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Alberta unveiled new

OTTAWA — Alberta Health Minister Adriana LaGrange says it’s only fitting for Canada’s top cattle-producing province to tip over its most sacred cow.

“One thing I’ve heard again and again since taking this job is ‘it’s not working.’ We’re waiting way too long for the care we need,” said LaGrange.

“Now is the time to really look at, okay, how do we implement something that will work for Albertans, and hopefully will be something that will be replicated across Canada?”

LaGrange and Hospital and Surgical Health Services Minister Matt Jones unveiled

new “dual-practice” legislation

last week that will allow physicians in the public system to perform elective procedures like hip and knee replacements and cataract surgeries at private clinics.

She said that the shift to a hybrid surgical model,

already underway in New Brunswick
and Quebec

is informed by a heavy dose of common sense.

“You know, it doesn’t make sense (that) I have to fly out of my province, to a different province to get a medical procedure, and oftentimes the surgeon who’s actually doing that surgery is from my province, and they’re on the plane with me. It’s nonsensical!” said LaGrange.

LaGrange sat down with National Post to discuss next steps, potential roadblocks from Ottawa and changing public attitudes toward private-sector involvement in health care.

She said that one of the biggest changes she’s seen is that Canadians are losing their knee-jerk aversion to “U.S.-style” private care and looking at what ails our system through a more global lens.

“People travel a lot and they go to other countries and ask why can’t we have this here?” said LaGrange.

She pointed out that Canada consistently lags peer countries in wait times, despite being near the top of the table in health spending.

One recent study placed Canada last among

10 high-income countries

in waiting times for both general practitioners and specialists, with 10 per cent waiting a year or longer to see a specialists.

Top performers Switzerland and the Netherlands, which both allow private surgeries, saw just one per cent of patients wait this long.

 “People travel a lot and they go to other countries and ask why can’t we have this here?” said Alberta Health Minister Adriana LaGrange.

“If you look globally, there’s no perfect model, but we have to get to a better functioning model,” said LaGrange

LaGrange said she still believed that universal access to life-saving care was an important national principle and sought to keep the changes compliant with the “spirit and principle of the Canada Health Act.”

“So right off the bat, we’ve said that any cancer surgery, any emergency surgery … will not be able to practice in a flexible capacity,” said LaGrange.

She added that family practitioners would also be excluded from the dual-practice system.

Doctors who opt-in to the system will also need to do a certain quota of surgeries in public facilities.

Dr. Marisa Azad, a specialist at The Ottawa Hospital, said that these prohibitions won’t necessarily stop the leakage of resources into the private system.

“There’s evidence that, when you take a model like this, you’re leaving the more complex procedures—for example, certain cancer surgeries—in the public system, which is going to bog down already limited time and resources,” said Azad.

“Meanwhile, the burnt-out physicians in the public system see surgical colleagues doing these relatively more straightforward osteoarthritis cases, your hip and knee replacements, in the community. They’re working easier hours and making bank,” she added.

“The temptation to flip over to the less demanding, better compensated private system can be intense.”

LaGrange said she’s well aware potential “unintended consequences” that can spring from the dual-practice model, and will spend the next several months developing robust guardrails, in consultation with provincial medical bodies.

“They could include that, for example, that those private surgeries are only done at certain times, such as evenings or weekends,” said LaGrange.

LaGrange said that one major hurdle to the reform

is a January communiqué

from then federal health minister Mark Holland that warns of penalties for provinces that facilitate so-called “queue-jumping” for non-emergency surgeries by patients who are willing and able to pay out of pocket.

“I can say emphatically that all provinces and territories (are) very concerned about how that interpretation letter could affect people who already have (private) services provided to them,” said LaGrange.

The federal directive, slated to come into effect on Apr. 1, 2026, was a key topic of discussion at

October’s health ministers’ meeting

in Calgary, with federal Health Minister Marjorie Michel

promising to follow up

by the end of the year.

Michel’s office said they had nothing new to add on the topic.

Dr. Shawn Whatley, a physician and past president of the Ontario Medical Association, said Michel’s intervention could make or break the Alberta policy.

“it will come down to the (Canada Health Act) interpretation letters. Government gets to define the exception. It is sovereign on this issue,” said Whatley.

National Post

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Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner holds a news conference in Ottawa, Friday, Feb.21, 2025.

A leading Conservative MP is calling for change after the accused rapist of a 13-year-old Ontario girl was given time to weigh how a guilty plea would affect his immigration status.

The case involves a 47-year-old Bradford resident, and non-citizen, who pleaded guilty last week to “two counts of sexual interference, one charge of child luring and another to breaching his release conditions,” local news outlet

BarrieToday reported

.

The court heard that the man

met the girl at a convenience store, groomed her and later raped her, which led to two pregnancies, BarrieToday reported. The girl reportedly ended up carrying one of those pregnancies to term. A publication ban is in place to protect the identity of the girl and her child.

The man ignored court orders to stay away from the girl, whom he raped again while he was out on release, according to BarrieToday. After breaching the conditions of his release for a third time, he was arrested and has been in jail since, for more than two and a half years.

