilton, Ont. at McMaster, one at the University of Toronto, and one in Edmonton. So, the referrals have been sent to endocrinologists and the clinics that they work at. We haven’t had any response as of yet, so we’re hoping that that would be a good thing. But in the meantime, this gentleman in the U.S., Glenn Beck, has put it on his site, and apparently he got like a million hits about Jolene’s story, and he’s offered to pay for treatment and surgery, or whatever it is, in the USA.

How would you describe Health Minister Jeremy Corkrill’s attitude and sympathy towards the situation?

In the meeting, he was kind of neutral. We didn’t really touch base on that. We didn’t confront him in that situation. Seems a little bit apathetic, but he did commit to trying to help us. So that’s all I was really looking for. Unfortunately, it was verbal. There was nothing in writing. But for his commitment, I am hoping that I can take his word for it.

How did you find out that Beck wanted to help you and what steps have been taken?

I’ve been talking to one of his producers. Jolene says that she reached out to Beck because somebody told her that she was trending on Twitter, so she reached out to him and confirmed that he was for real. Because, quite honestly, neither of us had heard of him, but his assistants and I have been in communication over the last two days both on phone and by texting. Apparently, there were two surgeons in the U.S. that were interested in helping. One of the surgeons did call from Atlanta, and I talked to him today (Dec. 10). I gave him a synopsis of Jolene’s case, and it’s complex, and he felt it perhaps was a little bit beyond his pay grade, but that’s a nice thing to say. We had previously, three or four years ago, been in touch with the Norman Parathyroid clinic in Tampa Bay, Florida, and he is working on sending a referral to them for us. Apparently, they are the ultimate parathyroid institution in the United States, especially for complex cases. So that is good news. We are optimistic about that, that this might pan out to be something that will give Jolene some help, treatment and surgery.

How would you describe the support you’ve received from friends and family?

There are some friends and family that have tried to be supportive, but when you’re ill and not leaving the house, like not leaving the house for about eight years with no social interaction, only leaving the house for hospital visits, doctor appointments and lab work. People give up on you and write you off and just don’t think about you anymore. Social interactions are important to keeping relationships alive. So it’s been very tough. She has been very lonely, depressed, anxious about being just basically a social outcast, a hermit in her own home.

What are the symptoms of this condition?

One of the worst symptoms is nausea and vomiting. She is usually up at 4:30 in the morning. She goes to bed at 6 p.m. the night before, and she is so nauseated that she vomits for possibly two to four hours before it settles. She can’t take any of her nausea medications because they’re oral until she can control the vomiting enough in order to even take them to try and assist in controlling the vomiting. The other thing is, her body overheats. Her extremities get red, her hands, her feet and her face and her whole body just feels like it’s burning, and she’s spent two and a half years of her laying on the bathroom floor at night with the cold water running in the shower, day and night sometimes, and our temperature in our house, we spent two and a half years with it at 13 to 13.5 degrees Celsius, and that might be a nice spring day, but it’s not comfortable in the house when it’s minus 20 to 30 degrees. She has osteoporosis, very badly, because this disease leaches calcium out of her bones. She had four or five bone breaks, in four year, breaks where a normal person would have fallen or hit the joint or the bone and would have just ended up with a bruise. She apparently has had bone density tests, and she has the bones of an 80-year-old woman because of this disease. The longer it goes on, the worse it gets. So delaying treatment and surgery is very important, very important. So those are some of the symptoms. There are a couple others that are bad, but those are really horrendous, the bone pain as well, because, as the calcium leaks, it causes almost like a nerve bone pain. She’s on very strong medications of hydromorphone daily to try and control it.

How would you describe the support that people have given you since your story became public?

Honestly, to me, it’s very surprising, and I don’t even know how this particular thing came about. I know that the NDP, a couple weeks ago, said they were going to post the article on social media there, and I’m assuming that Glenn Beck and his staff saw this and decided to take up the cause.

To conclude, anything else that you think should be mentioned?

I’ll tell you one very important thing, and that’s this, is that because of the time lag to get treatment, Jolene has spent very close to eight years laying on a couch because she’s too ill. I mean, she can excuse me, she can get up and use the facilities herself, but she has home care and kind of looks after bathing and stuff.  I try to help, but she has no other capabilities, as far as leaving the house, cleaning, cooking, looking after herself, basically, in any way, shape or form. What this has done in the meantime, because of being so sedentary and being so nauseated every day, she gets sick all the time. She gets pneumonia. She’s developed a condition called diverticulitis, which is caused by a very sedentary lifestyle, at least one of the major causes, and that is a condition in the bowels, where, in the meantime, she’s had to have her sigmoid colon resected because of infection. She keeps getting infections in the bowels. This is something she does even when the parathyroid is looked after. This is a condition we have to fight and will have to live with the rest of her life as well. It’s a direct result of the parathyroid not being looked after in an expeditious manner and that’s very important, and that’s a very sad situation as well.

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.


Neighbours gather for picnic in London, Ontario. From the perspective of age, trust in neighbours is stronger for people 35 or more, according to a new Leger poll for the Association for Canadian Studies. (MAX MARTIN, The London Free Press)

Younger Canadians are generally less trusting than older people, according to a recent survey conducted by Leger for the Association for Canadian Studies.

Atlantic Canadians are the most trusting in general (71 per cent), while British Columbians are least trusting (51 per cent), says Jack Jedwab, president of the association.

“For several years we’ve been monitoring evolving rates of trust in peoples, nations and institutions,” Jedwab explains. With heightened degrees of polarization, especially along ideological lines, he says it’s vital to understand the extent this is accompanied by a breakdown in trust between people and within communities. 

“The persistence of younger people being less trusting is an outcome of growing polarization,” he says. “It’s compounded by greater vulnerability, where age intersects with less education and lower income all contributing to higher instability and more challenges for resolving conflicts where trust is often critical.”

This study suggests that the amount of education a person has can play a role in trust. People with university degrees are more inclined to trust (65 per cent), while folks with a high school diploma are less inclined (52 per cent).

And indeed, income is a factor. Folks making more than $100K are more likely to trust in general (62 per cent), while people making $40K are less likely (52 per cent).

Perhaps unsurprising, people living in rural areas are more inclined to trust their neighbours than city folk. Looking at this issue from the perspective of age, trust in neighbours is stronger for people 35 or more.

Overall, Jedwab says, ethnic minorities are the most trusting of people who share their ethnic background. Specifically, members of ethnic minorities who speak a language other than French or English are far more trusting of people that share their ethnic background than those who don’t.

Race also seems to play a role. According to Jedwab, Black Canadians are least trusting of people in general, while Chinese and Middle Eastern are generally more trusting of people that share the same background.