The court also heard that the man had earlier in the case been “permitted an adjournment to explore the effect his eventual guilty pleas would have on his immigration status,” BarrieToday reported. In Canada, a permanent resident or foreign national is

inadmissable

if they are convicted of a criminal offence that leads to jail time of more than six months.

The Crown told National Post it would be seeking a 10-year sentence. He is due back in court for sentencing on Jan. 29.

The case was brought up by Alberta Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner during question period on Nov. 27. She put forward

Bill C-220

, a private member’s bill that is pushing for courts not to take into account the impact that a sentence would have on an offender’s immigration status.

“A senior Liberal (MP Kevin Lamoureux) debating my bill to stop leniency for serious crimes said this: ‘If someone is going out raping another individual, do we really believe they’ll get special treatment from a judge?’ The next day, there was a story of a non-Canadian raping a 13-year-old girl and impregnating her twice, and the rapist was given an adjournment to see the impact of a guilty plea on what? His immigration status,” said Rempel Garner during

question period on Nov. 27

.

“Will the liberals admit they were wrong?”

A video clip shared by Rempel Garner on social media shows Lamoureux speaking about the bill when it was

debated on Nov. 25

in the House of Commons.

“There are individuals who make bad decisions. Sometimes it does not necessarily justify a deportation,” Lamoureux said during the debate.

He added: “At the end of the day, with the types of crime that are being suggested, people are going to be deported anyway. If someone is going out there and raping another individual, do we really believe that they are going to get special treatment from a judge when they go before a court? It is nowhere near the degree to which the Conservatives are trying to put it on the record.”

Those opposing the bill said it would take away judicial independence and discretion, and it discriminates against non-citizens who are often trying to integrate into Canadian society.

During question period on Nov. 27, Liberal MP Ruby Sahota responded to Rempel Garner’s question of whether the Liberals would admit “they were wrong.”

“There are provisions in place if a non-citizen commits a crime and serves a sentence, they are removed from Canada,” she said. “CBSA works on these cases and they prioritize criminal cases, in fact, when making removals.”

“In recent years, there have been multiple instances of judges issuing sentences to non-citizens convicted of serious crimes that were designed to allow them to evade deportation,” said Rempel Garner on Nov. 25. This creates a “two-tiered justice system between non-citizens and those with Canadian citizenship.”

She called it “unfair” and listed seven examples of convicted non-citizens who received “lenient sentences in very recent history.” Included in that list was a case involving a 20-year-old Indian man residing in Canada on a student visa. He pleaded guilty to four counts of voyeurism,

National Post reported

in October.

“Despite the judge admitting that six to 12 months would have been a more appropriate sentence, this was to avoid deportation. The judge even said this,” Rempel Garner said.

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre, who has been outspoken about his

support for “jail, not bail,”

when it comes to repeat offenders, said it was an “unbelievable perversion of justice” that non-citizen criminals were receiving lower sentences “in order to allow them to stay.”

“It should be a stated policy of our system to get criminals out of Canada,” he said, while speaking in favour of Bill C-220. “If someone is not a citizen, not a Canadian, and commits a crime, then they should be shown the door.”

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.


Canadians are experiencing

While it’s been acknowledged for some time that visceral fat — belly fat —that wraps around internal organs is a health hazard, new research suggests it’s particularly dangerous to the male heart.

Researchers who studied advanced cardiovascular MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans of 2,244 adults aged 46 to 78 without known heart disease found that abdominal obesity — an unhealthy hip-to-waist ratio —  is associated with worrisome patterns of “cardiac remodelling,” more so than overall weight alone.

The findings “highlight the need for personalized risk assessment in obesity-related cardiovascular disease,” the authors wrote in research presented at this week’s annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America in Chicago.

Canadians are experiencing “high and growing levels” of fat stored around the waist and stomach,

Statistics Canada

reports. From 2022 to 2024, nearly half (49 per cent) of adults aged 18 to 79 had a waist circumference above the threshold for abdominal obesity, meaning greater than 102 centimetres for males and greater than 88 cm for females).

The National Post reached out to the study’s lead author, Dr. Jennifer Erley, a radiology resident at University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany to break the findings down. The conversation, via email, has been edited for clarity and length.

What made you interested in exploring abdominal obesity’s effect on the heart?

Obesity is very common in our modern society, about to replace smoking in terms of costs and health-care consequences. However, we still don’t really know if obesity has independent effects on the heart, because obese people often also suffer from other cardiovascular risk factors, such as diabetes and high blood pressure.

We also don’t really know if the effect of obesity on the heart is different for men and women, although men and women suffer from different types of obesity. Males generally tend to be more obese and tend to have more visceral obesity, which is sometimes described as ‘beer belly.’

I wanted to find an answer to these questions using a population-based trial, which is based here in Germany, the Hamburg City Health Study.

What was known before your study about obesity’s impact on the heart’s anatomy?

The effect of obesity on the heart has been studied previously, also in population-based studies. However, there have been discrepancies in the results.

Most studies predominately classified obesity according to BMI and they found that a high BMI is associated with cardiac dilatation.

Fewer studies investigated ‘visceral’ obesity according to WHR (waist-to-hip ratio), and some did not find a different effect of visceral obesity compared to general obesity.