A related Leger survey for the Association for Canadian Studies looked at the level of trust in the workplace.

Trust is vital in establishing a strong workplace culture and is linked to successful economic outcomes, productivity and job satisfaction, says Jedwab.

“The survey found that younger people are also less trusting of co-workers,” he notes. But most other Canadians do, beginning with the 45-54 years’ old cohort.

Meanwhile, most Canadians say they trust their bosses and that level starts to increase between ages 35-44.

“The results on trust send an important message to labor leaders who are the object of much distrust compared to employers who earn relatively strong trust. The gap may affect a union’s influence in effectively representing workers.”

Indeed, based the survey results suggest the Canadian view of labour unions is not positive. Most Canadians don’t trust labor union leaders, especially between ages 45 and 54.

Finally, Canadian trust their co-workers more than their employers or union leaders.

“Income is an important driver of trust across that spectrum,” says Jedwab. “People with higher incomes are far more trusting of bosses and co-workers.”

Both surveys were conducted in late October, the first with 1,527 respondents, the latter with 1,537.

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.


Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe has launched another attack on federal equalization payments, posting an illustrative map showing western provinces getting nothing in 2026.

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe is not giving up the fight to change the federal system of

equalization payments

to the provinces.

In a Dec. 11 post to X, he included a map that shows his province, Alberta and B.C. receiving nothing from 2026 equalization.

Several eastern provinces are set to get substantial sums: Quebec $13.9B, Nova Scotia $3.5B, New Brunswick $3.3B. Ontario is getting less, $406M, Newfoundland and Labrador is in line for $182 million while the smallest province in the country will be getting $723M.

The only western exception is Manitoba ($5B).

This is not the first time Moe has been critical of the system. He has described the equalization formula as

unfair to provinces like Saskatchewan

that rely heavily on natural resources, arguing that including the resource revenues in the equalization calculation penalizes provinces such as his.

He has regularly framed equalization as a

pattern of the West being taken advantage of by Central and Eastern Canada

.

“The equalization formula doesn’t reflect the economic realities of the western provinces,” says Saskatchewan’s executive director of media relations, Jill McAlister-Lane.

In a Friday email to National Post, she wrote: “Equalization is meant to ensure comparable public services across the country, but the current formula is inequitable. The formula masks the fiscal challenges faced by some provinces while supporting those in other provinces.”

While discussion about equalization has the potential to pit province against province, McAllister-Lane is careful not to go there.

“It isn’t about one province versus another. Saskatchewan respects each province has its own economic structure and needs. The issue is the formula, which doesn’t account for Saskatchewan’s economic contributions in areas like energy, mining and agriculture. Saskatchewan contributes significantly to the national economy. We would like a formula that acknowledges that contribution and treats all provinces fairly.”

One of the notable points in Saskatchewan’s battle against the current system came

in 2018, when Moe put forward a plan to reform

it by cutting the total by about 50 per cent and then redistributing the savings to all provinces on a per‑capita basis. Since then, he has continued to push for per‑capita transfers.

Under

Moe’s proposa

l, non‑recipient “have” provinces like Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia would gain, while “have not” provinces would lose, relative to their present status quo.

Quebec

, which now receives more than half of all equalization dollars, would lose funding because part of its share would be removed and redistributed throughout the country.

Meanwhile, Moe’s government has been pushing back in the courts. It got involved in

Newfoundland and Labrador’s legal battle

, launched in 2024, when that province challenged the federal equalization program in the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador. It is claiming the formula unfairly penalizes it by not accounting for service delivery costs within its dispersed population, while also imposing a fiscal capacity cap and applying a GDP growth ceiling, potentially depriving it of billions.

Moe has similarly reiterated that Saskatchewan has not received equalization for many years while arguing the formula ignores structural costs involved in serving sparsely populated provinces.

The case is ongoing with no trial date set. The

Canadian Taxpayers Federation

and the Saskatchewan government have been granted intervenor status to oppose demands for larger payments, citing risks of higher costs for net-payer provinces.

He continues to keep the issue alive, echoing criticism by Alberta’s Danielle Smith that Saskatchewan, Alberta and B.C. are

“helping support the rest of Canada”

while not receiving equalization payments themselves.

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.


An Ontario senior found not criminally responsible for attacking three housemates with a hammer has been discharged. The Ontario Review Board heard James Harding consumed cannabis around the time of the attacks and likes to use it regularly.

An Ontario senior found not criminally responsible for attacking three housemates with a hammer before he tried to punch a police officer and kicked a nurse in the face has been discharged.

James Harding, 73, appeared recently in front of the Ontario Review Board at the Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences in Whitby, Ont., where he was a patient until he was released into the community in May 2023.

“The panel found that Mr. Harding remains a significant threat to the safety of the public and the necessary and appropriate disposition to manage that risk is a discharge with … conditions,” said the decision discharging Harding on the condition that he consents to treatment for his schizoaffective and substance use disorders, and keeps living at a facility that’s staffed 24 hours a day.

The panel heard that in August 2020, Harding was living in a Scarborough group home.

“In the early morning hours of Aug. 21, 2020, he was agitated and paranoid, believing that the other residents were out to kill him,” said the decision.

“He armed himself with a hammer. He went to Victim #1’s room and struck him in the head. The victim sustained lacerations and bruising to his head and arms. Mr. Harding then proceeded to the room of Victim #2 and struck him in the arm with the hammer, resulting in Victim #2 having a swollen arm. Mr. Harding encountered Victim #3 on the front porch of the residence. He struck him with the hammer on the head, face and shoulder. Victim #3 sustained a skull fracture, facial fractures and bruising.”

Once outside, Harding smashed the windows of a parked car.

“When police arrested him, he tried to punch the officer,” said the decision.

“He was taken to the Scarborough General Hospital as he had sustained cuts from the broken windows. While being treated, he kicked a nurse in the face. She fell back against the wall and fainted, temporarily losing consciousness.”

Harding was charged with two counts each of assault with a weapon and aggravated assault. But he was found not criminal responsible in May 2021 on account of a mental disorder.

Harding “has a long history of substance use, particularly cannabis, alcohol and cocaine,” said the panel, which notes he attended a residential treatment program for alcohol.

Now that he’s been discharged, Harding, who consumes cannabis regularly, will no longer be under orders to avoid drugs.

Harding — a drummer who has played in bands throughout his life — is believed to have consumed cannabis around the time of his hammer attacks.

The panel accepted his psychiatrist’s “evidence that while Mr. Harding has continued to consume cannabis, the amounts have not resulted in a change in his mental status,” said the panel’s decision, dated Dec. 3.

“Should such a change be observed, the team will have the ability to request a urine sample to determine possible causes, such as increasing amounts of cannabis or the use of other substances.”

This past January, Harding experienced “significant sleep difficulties,” while living at a facility in Scarborough, said the decision.

“The treatment team tried to manage the issue with medications. On Jan. 16, 2025, Mr. Harding experienced more intense paranoid beliefs and secured one of the residence’s fire extinguishers to use for his protection. The decision was made to readmit him to hospital and Mr. Harding was agreeable.”

Harding was discharged from hospital this past April to a group home.

“He has remained adherent to his medications which are administered by staff at the group home,” said the panel’s decision.

“He continues to report auditory hallucinations but they do not appear to impact on his day-to-day functioning.”

Harding, who has maintained periods of abstinence, has also tested positive for cannabinoids on several occasions, said the decision.

“Mr. Harding often told his forensic case manager that he had a desire to use cannabis on a regular basis. The forensic team noted that he lacked insight into their concerns of how this may impact his mental status.”

Harding was raised with his two younger sisters in Scarborough, said the panel.

He was diagnosed with schizophrenia in the late 1980s, said the panel. “He has had numerous admissions to various hospitals in the Scarborough area, often after displaying symptoms of paranoia and arming himself with a weapon for protection,” said the decision.

“He reported experiencing command auditory hallucinations.”

In April 2024, Harding went to Scarborough’s Birchmount Hospital because he was “concerned about his own safety and (reporting) paranoid ideation in relation to his co-residents and police. He appeared to see the hospital as a place of refuge.”

He was transferred to a forensic unit at Ontario Shores where his meds were adjusted. Harding was sent home to his residence on June 5, 2024.

Harding “continues to experience residual psychosis on a regular basis,” said the panel. “He identifies his auditory hallucinations as ‘good voices’ giving him positive messages.”

Harding’s “mental state can fluctuate widely,” said the panel.

“When his sleep is disrupted, his mental status deteriorates significantly. His paranoia becomes more intense and historically this has resulted in his arming himself with weapon. Should that reoccur, as in the past, he likely will act out against those in close proximity. As such, he remains a significant threat to the safety of those living and working in his residence, as well as those attempting to assist him, such as police officers or nurses.”

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.


“He’s not a traditional ambassador,” a Canadian auto industry insider says of U.S. envoy Pete Hoekstra. “He is very likely making his boss happy, while he makes the rest of us uneasy.”

Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page.

The U.S. election had just ended and Pete Hoekstra was on a bit of a high. He’d taken charge of a divided Republican Party in Michigan and, with his team, helped steer the key battleground state to Donald Trump.

Now he was asking Trump’s people about possible jobs in the new administration.

They had a simple response: talk to the president-elect himself. Hoekstra dutifully called Trump on his cell phone and won an invitation to the Mar-a-Lago estate – the next day.

Hoekstra and his wife Diane drove three hours from their own home in Florida to the Palm Beach compound and soon enough the former congressman was sitting down with Trump.

“He said, ‘What do you want to do?’ I said, ‘I think I see myself as your ambassador to Canada,’ ” Hoekstra recalled in a recent interview. “He had kind of a quizzical look … and he says ‘I like that, I like that idea.’ ”

Within three hours of their encounter last November, the next president of the United States had announced on Truth Social the name of his new ambassador to Canada.

But if getting the job was strikingly smooth-sailing, actually doing it has turned out to be a little different.

Hoekstra has raised the profile of the American ambassador to Canada to seemingly unprecedented heights – and regularly courted controversy and criticism in the process.

He’s publicly voiced bafflement at why Canadians are angry at Trump for imposing devastating tariffs and urging this country to become the 51st state, suggested Canada’s response to Trump’s actions has been “nasty and mean” and reportedly aimed an expletive-laden rant at Ontario’s trade representative in front of a crowd of stunned onlookers.

One academic expert calls him the most contentious ambassador the U.S. has ever dispatched here, while others see Hoekstra as a sort of diplomatic embodiment of the pugnacious president he represents.

“For the first time, it appears that the American ambassador’s audience in everything he says publicly is the president,” said Flavio Volpe, president of Canada’s Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association. “He is very likely making his boss happy, while he makes the rest of us uneasy … He’s not a traditional ambassador. He’s not from central casting.”

There have been sharper assessments, too.

“Dear Canada: beware,” proclaimed the left-wing

Common Dreams

 website in March. “Hoekstra deserves to be treated as a hostile guest.”

But the ambassador – who is personable and unassuming in one-on-one conversation – makes no apologies for the abruptness of his approach. Some might call it undiplomatic; he sees it as injecting a bit of straight-talking fresh air into a sometimes-obtuse diplomatic culture.

“I’m not only Dutch, I’m Frisian, which they call the most stubborn and blunt group – and the Dutch pride themselves on being blunt,” he said. “(That) is pretty valuable as a diplomat … I don’t think (Canadian officials) leave the meeting saying ‘What was he trying to tell us? Do you think Trump is really serious about tariffs?’ ”

Nor is his approach to the job entirely surprising.

Hoekstra was a prominent figure in U.S. national politics, chairing the important House of Representatives intelligence committee from 2004-2007 and meeting with world leaders from Muammar Gaddafi to Vladimir Putin.

But as a conservative Republican lawmaker, think-tank pundit, author and diplomat, he has often been in sync with Trump’s worldview, a loyal backer of the businessman’s presidential career – and unafraid to plunge into hot water.

While warning about the threat of “radical Islam,” he asserted repeatedly that Europe was spotted with Muslim “no-go zones,” a claim that would backfire in his first ambassadorial job in the Netherlands. He has said American “government schools” were being used “to

indoctrinate our children

 with Marxist ideology.” And in a losing bid for a U.S. Senate seat, he ran a TV ad that critics blasted as racist.

Hoekstra is also listed as a contributor to Project 2025, the provocative right-wing blueprint for government that Trump distanced himself from during last year’s election but has mirrored extensively in his policies since taking power.

Steve Emerson, who made Hoekstra a fellow of his Investigative Project on Terrorism, describes his friend as independent-minded.

“He was just a brilliant guy and a can-do guy who just wanted to get things done,” said Emerson. “He is an original thinker. He’s not conventional at all in so far as policies or in terms of ideology. He thought outside the box, which I really admired.”

 U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra delivers a monologue before taking part in a discussion on Canada-U.S. relations during the Global Business Forum in Banff, Sept. 25, 2025.

Hoekstra is certainly a staunch advocate for his country, too, but the 72-year-old was actually born in the northern Netherlands city of Groningen, before his family emigrated and settled in Michigan when he was three.