Moreover, many studies used echocardiography (an ultrasound test that checks the heart’s structure and function) to investigate how obesity impacts the heart’s anatomy, which is broadly available but does not allow for further tissue characterization.

What did you find on MRI scans in people with a high BMI versus those with abdominal (high waist-to-hip-ratio) obesity?

Similar to previous studies, we found a high BMI is associated with bigger heart chambers, indicated by increased cardiac volumes (the amount of blood the heart holds and pumps) and an accompanying hypertrophy (thickening of the heart muscle).

Abdominal or visceral obesity, on the other hand, was associated with a proportionally greater hypertrophy but smaller heart chambers.

This form of remodelling, where the heart muscle thickens but does not enlarge, is called ‘concentric remodelling’ and we know from previous studies that this form of remodelling is prone to lead to heart failure. (In a release, Erley explained how, when the inner chambers become smaller, “the heart holds and pumps less blood,” messing with the ability of the heart muscle to properly relax.)

This association was more prominent in males than in females in our study.

What might explain the gender difference?

Males tend to suffer from obesity at a younger age than females due to the protective effect of estrogen on the female metabolism. Therefore, the male heart is exposed to the effects of obesity longer than the female heart.

What is important is to detect this type of remodelling before any symptoms occur, such as shortness of breath, in order to radically intervene.

As a radiologist, I think that it is important to consider the effect of abdominal obesity when we see concentric remodelling in cardiac magnetic resonance scans.

Nowadays, we have a broad variety of therapeutic strategies to tackle visceral obesity and it’s important to address obesity as a ‘pathology,’ just like arterial hypertension and diabetes.

Patients and clinicians should take obesity (particularly the accumulation of abdominal fat) just as seriously as those other pathologies.

National Post

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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during Question Period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025.

OTTAWA — Conservatives say a deal between Liberals and the Bloc Québécois to remove a religious exemption from hate-speech laws in exchange for passing a bill targeting hate and terror symbols is an “assault” on freedom of speech and religion.

But the Bloc Québécois said the change was necessary to help prosecute rising hateful and antisemitic rhetoric, often made under the guise of exempted religious speech.

Both parties were

reacting to a National Post report Monday

that the governing Liberals and opposition Bloc had agreed to add an amendment to Bill C-9 removing what is frequently referred to as the “religious exemption” in exchange for the Bloc’s support for the legislation.

Currently, the law exempts hateful or antisemitic speech if the speaker expressed “in good faith” an opinion “based on a belief in a religious text.”

The Bloc has pushed for years for the religious exemption to disappear, even tabling a bill in 2023 to that effect. At the time, the Quebec party pointed to comments by Montreal Imam Adil Charkaoui calling for the extermination of “Zionist aggressors” during a recent public prayer.

“Speech that incites hatred is a criminal act, regardless of whether it is uttered under the guise of religion or not,” Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet said in a statement Monday confirming the deal with the Liberals.

“Our amendment will require the government to act to counter such hate speech, which has been on the rise since the beginning of the conflict in the Middle East, and will at the same time contribute to ensuring greater religious neutrality of the State,” added the Bloc’s justice critic Rhéal Éloi Fortin.

The Bloc’s efforts were supported by many Jewish and LGBTQ organizations, but was criticized by free speech advocates and various Christian groups as an attack on freedom of speech and religion.

That criticism was reprised by the Conservatives on Monday following National Post’s report on the deal to remove the religious exemption.

Liberal-Bloc amendments to C-9 will criminalize sections of the Bible, Quran, Torah, and other sacred texts,” Poilievre wrote on social media.

“Conservatives will oppose this latest Liberal assault on freedom of expression and religion.”

Conservative Calgary MP Michelle Rempel Garner called on all other parties to oppose the amendment to C-9.

This is an unprecedented assault on Canadian religious freedom and must be stopped. Everyone, of all political stripe must get behind this

,” she wrote on social media.

As part of the deal with the Bloc, the Liberals are also expected to back off plans to eliminate the need for a provincial attorney general’s sign-off to pursue a hate-propaganda prosecution. The move will likely be supported by both the Bloc and Conservatives.

Quebec’s Justice Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette, who has called on the federal government for years to remove the religious exemption defence, celebrated the deal between

Liberals and Bloc on social media

.

National Post

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Steven Guilbeault arrives to a caucus meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, March 22, 2023.

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney will shuffle his cabinet on Monday after a high-profile resignation last week.

His public itinerary shows that he will be at a swearing-in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa at 3 p.m.

The move comes days after

Steven Guilbeault resigned from his position as minister

of Canadian Identity and Culture and Quebec lieutenant because of the agreement struck between Ottawa and Alberta which Guilbeault said would erode past climate policies.

A spokeswoman for Carney, Audrey Champoux, said there would not be a “full shuffle.” She also said that a new Quebec lieutenant will be named on Monday.

The position of lieutenant is usually held by a Quebec MP who acts in an advisory role or as a spokesperson for issues specific to the province. As such, that role does not require to be sworn in to cabinet — a Quebec lieutenant is simply appointed to the role.

Carney could also decide to redistribute Guilbeault’s role to existing ministers.

When Chrystia Freeland resigned from cabinet in September, her roles as minister of transport and minister of internal trade were given to government House leader Steven MacKinnon and to Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc, respectively.

Guilbeault made his first media appearance at

Radio-Canada’s weekly talk show “Tout le monde en parle”

on Sunday to explain why he decided to leave Carney’s cabinet.

“At some point, you have to be able to look at yourself in the mirror,” said the Montreal MP.

Guilbeault admitted he proposed some changes to the agreement with Alberta, but seeing that those suggestions were rejected, he concluded he could not publicly defend the government’s decision anymore. He said he had no choice but to step down as a minister.

He appeared to fight back tears when asked if he had abandoned the cultural sector with his decision. He said there were still many things he was hoping to accomplish in that area, but that the price to pay to defend a new prospective bitumen pipeline was too high.

Despite those differences of opinion, Guilbeault reiterated his confidence in his leader and said that, if an election were held today, he would still vote for the Liberal Party of Canada.

More to come…

National Post

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Migrant workers overlook Okanagan Lake and Kelowna in late November. Many told the Investigative Journalism Bureau that  they are unfairly compensated and living in substandard conditions. Others have recounted physical harm.

Harvesting cannabis in British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley as a migrant labourer in 2023, Maria recalls being surprised when her boss invited her and two friends for dinner at his home in the nearby mountains.

It was an evening of dancing, drinking and lounging in a hot tub — rare luxuries for the then-28-year-old Mexican who says she lived in a cramped trailer on the farm where she worked.

Feeling intoxicated, she says she went to bed alone in a nearby bedroom.

Her next memory, she says, was of her boss on top of her, kissing her against her will and doing “many things to my body.”

“I wish I could have pushed him or hit him but I couldn’t,” says the woman, whose name is covered by a publication ban in a sexual assault case currently before the courts in B.C. “I wish I could have protected myself.”

Maria is among

tens of thousands

from around the world who come to Canada every year to harvest and process fruit, tobacco, vegetables and other crops, often living in makeshift housing and working long, physically demanding days in sweltering summer heat, mostly for minimum wage.

Last year, nearly 80,000 migrants worked in agricultural jobs under Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program, an increasingly controversial initiative designed in part to fill a labour gap left by Canadians who are unwilling or unable to do farm work.

The program gives foreign labourers access to Canadian jobs that can help them support their families better than they could at home while being a vital resource to this country’s food production system. A very small number will become permanent residents of Canada.

But the Temporary Foreign Worker program is exposing many migrant labourers to health risks, financial exploitation and physical abuse, the

Investigative Journalism Bureau

(IJB) found. IJB reporters worked in collaboration with Simon Fraser University researchers who were to release

a report

on Dec. 1 on the experiences of B.C. migrant agricultural workers.

“This is the new slavery,” said a 37-year-old Jamaican father of two who came to B.C. this past summer on a Temporary Foreign Worker contract only to find what he called “deplorable” conditions, including no hot running water. “They’re all using us.”

As with many workers interviewed by reporters, the man’s real name has not been used for fear of repercussions from employers who control the labourers’ work permits in Canada.

Among the dozens of migrant workers interviewed by reporters in Ontario and B.C., many complained of a work-permit system that binds them to one employer in Canada, fails to enforce basic employment standards and exploits vulnerable people who often don’t know their rights.

Not being able to switch employers in Canada is a “shitty rule,” said a father of two from Grenada who has worked in Ontario and B.C. since 2018 under the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, earning less than $18 an hour. “If we’re not being treated fairly on a job site … we should have the option to apply or look for another job while in Canada.”

A

Senate committee report

last year said “an overwhelming majority of migrant workers, migrant worker advocates, academics and economists told the committee that employer-specific work permits are the single most egregious condition of vulnerability.” It called on the government to phase out these types of permits.

“The employer-specific work permit inherently makes migrant workers more vulnerable to abuse at the hands of bad actors as well as imposing structural barriers to accessing rights and protections.”

In response, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada spokesperson Jeffrey MacDonald said in an email that temporary foreign workers “have the same employment standards, rights, and protections under federal, provincial, and territorial law as do Canadian citizens and permanent residents.”

Only six per cent of workers who came to Canada between 2005 and 2009 under the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) program — part of the Temporary Foreign Workers Program — achieved permanent residence after a decade, according to Statistics Canada.

“All of it kind of boils down to, ‘You workers have no agency,’” says Navid Bayat, a staff lawyer at the Migrant Workers Centre in Kelowna, which advocates on behalf of workers in the area. “‘We control you. More than control, we kind of own you.’”

A 2023 report by the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur concluded that Canada’s temporary foreign worker programs are a “breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery.” Among the report’s recommendations to the Canadian government were reforms that would end the use of employer-specific work permits and ensure migrant workers have “a clear pathway to permanent residency.”

Those suggestions run up against growing public concern in Canada about the flow of immigrants into the country. According to

polling by Leger

in June 2025, 62 per cent of Canadians surveyed thought that Canada was admitting too many immigrants. In a September survey by Leger for the Association for Canadian Studies, 60 per cent of respondents disagreed that “Canada needs new immigrants.”

The Temporary Foreign Worker Program itself is unpopular among many Canadians, according to September 2025

polling by the Angus Reid Institute

. It found half of respondents view the program more negatively than positively, compared to 23 per cent who said the opposite.