After undergraduate and MBA degrees and rising to be vice president of marketing at office-furniture maker Herman Miller he turned his attention to politics, first winning election to the House of Representatives in 1992.

He was a founding member of the Tea Party caucus, home to some of the most conservative Republicans in Congress. Hoekstra himself had a

voting record

 that in Canada would place him on the rightward edge of mainstream politics, opposing abortion rights, same-sex marriage, gay adoption, gun control and paid parental leave for federal employees.

But he made his name on the intelligence committee and

has said

 that in the decade after the 9/11 attacks he spent “almost all of my time” on intelligence matters. Hoekstra’s focus became what he once termed America’s “greatest threat”: the rise of “radical Jihad, radical Islamists.”

It led to some unexpected bedfellows.

At the invitation of the George W. Bush administration, he met with the late Libyan dictator Gaddafi in 2003, then twice afterward. As he recounts in his book,

Architects of Disaster: The Destruction of Libya

, Gaddafi had been a brutal dictator and one of the world’s most prolific backers of terrorist acts, including the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jumbo jet over Lockerbie, Scotland.

But the encounters were a resounding success, Hoekstra says, part of U.S. efforts that convinced the brutal strongman to become a de-facto ally of the States. That meant giving up his nuclear-weapons program, compensating victims of the Pan Am attack and, especially, helping combat violent Islamic extremists.

“Yes, Muammar Gaddafi was a monster,” Hoekstra conceded in his book. “But he was our monster.”

Today, he remembers surprisingly productive sessions with the Libyan despot.

“Gadaffi was very rational … You don’t sit there and think ‘I’m talking to a crazy guy,’ ” says Hoekstra. “He’s making rational, realistic arguments and you could have a good discussion with him.”

In fact, he argues in his book that President Barack Obama made a colossal mistake when he decided to aid Libyan opposition forces, spearheading a NATO air campaign that included Canadian CF-18s and bringing about Gadaffi’s downfall and death. The ensuing leadership vacuum led to chaos, civil war and fertile ground for terrorists, Hoekstra says, with an ambassador and three other Americans at the U.S. mission in Benghazi falling victim to a 2012 militant attack.

Hoekstra also voted in favour of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, which itself led to a bloody insurgency that killed 4,400 Americans and an estimated hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, while helping sow the seeds of the Islamic State terror group.

Hoekstra stayed on the radical-Islam beat after his career in Congress ended in 2011, working with Emerson’s Investigative Project on Terrorism, then writing the Libya book.

He often warned against the United States following the example of western Europe, which he said had naively allowed Islamists a foothold there.

“Chaos in the Netherlands. There are cars being burned. There are politicians that are being burned,” he said at a

2015 panel discussion

 called Muslim Migration into Europe: Eurabia Come True? “With the influx of the Islamic community … there are no-go zones in the Netherlands. All right? There are no-go zones in France … There are no go zones in Britain as well, but they are tearing the Dutch apart politically.”

Hoekstra also made two attempts at statewide office, first losing the Republican primary for the Michigan governor’s post, then battling Democrat Debbie Stabenow for a seat in the U.S. Senate. He fell short in that one, too, and

sparked controversy

 with a commercial that depicted a stereotypical Chinese peasant speaking in broken English.

 Pete Hoekstra, then Michigan Republican Party chairman, speaks at a Donald Trump campaign rally in Freeland, Mich., May 1, 2024.

A few years later Trump was vying to be president, with Hoekstra’s “close friend” Mike Pence as his running mate. Trump’s staff asked Hoekstra to co-chair the campaign in Michigan. He reminded them that the role usually fell to a sitting member of Congress. That’s true, the aides told him, but all the state’s Republican lawmakers had turned down the job.

“People forget, but back then, Republican congressmen who were on the ballot, they had no idea whether being aligned with Trump or not, what the impact would be on their campaign.”

Trump won a slim, unexpected victory in the state and later named Hoekstra ambassador to the Netherlands. But his first stab at diplomacy started in rocky fashion.

A reporter for Holland’s public broadcaster asked him about his comments on alleged Muslim no-go zones and the burning of cars and politicians, assertions that the Dutch widely rejected. Hoekstra denied he’d ever said such a thing, calling it “fake news.” The

journalist then showed him

 – and later broadcast to TV viewers – a clip of the ambassador saying exactly that.

The State Department repudiated the comments and the ambassador apologized.

The posting ended when Joe Biden captured the White House in 2020, but four years on Hoekstra was back in the political fray, chairing the Michigan party and helping pave the way for Trump’s return to office.

Hoekstra says he had his eye on the Ottawa job in part because of his ties to this country – he had an aunt and uncle who lived in B.C. and Alberta, his wife has a sister who called Smithers, B.C., home and an uncle who was a pastor in St. Catharines, Ont.  Hoekstra almost took a job in Guelph, Ont., after obtaining his MBA in the late 1970s. He also cites the fact Canadian troops liberated his parents’ city in the Netherlands during the Second World War and that Canada is a huge trading partner of America’s.

As his Mar-a-Lago one-on-one with Trump ended, the president invited Hoekstra and his wife into a meeting with his core transition team, including Vice President JD Vance by Zoom, and the deal was sealed.

The appointment began on a positive note. Hoekstra told his Senate

confirmation hearing

 in March that “I recognize Canada’s longstanding friendship, our deep economic ties and our strong military alliance.” He touted his good, bipartisan relations with Democratic ambassadors who came after him in the Netherlands and before him in Canada, and said Trump’s priorities were “freer, fairer trade.”

 Pete Hoekstra, with his wife Diane, arrive at their residence in The Hague to start his stint as U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, Jan. 10, 2018. As it is in Canada, his time in the Netherlands was also not without some controversy.

A Democratic senator asked if he agreed that Canada “should not be even jokingly referred to” as part of the U.S. “Canada is a sovereign state,” Hoekstra replied.

Even so, Volpe said the ambassador was “still repeating the president’s annexation language” during their first private meeting to discuss trade issues. Hoekstra later suggested publicly that Trump’s 51st state musings were “a term of endearment,” something few Canadians

seemed to swallow

.

He says now that promoting annexation was never part of his remit as ambassador and feels both Trump and Prime Minister Mark Carney have long since moved past the issue.

Even so, Trump went beyond just suggesting Canada join the U.S. and calling then-prime minister Justin Trudeau “governor.”