Among respondents familiar with the program, more than half said “the government exploits temporary foreign workers.” And half said workers are “treated unfairly by employers.”

The federal Conservative Party has called for

“permanently scrapping”

the Temporary Foreign Worker Program. But it also acknowledges that “difficult-to-fill agricultural labour” would then require the creation of a separate, standalone program.

The recently released

federal budget

commits to reducing permanent residency levels in order to “bring immigration back to sustainable levels.” But it also carves out a caveat for migrant workers needed in sectors including agriculture.

“The government recognizes the role temporary foreign workers play in some sectors of the economy and in some parts of the country,” it says.

In a written statement to the IJB, Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) spokesperson Mila Roy said mistreatment of temporary foreign workers “is not acceptable and will never be tolerated … Canada is focused on working with partners and stakeholders to continuously find ways to strengthen the (Temporary Foreign Worker) Program’s integrity and to enhance worker protections.”

* * *

Foreign agricultural workers have become deeply woven into the national food production tapestry. The

nearly 80,000

temporary foreign workers employed in Canada’s agriculture sector in 2024 mark a significant jump from the 60,992 employed in 2021.

The cherries, cauliflower, blueberries, apples and wine that end up on Canadian dinner tables were gathered, in many cases, by foreign hands working Canadian soil.

But their experiences in Canada are increasingly fraught, according to federal data.

Federal

ESDC staff inspected

1,435 temporary foreign worker program employers across all sectors in the 2024-25 fiscal year. Approximately 10 per cent of these employers were non-compliant with the program’s requirements.

The government banned 36 employers from the program, three times the number from the previous year, and

financial penalties

against non-compliant employers more than doubled, to $4.9 million.

The true scope of legal and ethical breaches is unknowable thanks to a culture of secrecy and vulnerability.

Maria is among the small minority of workers in the agricultural sector who have filed a formal complaint against their employer. It’s a decision that can swiftly terminate their job, housing, health care and future prospects of working in Canada.

“Workers are made vulnerable by the very design of the program,” said Anelyse Weiler, an associate professor in sociology at the University of Victoria who has researched sexual violence in the agricultural sector, including in the Okanagan and Southwestern Ontario.

“The fact that migrant workers have been made so vulnerable by Canada’s laws probably factors into their perpetrators’ decision-making calculations … It’s ripe for abuse.”

Randhir Toor, president of Desert Hills Estate Winery in the Okanagan, employed Maria in 2023. He was criminally charged in April with sexual assault based on her criminal complaint.

The charges, which have not been proven, remain before the courts in B.C.

Toor declined an interview but his Vancouver lawyer, Vincent Michaels, said in writing that his client “vigorously asserts his innocence and looks forward to the opportunity a trial will provide to fully defend himself.”

Toor’s companies have been found in violation of immigration legislation and requirements of the Temporary Foreign Workers Program over the past few years.

In 2022, his company, Toor Vineyards Ltd.,

pleaded guilty

to seven charges under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act related to immigration fraud, and was fined $90,000.

“If I could take it back, I would, but I can’t,” Toor was quoted saying in media reports at the time, speaking to the judge. “I’m sorry, your honour, and I’m so sorry to my community.”

The judge is quoted as responding: “Mr. Toor, today’s the first day of the rest of your life and you’ve promised and assured me that you’re going to take some very positive steps in repaying the community and continuing on with your philanthropy.”

In January 2023, the federal government levied a $16,000 fine against Toor’s Desert Hill Estate Winery for breaches including failing to produce documentation showing the company met the conditions of employing a foreign national, and because the pay and working conditions were different from what was listed on the offer of employment.

That fine was not paid, according to the federal website listing non-compliant employers.

Last year, the federal government took the

rare step

of permanently banning Toor Vineyards from using the Temporary Foreign Workers Program, fining the company $118,000 for violations that include failing to “put enough effort” into ensuring the workplace was free of offences, including physical, sexual, psychological or financial abuse, as well as reprisals.

Toor’s lawyer said it would be “irresponsible” to comment on details that could become a factor in a case before the courts and “neither myself nor Mr. Toor will do so.”

* * *

To better understand the experiences of foreign labourers who leave behind children, spouses, language and culture to work in Canada for months or years — sometimes for decades — IJB reporters spent two months this summer in the picturesque fields of B.C. and southwestern Ontario.

They conducted interviews with agricultural labourers who came from South America, Mexico, Jamaica, Guatemala, Dominica and Grenada to work for more than 20 employers.

Some are deeply grateful to Canada for the ability to earn a living that puts children through school back home, covers monthly expenses for their families and helps pay for the medical care desperately needed by far-flung relatives.

Sitting in front of a series of modular housing units while eating his dinner in July, one Jamaican worker at a cherry farm in B.C. said he has been coming to Canada every year since 2014 to work on farms to support his wife and four children.

The work at his current place of employment is good. Pay arrives on time. He sends half of it straight home to Jamaica.

But despite the economic opportunity it provides, there is also a cycle of heartache in constantly leaving behind his growing children, who face unlikely odds of ever joining him in Canada, he says.

“It shook (my daughter) so much because I left her when she was a child, a baby,” he says. “When you’re packing up and leaving the next day … a child doesn’t understand.”

Many other workers spoke with reporters inside ramshackle housing or leaning on fence posts at the end of 12-hour days. Those conversations often featured feelings of betrayal over alleged mistreatment rooted in the uniquely vulnerable status migrant workers hold in Canada.

“Existing regulatory frameworks are insufficient to protect workers from exploitation,” says the

new Simon Fraser report,

Temporary Foreign Workers in British Columbia’s Agriculture Industry: Learning from Lived Experience.

“The closed work-permit system creates conditions where employers can operate with relative impunity despite legal protections on paper.”

Genevieve LeBaron, a professor of global supply chain governance at Simon Fraser University and one of the study’s authors, said the problems detailed in the experiences of workers demand a federal response.

“The government needs to ensure these workers are covered by legal protections and rights and then enforce these rights through a targeted, risk-based approach to inspection. They should reform the program to enable workers to change employers more easily and ensure they are protected against retaliation.”

What can happen to worker wages

Tyrell Mills arrived in Ontario in September 2023 as a migrant farm worker, hoping to earn enough money to support his family in Jamaica.

In the month that he spent at Triumph Produce Ltd. in Cobourg, Ont., he says he only received a cheque for $193 — which he says later bounced. One day, he said, he was paid $35 for eight hours of work.

Mills and other workers brought Triumph Produce before the Ontario Labour Relations Board in 2024. In May, the board’s vice-chair, Rishi Bandhu, found the workers “were not paid the minimum wage for the number of hours they worked.” The

decision ordered

the farm to pay the workers the outstanding balance.

In an interview, Jenny Trinh, owner of Triumph Produce, said she disagrees with the Labour Relations Board decision. She alleges Mills and the other Jamaican workers were paid according to the work they did, which she says was very little.

“They don’t go to work … they cut the product like junk … all the product (they cut) got rejected,” she said. “They put me out of the business … I had to sell the farm (for) cheap. I lost everything.”

Immigration and Citizenship Canada’s website shows that Triumph Produce was fined $105,000 after being found non-compliant with the regulations of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program. The penalty is based on findings that the company did not give inspectors requested documents, that it broke Canadian laws for hiring and recruiting employees, and that the pay, work or working conditions didn’t match the offer of employment.

Trinh said she fully complied with the federal inspections and provided all documents requested, but it did not satisfy the inspectors.

In its written statement, ESDC’s Roy said the program ensures workers are paid fair wages in accordance with provincial labour standards, amounts that are detailed in an agreement workers receive on the first day of work.

“Employers who fail to comply with wage or program requirements can face administrative monetary penalties and bans from using the program.”

Nearly half of the 36 respondents surveyed by Simon Fraser researchers in the Okanagan this summer said they experienced issues with wages and working conditions, from paycheque discrepancies to delayed payments.

A 39-year-old migrant worker from Jamaica said he faced routine wage theft while harvesting buckets of cherries near Kelowna.

“They cheated and we know it,” he said, alleging the employer shortchanged him and his colleagues on the number of buckets of cherries they picked. “(It’s) a lot of money.”

Most said they were too fearful to complain because of potential retaliation from employers who hold their ability to work in Canada through employer-specific — or “closed” — permits.

That power imbalance with employers creates a “climate where workers felt compelled to accept potential wage discrepancies rather than risk their employment security,” researchers concluded.

High-risk work, low reward

Many of the workers interviewed detailed tragic incidents they’ve experienced or seen involving unsafe working conditions. From heavy farm machinery to chemical exposure, they say protective equipment and proper training required under labour laws are often ignored.

More than half of survey participants in B.C. reported workplace safety and hazard concerns that included “physical hazards, chemical exposures, and environmental challenges, often exacerbated by inadequate training and inconsistent safety protocols across employers in the region,” Simon Fraser University researchers concluded.

After 18 years of farm work in Canada, Luís, a 52-year-old from Mexico, suddenly lost his employment — and livelihood — last year after a devastating workplace accident in B.C.

Waking up at 4 a.m. for what he called 14-hour shifts, seven days a week, he was in an apple orchard in October 2024 removing netting from the fruit trees and using heavy machinery.

Luís’s hands got caught in the equipment, causing serious injury to his left arm that required several surgeries.

“The orthopedic surgeon told me that it was the first time that he had seen broken bones, nerve damage, skin damage and muscle damage all in one injury,” he said in an interview.

With little understanding of his rights under provincial workers’ compensation legislation — and unable to navigate the process alone — he found himself in a foreign country unable to work or earn an income, with no clear way out.

Lorena Ordoñez, the intake manager at the

Migrant Workers Centre in Kelowna

, helped him report the incident to the provincial workplace safety agency, WorkSafeBC, which triggered health-care support.

“Temporary foreign workers harvest our food, build our communities, pay taxes, buy goods here, contribute to employment insurance that at times they will never benefit from, they sustain our economy in countless unseen ways,” said Ordoñez.

“Yet when they are injured or no longer useful, they are cast aside, invisible and unprotected within a complex system that was never built to safeguard them. As a society, we don’t owe them charity. We owe them justice and dignity.”

Luís continues his recovery in physiotherapy and rehabilitation, and may require further surgeries. In the meantime, he sends what he can from his WorkSafeBC cheques to his wife and two daughters in Mexico.