When asked if he would use military force against his northern neighbour, the president said

“economic force”

would be his preference, and encouraged getting rid of the “artificially drawn line” between the countries. Meanwhile, Trump imposed 35-per-cent tariffs on goods not covered by the countries’ free-trade agreement, as well as crushing new tariffs on aluminum, steel, copper and lumber that also apply to other nations. Despite Hoekstra’s suggestion that the president wanted “freer, fairer” trade, Trump has touted tariffs as a way to shift jobs to the States, and said the U.S. simply does not need most of what Canada exports.

Some diplomats might have tried to soothe the anger, if only to bolster their government’s position. Hoekstra appeared uninterested in coddling.

He said he didn’t understand the bitterness and lamented that “it is very, very difficult to find Canadians who are passionate about the American-Canadian relationship.” The ambassador scoffed at what he called “anti-American” campaigning in the last federal election, and said it was understandable the White House considers it “nasty and mean” of some provinces to ban American alcohol and for Canadians to curb travel to the States.

His strongest pushback, though, came after the Ontario government paid for an ad on American television made up almost entirely of clips of former president Ronald Reagan decrying the idea of tariffs. The TV campaign prompted Trump to halt trade talks with Canada and threaten to slap on another 10-per-cent tariff.

 “I recognize Canada’s longstanding friendship, our deep economic ties and our strong military alliance,” U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra had said at his Senate confirmation hearing.

In public, Hoekstra said “you do not come into America and start running political ads – government-funded political ads – and expect that there will be no consequences or reaction.”

At the Canadian American Business Council gala – traditionally a forum for cross-border bonhomie – he angrily laid into Ontario’s Washington trade representative about the commercial, according to reports quoting unnamed sources in the Toronto Sun, Globe and Mail and CBC.

The trade official, David Paterson, declined to comment on the episode, telling the National Post “we need our ambassadors to be successful problem solvers – and I wish him well.”

Despite all the controversy, Canadians are wrong to think of Hoekstra as prickly or antagonistic, says Emerson about his friend.

“He’s not an abrasive person at all. He’s a very friendly guy,” said the think-tank head. But Hoekstra “didn’t suffer fools very lightly. He was always someone who was very direct. He didn’t hold back in terms of saying something that needed to be said.”

Volpe concedes the ambassador is, in fact, a more reasonable and likeable fellow in private.

Hoekstra stressed in the interview that Canada is being treated no worse than any of the other countries facing Trump tariffs. And yet he said his impression from speaking to fellow U.S. ambassadors around the world is that Canada has reacted with “unique” vehemence.

Hoekstra said trade talks will resume sooner or later and he’s made suggestions to the Carney government on how to proceed. Canada can try against tough odds to avoid any U.S. trade barriers at all or, he said, “If you want to negotiate for the lowest tariffs of any country in the world … you may have a great case.”

Meanwhile, the ambassador says that he can literally pick up the phone and call or text Trump when needed.

Hoekstra’s performance may end up being judged brilliant, bullheaded or something worse. Whatever the verdict, says David Haglund, a Queen’s University international relations professor, it looks like one for the history books.

Arguably the last time an American diplomat created so much fuss here was more than six decades ago, he said, when John F. Kennedy’s ambassador – Walton Butterworth –

issued a news release

 with “corrections” on a speech by then prime minister John Diefenbaker. Diefenbaker was livid at the Americans, said Haglund.

But the expert on Canada-U.S. relations believes Hoekstra’s lot as an ambassador has few if any precedents. He’s had to be the front man here for both a major eruption of American protectionism and talk of annexing Canada, something not heard from a U.S. president since the 19th century.

“He’s got to walk a tightrope,” said Haglund. “If he tries to inject too much rationality into the discussion, he gets zapped by Trump.

“I’m not going out of my way to defend him, but I feel a bit of sympathy for the predicament he’s in,” the Queen’s professor added. “I’m sure when he showed up in Ottawa he didn’t think he’d become the most controversial U.S. ambassador in history.”

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.


Markham-Unionville MP Michael Ma speaks briefly at the Liberal Party caucus Christmas party hours after crossing the floor from the Conservatives to the Liberals, in Ottawa, on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025.

OTTAWA — If there’s one person who won’t be receiving any Conservative MP Christmas cards, it’s Markham–Unionville MP Michael Ma.

In fact, if anything, Conservatives want the floor-crossing new Liberal MP to return a Christmas gift he already received.

“I was Michael Ma’s Secret Santa. I gave him an Amazon Fire Stick just hours before he crossed the floor. Now I want my gift back, just like the people of Markham—Unionville want their votes back!,”

Conservative MP Kurt Holman posted on social media

Friday morning.

Though metaphors involving Santa and lumps of coal may be seasonally relevant, the atmosphere in the Liberal and Conservative camps going into the Christmas break is more akin to a tale of two cities.

For the Carney Liberals, it feels like the best of times. The party is now one seat away from the slimmest of majorities after a difficult fall Parliamentary session in which only

one minor bill received royal assent

by the time the House of Commons rose.

“What’s everyone’s favourite number?,” Liberal MP James Maloney asked thousands of Liberals attending the party’s Christmas party Thursday evening, just hours after Ma announced he was crossing the floor.

“171,” his co-host and Liberal MP Mona Fortier replied with a smirk, earning a standing ovation from elated party staff and MPs.

For many Conservatives, it feels like some of the worst of times they’ve experienced since Pierre Poilievre was elected leader in 2022.

In the last five weeks, the caucus has lost three MPs — Ma and Chris d’Entremont crossed the floor to the Liberals, Matt Jeneroux announced that he will resign at some point — and many fear that more are to come.

“I expect two more, at least,” one Conservative caucus member told National Post. “Poilievre will continue to die a death of 1,000 cuts, because I’ve never seen a guy who’s so unaware of the room he’s in, and I’ve never seen a guy who just refuses to stop doing stupid things.”

National Post spoke to multiple Liberal and Conservative caucus members for this story. All were granted anonymity to describe internal caucus dynamics candidly.

On Friday, there was rampant speculation on both sides of the aisle that if there are more Conservatives joining the Liberals, it could happen after Poilievre faces his leadership review in mid-January.

The fact that Ma covered his tracks so carefully before leaving his former caucus adds to the surprise and dismay of his former Conservative colleagues.

In the weeks leading up to his defection, Ma repeatedly voted with the Conservatives and lambasted the Liberals’ 2025 budget extensively.

He even attended the party’s private Christmas party Wednesday, had his picture taken with Poilievre and can be seen on the dance floor in videos shared online.

(Though, MPs will say, he did not buy a gift for his own Secret Santa recipient.)

One Conservative caucus member described Ma’s departure as a “gut punch”. Another said they were “very shocked” to hear the news.

“I am really trying to just absorb what all has transpired over the last few days,” said one MP. “I think we’re all probably just processing it.”