Jesús Chauteco says that when he regained consciousness after flipping over an ATV vehicle on the B.C. farm where he was working in July 2024, he wasn’t sure where he was.

Bloodied and confused, the 44-year-old Mexican labourer says he knew he was hurt.

“​​We weren’t wearing helmets or anything,” said Chauteco. “My friend was shocked because I was bleeding profusely.”

The fall had broken his nose, but Chauteco couldn’t be sure because his employer didn’t take him to the hospital for more than two weeks, he alleges.

“He told us that if he took me to the hospital … he’d have a lot of problems and there would be a lot of paperwork,” he said. “I kept telling him it hurt a lot.”

Monette Farms, which employed Chauteco, described the incident to WorkSafe B.C. by saying  “his nose was scratched,” and that he later reported “a minor discomfort on his nose,” according to documents filed before the regulator.

In its statement, Monette Farms said it provided first aid right after the ATV accident and that it offered to take him to the hospital that day, but he refused.

“We categorically reject any suggestion that Monette Farms refused necessary medical care in order to avoid ‘paperwork’ or scrutiny,” reads a statement from Ben Nesbitt, the company’s chief human resources officer.

WorkSafeBC later inspected the farm and issued 12 orders against the operation, including failing to ensure its workers wore appropriate personal protective equipment when using the ATVs and failing to provide sufficient training.

“Monette Farms has cooperated with WorkSafeBC, taken the inspection findings seriously, and implemented corrective measures, including strengthened training, formalized ATV procedures and reinforced PPE requirements,” reads Nesbitt’s statement.

Earlier this year, WorkSafeBC dismissed a claim from Chauteco that alleged a Monette Farms supervisor had retaliated against him after the injury by reducing his work hours, isolating him from other workers and generally treating him poorly.

Nesbitt said the company “firmly” rejects any suggestion Chauteco was punished, isolated or not rehired because he caused trouble.

Doctors eventually scheduled a surgery for Chauteco’s broken nose for March 2025, but he was sent back to Mexico when his contract ended and hasn’t been called back to the B.C. farm for work since.

He says his nose remains broken a year-and-a-half later. The search for work in Mexico has been undermined by his injuries, he says. The IJB has reviewed a letter Chauteco received in August from a trucking company he applied to, which said his breathing problems mean “he is not suitable for the requested position.”

He says that, at one point, he was selling candy on the street to support his family.

“I left for a better life for them, but now I’ve lost everything,” he said.

Pesticide exposure, little protection

Walk the fields of Canada’s agricultural farmland and you’ll inevitably see signs warning of chemical and pesticide spraying. While Canadians rarely consider the impacts of standard chemical treatments on our food, agricultural labourers see it — and breathe it  — up close.

A quarter of respondents in the Simon Fraser survey reported experiencing chemical exposure as a result of poor training and a lack of protective equipment.

“Some stuff started coming up on my skin, like a rash. I never had this before, from the back of my neck and down to my hands,” said a Grenadan farm worker in the Okanagan. “I didn’t want to speak up or anything because I didn’t want to lose my work.”

A Mexican labourer in the same area worked for years in a greenhouse, which he says meant concentrated and lengthy exposure to chemicals he didn’t understand.

“I believe that the farm didn’t know how to take care of us, they didn’t know because they allowed me to do that work without any prior training,” says the 44-year-old father of three. “So when I started working there, my skin, my face, everything was good. I came healthy.”

Today, he lives with burning and discoloration of his skin and increasing fears of the potential long-term health consequences, he says.

“What happens if I get sick at some point, like cancer or something, what happens to me and my family?”

ESDC’s written statement says workers under the program have the same protections as all Canadians when it comes to pesticide and chemical exposure and that employers are required to provide free protective equipment, training and supervision.

Much like migrant workers in B.C., those in Ontario frequently raised pesticide exposure as one of their most serious workplace concerns.

In April 2024, a 43-year-old Jamaican farm worker, Aaron, says he emerged from a greenhouse in Leamington, Ont., where he worked, feeling like he was drunk.

“I couldn’t walk straight,” he recalls.

Aaron came to Canada from Jamaica in 2011 to participate in the seasonal worker program, eventually ending up at an Ontario farm in 2023 where he says he suffered a stroke and temporary paralysis from chemical exposure and long hours in the heat.

“I couldn’t move at all,” he said about the six weeks he spent in a hospital bed.

Working in the greenhouses often means long hours spent inside confined spaces with limited fresh air. Aaron said he would work in greenhouses shortly after they were sprayed with pesticides, and often had a hard time breathing upon entering.

“I wasn’t getting any fresh air. I worked from sometimes six in the morning, sometimes to nine in the night.”

Under the

Occupational Health and Safety Act of Ontario

, farm employers are required to provide training on pesticide risks and safe handling, provide personal protection equipment (PPE), inform employees of treated areas and report health concerns caused by exposure.

Aaron says his employers didn’t provide safety training or personal protection equipment.

He says he still feels the effects of his stroke, and he’s not sure if it’s permanent. While his vision and motor function came back, his speech is still slurred, making it hard to understand him.