Among Liberal MPs, chatter has now turned from “if” more Conservative MPs will join their ranks to “when.” Among Conservatives, the focus is on “how” to stop the bleeding.

“They want to demoralize you. Don’t let them,” Conservative MP Jamil Jivani posted on X a few hours after Ma’s announcement. “You are right to believe our country needs better leadership. The status quo isn’t working. Keep fighting until we get a federal government that the great Canadian people deserve.”

On Friday, Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon claimed he is aware of a “minority” within the Conservative caucus that is unhappy with the leadership and direction of their party.

“Many Conservative MPs speak to me, speak to my colleagues about their frustration with Pierre Poilievre’s obstruction and little games,” he said in French.

“There are others like Mr. Ma who share the kind of view that I just described,” he later added.

If another floor crossing to the Liberals happens, it will likely be done in total secret, much like with Ma. The secret was so tightly held that minutes before Christmas party co-hosts Fortier and Maloney took the stage, they were scrambling to rewrite their speech in light of the floor-crossing they never knew was coming.

Toronto Sun columnist Brian Lilley reported Friday

that even Ma’s staff didn’t know until the last minute that he was crossing the floor.

“In caucus Wednesday… there was zero, zero, zero hint,” one Liberal MP told National Post. “Everything is done very, very underground.”

National Post

cnardi@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 politics newsletter, First Reading, here.


Martin Imbleau, president and CEO of Alto, second from right, points at Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe as Minister of Transport and Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Steven MacKinnon, right, looks on following an announcement about the next steps for high-speed rail during a press conference in Gatineau, Que., on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025.

OTTAWA — The first section of Canada’s proposed high-speed rail project will link the regions of Ottawa to Montreal, a decision that is not only symbolic but practical, said Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon on Friday.

Speaking in Gatineau, Que., with a delegation of local MPs and mayors, MacKinnon said that this segment will represent “a unique opportunity to connect two provinces and quickly generate benefits for travelers, communities and the economy.”

“Why start with this part of the route? Because it is, for several reasons, the most logical option, it is a relatively short and straight portion of the overall route,” he said.

“These high-speed trains, they don’t like curves. They need to go in a straight line. This provides an excellent opportunity for teams in both provinces to begin to develop together the expertise needed to deliver the other segments, both in Ontario and in Quebec.”

Martin Imbleau, the CEO of Alto, the Crown corporation behind the project, said linking those two cities is “just a natural place for us to start.”

“The Ottawa-Montreal segment also gives us a manageable distance to deliver it in a controlled, disciplined way,” he said, adding that the defined scope sequence will help validate assumptions and pave the way to expand the network with “greater agility.”

The project promises to develop roughly 1,000 kilometres of fully electric rail dedicated to high-speed commuter trains that will run between Toronto and Quebec City.

Alto claims the trains will hit speeds of up to 300 km/h and will cut travel between certain cities by half compared to existing Via Rail service. For instance, commuting from Ottawa to Montreal could take only an hour compared to the current two hours on the Via route.

Even though the final route has not been determined, the first part of the high-speed rail will also include Laval — on Montreal’s north shore.

“How we enter Montreal to connect Laval remains to be determined,” said Imbleau.

MacKinnon said that since the first section would be at the centre of the future network, the other segments could be added to the west of Ottawa — to Peterborough and Toronto — as well as to the east of Montreal and Laval — to Trois-Rivières and Quebec City.

The minister also said that while Ottawa has the current train infrastructure, his objective is for the entire National Capital region to be more interconnected with a tramway in the western part of Gatineau and a new crossing to Ottawa in the east of Gatineau.

Alto is set to hold public consultations starting in January 2026 in various cities that are impacted by the project, including Ottawa and Gatineau.

But already, the federal government is laying out the ground for the project — estimated to cost between $60 and $90 billion — to move ahead at high speed.

The budget implementation bill, C-15, proposes not only

sweeping new powers to accelerate the acquisition or expropriation of land for the project

, but also proposes to exclude it from review by the Canadian Transportation Agency.

Over the summer, the Carney government also designated the high-speed railway as a “transformative project” under its new Major Projects Office and promised to cut the time before construction from eight to five years.

On Friday, MacKinnon said he was hoping for the project to start in four years instead — in 2029. And even less time would be better, he said.

“Believe me, if we could get shovels in the ground in 2028, we’ll do it.”

— With files from Christopher Nardi. 

National Post

calevesque@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 newsletters here.


Premier Danielle Smith at the UCP Annual General Meeting at the Edmonton Expo Centre on Saturday, November 29, 2025.

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she still supports Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre ahead of his high-stakes leadership review, despite her quibbles about his recent motion endorsing an oil pipeline to the West Coast.

“Yes and yes,” said Smith when asked if she thought Poilievre should stay on as Conservative leader and whether she’d be around for the party’s upcoming national convention in Calgary, which is scheduled for Jan. 29 to 31.

The convention will culminate with a confidence vote on Poilievre’s performance as party leader.

Despite her continued backing of Poilievre, she admitted to being somewhat baffled by the recent

motion he put forward

targeting her memorandum of understanding (MOU) on energy issues with Prime Minister Mark Carney.

“We were hopeful that, if Pierre was going to do that, he would have put the whole MOU forward,” said Smith, in a year-end interview with National Post.

The motion, clipping language from

the 2,000-word MOU

relating to the construction of a new West Coast pipeline and reversal of the federal oil tanker ban, was voted down on party lines.

Smith said the defeat doesn’t at all undermine the MOU’s credibility.

“Look, if (Green party leader) Elizabeth May had cherry-picked only the things in the agreement that she agreed with and put those into a motion, I would have expected the prime minister to vote against that too, because it was a package,” said Smith.

The MOU also included concessions on the industrial carbon tax and GHG emissions reduction.

Smith said she doesn’t expect much trouble for Poilievre from the party faithful.

“From what I’ve seen, he continues to have incredibly strong support,” said Smith.

Smith called Poilievre a “consistent voice in favour of the Alberta energy industry” and said that her province would be on stronger footing if he had won April’s federal election.

“(Poilievre) would not have put any concessions on us, he would have not (made) unreasonable demands, he would have repealed

the nine bad laws

and we’d probably be well underway in planning a pipeline,” said Smith.

“Unfortunately, he didn’t win in April (but I’m) delighted for his continued advocacy,” she added.

Smith endorsed Poilievre ahead of the election, returning the favour after

he publicly backed her

in Alberta’s last provincial vote in May 2023.

Her comments to National Post came just hours before

Toronto-area Conservative MP

Michael Ma announced he was crossing the floor to join the governing Liberals. He is the party’s second MP, after Nova Scotia’s Chris d’Entremont, to defect in the past month, and he put the Liberals within one seat of a majority.

Smith didn’t elaborate on whether she’d be at the Calgary convention in person but said she was looking forward to it.

“It’s going to be a fantastic convention,” said Smith.

Smith’s enthusiastic backing notwithstanding, polls show that Poilievre has some work ahead of him to convince the party rank-and-file that he’s still their guy.

A just-released Angus Reid study found that

as many as two-in-five

Conservative voters may be having second thoughts about Poilievre’s leadership ahead of next month’s review.

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.


Shiri Gabriel and her husband were refused a ride home in February by an Uber driver after he heard them speaking Hebrew, she told National Post.

A Toronto woman says her luggage was tossed out of a vehicle by an Uber driver when he heard her speaking Hebrew to her husband. The driver then refused to take them home from the airport after they arrived from a trip in the middle of the night in February.

Shiri Gabriel’s snub at Toronto Pearson airport brings the number of antisemitic acts involving the rideshare company and Torontonians to three. In August, David Woolf, 78, who splits his time between Toronto and Israel, said an Uber driver in Europe refused to take him, his wife and their friends to a train station, because he said he was from Israel. Toronto model

Miriam Mattova recently told National Post

she was kicked out of a vehicle in the middle of the night last month after the driver heard her speaking about Israel. The driver told her “they do not drive Jewish people,” she told the Post.

Gabriel, 52, was born in Peru, moved to Israel in her teens and then later to Canada. She said her husband ordered an Uber through the app on Feb. 11 after returning to Toronto from Florida. When the vehicle arrived, her husband started putting luggage in the trunk while the male driver sat inside the vehicle. Gabriel waited in the back seat to keep warm.

As her husband was finishing up with the luggage, she said something to him in Hebrew.

“Then the Uber driver turns to me and says, ‘Get out! Get out!’” she told National Post. “He gets out of the car, literally takes our suitcases and throws them on the road, all of them.”

The driver wouldn’t tell the couple why he refused to take them, but Gabriel said it was “clearly an antisemitic act.”

Through her husband’s Uber account, they reported the incident. Uber responded via email the following day and said the behaviour they described was “completely unacceptable and not tolerated” on the platform. The company refunded them $5 in Uber Cash, and said they would not be matched with the driver again.

“It felt like a punch in the gut, like literally a slap in the face. I’m telling you this whole story, I’m writing an email about what clearly is an antisemitic act… and all you have to say is (here’s) $5,” she said. “No repercussions, nothing…not even saying, ‘We will look into it further,’ or, ‘We’re sorry that this happened to you.’”

An Uber spokesperson told National Post in an emailed statement: “We’re sorry for the experience this rider had. Discrimination has no place on our platform, and we take reports like this very seriously. We’ve been in contact with both parties to understand from each of them what happened, and have taken appropriate action based on the information we were able to gather.”

Gabriel described herself as being openly Jewish and proudly displaying her Star of David. But she was reluctant to escalate the situation in person because the driver had her home address through the app. She also said she didn’t want to take the complaint further with Uber or include details about it online because she believed there wouldn’t be any point.

“This is why my expectations, especially since then, are lowered. That’s why I probably shut down and I said, ‘You know what? I’m not even talking to the media.’ Nobody wants to hear this. Nobody wants to listen,” she said.

“Nobody really cares here in Canada — in Canada specifically.”

A similar incident occurred when Woolf was travelling in Europe over the summer.

Woolf was in Belgium with his wife and another couple in late August. They decided to take a day trip to Rotterdam in the Netherlands. After visiting the city’s Market Hall, they had to go back to the train station. Woolf ordered an Uber on his wife’s account, which they share.

When the male driver arrived, Woolf asked where he was from in a friendly tone. The driver said he was from Yemen. But when the driver asked Woolf the same question, he was upset at Woolf’s response: He was from Israel.

“He said, literally yelled at us, and said, ‘Get the hell out of my Uber!’” said Woolf.

Woolf thought the driver was joking at first, but the driver said he was not, and told him to get out of the vehicle. Woolf ordered another Uber and that ride went seamlessly, but the group was still scarred from the experience. The incident involving Mattova published by National Post this month reminded Woolf of what happened to him.

He reported the incident to Uber in an email on Aug. 27. He got a response saying the company was concerned and they flagged the driver. Uber said it would ensure the driver would not be matched with Woolf again.

“I wrote back, and I said that this response was the most asinine response I’ve ever received in my life. And it’s insulting that you would think that I’m so stupid to accept a response like that,” he said, adding that he was already on his way to back to Israel at that point, so the company’s solution didn’t make sense.

He expected Uber to remove the driver from the platform altogether, he said. He called it “disgusting” that the company would respond to an antisemitic incident in such a way.

A representative from Uber later called Woolf to tell him that the company would “take action,” but could not confirm if the driver would be suspended, citing “privacy issues.” He said his fare was refunded.

“That was their big gesture, and I wasn’t asking for any more. All I wanted was closure in the sense that he should be fired, right? And all they said was, ‘We can assure you we will take care of it, but we cannot let you know what we’re going to do, and you won’t hear about it,’” he said.

Uber did not respond to National Post’s request for comment about the incident.

Throughout all of his travels over the years, Woolf said he’s been open about his identity and it has never been a problem. He often wears a kippah, a cloth cap worn by Jewish men, which usually draws intrigue, rather than hate.

“I’ve often thought…that the more you more open you are about your Judaism, the freer you are,” he said. “I think every trip, I’ve worn a kippah, wherever it was. And I’ve never had an antisemitic incident before.”

In Israel, Woolf said he does not feel antisemitism at all.

“We feel totally safe here, despite the dangers of terrorism, but we feel extremely safe,” he said. In Canada, while he said he’s “not blind to the fact that at

Bathurst and Sheppard every week

you have people standing, yelling at each other on either side of the street and that antisemitism is rising,” he still feels safe in Toronto.

“Many people are starting to remove their mezuzahs (Jewish prayer scrolls affixed to doorways) and things like that. I would not do that. I feel safe. And I think the media has blown it out of proportion. It is getting worse, but I don’t think it’s at the level yet where people are to say, ‘This is Germany, 1939,’” he said. “I don’t feel unsafe in Canada.”

He said he hoped that Uber would publicly fire the driver who refused to take him “so that other people get the message.”

“I think the real way to deal with this is for those companies to be able to stand up and say, ‘No, we really are honestly against harassment or discrimination of any kind and anybody who does that should be fired. They shouldn’t be working for us,’” he said.

“If I was running a company and I had an employee who did that to another employee, I would fire the guy. There’s no ifs, ands, or buts about it, because it may start with the Jews, but it’ll spread to everybody.”

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.


Empty shelves where U.S.-made bourbon once sat at a P.E.I. liquor store. The province is one of four returning existing U.S. stock to shelves and donating net profits from their sale to charity.

Across Canada, there are millions of dollars worth of U.S.-made alcoholic products gathering dust in warehouses, all of it pulled from liquor store shelves in most provinces in retaliation for sweeping U.S. tariffs on Canadian imports.

If the idea of some of those products finding their way back to market leaves a bitter taste in your mouth, let the knowledge that several provinces are doing so to benefit local charities be the chaser.

Here’s the latest on what Canadian provinces are doing with their U.S. booze stockpiles.

Nova Scotia

Atlantic Canada’s most populous province was the first to start selling off some of its estimated $14 million in remaining U.S. products, mostly wine and spirits such as whiskey, to benefit charity.

The provincial government estimates the current sale will generate $4 million in profits that will be donated to Feed Nova Scotia and other food banks.

Once the existing stock is depleted, the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation won’t order more.

“We remain committed to a Team Canada approach to tariffs and trade. We will not be ordering any more from the United States once this inventory is gone,” Premier Tim Houston said in

a news release.

 Empty shelves where alcohol and wine from the U.S. used to be at the NSLC (Nova Scotia Liquor Commission). The province is now selling of the products to benefit local food banks.

Manitoba

This Prairie province soon followed suit, announcing the sale of “some U.S. wine and spirits at select Liquor Marts” as of this Wednesday and until Dec. 24 or until sold out.

Up to $500,000 of the proceeds will be donated to Cheer Boards in Winnipeg, Thompson and Brandon, community charities that provide holiday help to families in need.

On the first day of sales, the Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Corporation told

CTV News

some stores had long lineups before opening and lots of foot traffic.

“Some locations have already sold through their first round of inventory of the most popular brands,” an MBLL spokesperson told the outlet.

And like N.S., Manitoba’s stock will not be replenished once sold out.

Newfoundland and Labrador

The new Progressive Conservative government and the province’s liquor corporation (NLC) started selling its $3.2 million in U.S.-made products this week, with a promise to donate the net profits to the Community Food Sharing Association, a St. John’s-based food distribution hub for the province’s food banks.

Along with an immediate donation of $500,000 already provided at a crucial time of year for food banks, the NLC anticipates the total donation amount to reach up to $1 million by the time products are sold.

“Many of the products are spirits and wine, so there is no risk of expiry anytime soon,” an NLC spokesperson told National Post in an email. “However, there are a small number of products that have shorter shelf life, like beer and (ready-to-drink beverages).”

Some liquers, they added, also have shorter shelf lives than most products.

Ontario

The province is sitting approximately $80 million in products from the U.S. — by far the largest Canadian cache — some $2 million of which is set to expire in 2026, according to

CP24

.

The province’s Liberals are calling on Premier Doug Ford to follow the example set by Houston.

“We all agreed, when we pulled American liquor off the shelves, it was the right thing to do. We sent a message. It felt good,” Liberal legislative leader John Fraser said during

Question Period at Queen’s Park on Wednesday

.

“What would be even better is to do some good at home with that action, not just let this liquor collect dust in a warehouse.”

Ford later told reporters he’d bring it up with the LCBO.

“U.S. alcohol will remain off shelves and is being held in storage until further notice. We are currently exploring options for the products,” a spokesperson for Minister of Finance Peter Bethlenfalvy told the Toronto Star.

 Ontario Premier Doug Ford dumps out a bottle of Crown Royals at a press conference in Kitchener, Ont. on Sept. 2.

Prince Edward Island

In Canada’s smallest province, the government and the liquor control commission also resumed sales of U.S. products

effective Thursday.

Officials expect the sales to generate $600,000 in net profits, all of which will be donated to island food banks.

It, too, won’t re-order any American alcohol.

New Brunswick

Neighbouring New Brunswick pulled its stock from provincial liquor store shelves in March, but the provincial authority told National Post in August that the products remained available for purchase by “grocery, agent, and licensee” because it needed warehouse space for new Canadian inventory. Once sold, it was not being restocked.

“This solution allows access to American products for those who want them and will help us minimize waste and recover investments we have made in U.S. products,” New Brunswick Liquor (ANBL) wrote.

In October, the province started selling off its remaining $3.4 million in American products at its warehouse location in Salisbury, just west of Moncton. In early December, the minister responsible for ANBL said only $2 million of that remained.

As for donations, a spokesperson for the agency told National Post in an email that while it donates to “Feed NB and a network of food banks, community gardens, and libraries through fundraising efforts and internal programs,” the profits from liquor sales are returned to the province.

National Post has asked the province directly about its charitable intentions, if any.

British Columbia

Officials in B.C. took the same approach as New Brunswick

in March

, halting imports and pulling existing products from store shelves while maintaining their wholesale availability.

National Post has contacted the province and its liquor agency to inquire about existing stock and whether they, too, have plans to return products to shelves in aid of local charities.

 U.S.-produced alcohol is removed from the shelves at a B.C. liquor store.

Quebec

The province’s liquor authority also pulled its stock, halted orders and

later donated $300,000 worth of expiring

U.S.-made alcohol to foundations, charity events and hospitality training schools.

“The products currently concerned include mainly rosé wines, boxed wines, ready-to-drink beverages, creams, certain beers, and liqueurs that are not intended for long-term storage,” the SAQ said at the time.

The SAQ told National Post on Thursday that the program is still underway and “there are no other plans at this time.”

The province had roughly $27 million in products stored, according to

CBC

.

Northern Canada

A spokesperson for the Yukon Liquor Commission told National Post via email that it also stopped importing U.S. products in March and pulled them from shelves at its six stores, but they can still be purchased by licensees until existing stocks are sold. They did not say how much remained.

“We are reviewing the current position and considering options for changes in the new year,” they wrote.

When contacted in August, Nunavut’s department of finance told National Post via email that the sale of about $600,000 worth of existing U.S.-made inventory resumed on July 3 and, once gone, would not return until next year.

Such products are only resupplied during the territory’s short summer shipping season, and the already-completed 2025-26 order “did not include any U.S.-made product.”

The Northwest Territories also stopped importing new products in March, but permitted the sale of existing stock. National Post has reached out to the authority for an update on the stock quantity.

Alberta and Saskatchewan

When others were pulling products from the shelves, these Prairie provinces continued to permit the sale of existing stock and temporarily stopped importing new products. Alberta first, followed by Saskatchewan, later lifted their respective purchasing moratorium, making U.S. products readily available to customers.

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.