He continues to work as a welder in Canada under a one-year work permit for vulnerable workers, set up by the government to allow workers to escape abusive situations. When it expires, he will have to reapply to remain in Canada.

Substandard housing conditions

At the end of every 12-hour shift picking B.C. cherries with no days off, Alejandro returned to cramped housing he shared with 11 other men.

The 29-year-old Guatemalan, who paid $120 a month for his accommodations, slept in one of a dozen beds and bunk beds in a large main room with no walls or privacy.

The two bathrooms had no running hot water when reporters visited this summer.

Without internet access, Alejandro was forced to buy phone data to communicate with family, another $50 monthly from his tight budget.

“There’s been situations where our workers have said that they have to sleep on a couch because there were no beds for them,” says Migrant Workers Centre manager Ordoñez.

The ESDC statement says accommodations under the Temporary Foreign Worker Program are a “multi-jurisdictional responsibility, with provinces and territories generally having responsibility for setting accommodation standards.” Federal staff regularly inspect employment sites to “ensure that employers are adhering to program conditions, including those related to employer-provided accommodations.”

But one-third of respondents in the Simon Fraser survey reported dissatisfaction with the housing provided by their employer. The grievances included overcrowding, overheating in the summer months and dilapidated conditions.

It is an echo of what migrant workers in Ontario describe.

Juan, a 42-year-old migrant worker from Mexico, remembers arriving in southwestern Ontario in 2017 and being escorted to his housing, which, contrary to what his employment contract detailed, had no plates, utensils, a washing machine or a dryer, he says. Three workers shared one small room.

“I was defeated,” he said.

His experiences in Canada have varied widely based on the attitudes of his employers, he says.

Working the fields of B.C. this past summer, “(They) treat us with respect and appreciation,” he said. “Each (worker) has their own room. There are two fridges, internet, TV, and the employer pays for Netflix. They also purchased chickens for us so we don’t have to purchase eggs.”

Gender-based violence

Sexual harassment, abuse and violence are systemic in the agriculture sector, typically rooted in power imbalances that most commonly target women, multiple research studies have found.

“In any employment relationship, there is an imbalanced relationship of power between bosses and workers,” says Weiler, the University of Victoria researcher. “However, Canada’s migrant farm worker program ratchets up that typical asymmetry in a uniquely lopsided way … The threat and fear of potentially losing your job, getting repatriated and having zero course for appeal is a powerful motivator to keep your head down and stay silent.”

Two years have passed since Maria made the choice to file a formal complaint against her former boss alleging sexual assault.

In retrospect, she says, it all began as an adventure, travelling far from home to spend six months in B.C. working in the fields with friends.

“A friend from university told me many stories about what they do in farms in Canada. He told me, ‘You should come.’”

She started by picking cherries and apples in the Okanagan and eventually found her way to working on a cannabis farm, where she met Toor.

The work was hard enough, she says: 12-hour days of heavy lifting, bending and harvesting and delays getting paid were typical.

Then came flirtatious comments from Toor, along with promises of immigration help, she says. She says Toor told her, “I can make everything work for you and get you your papers to work legally here.”

Toor’s lawyer declined to comment on those allegations.

When Toor invited her to dinner, Maria says, she initially declined. But when two of her friends working on the farm agreed to join, she said she would go.

The party turned into a night of terror, she said.

She would later go to the hospital and call the police to give a statement. A workers’ rights advocate helped her find a place to stay. She never returned to Toor’s farm.

Maria now lives and works in Mexico City and continues to co-operate with Canadian prosecutors in their case against Toor. She says she is resolved to see the criminal case through, even if it means having to return to B.C. to testify in court.

“It’s something I have to do,” she says. “I need justice. I knew I could lose everything that I had. I thought they will take me from the country, and I won’t have money. I was destroyed inside …

“I had a lot of expectations about Canada. I was disillusioned.”

The Investigative Journalism Bureau (IJB) at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health is a collaborative investigative newsroom supported by Postmedia that partners with academics, researchers and journalists while training the next generation of investigative reporters.


A Lockheed Martin F-35 II is displayed at Al-Maktoum International Airport during the Dubai Airshow 2025 in Dubai on November 20, 2025.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — It’s a high-flying tale of carrots, sticks and political flip-flops.

American leaders have been urging Canada to boost its military spending and NATO contributions since the alliance’s founding, back in 1949. Some, like former U.S. president Barack Obama, have been polite about it, encouraging Ottawa that “the world needs more Canada,” while others, especially U.S. President Donald Trump, have been more blunt, referring to Canadians as “freeloaders” who are “delinquent” on military contributions.

In other words, there has long been a bipartisan U.S. view on Canadian defence spending needs, and Ottawa has been pushed with both carrots and sticks to spend more.

So U.S. defence officials supported Canada’s 2022 selection of the F-35, with the intent of buying 88 U.S.-made jets, but political back-and-forths, reviews, and debates have meant that only 16 have been ordered to date. Earlier this year, amid Trump’s trade war and “51st state” rhetoric, and citing over-reliance on U.S. defence, Prime Minister Mark Carney ordered a review to inform his upcoming decision on the remaining 72 jet purchases.

As the Liberal government review winds down amid escalating trade tensions — including a warning from Ambassador Pete Hoekstra that a trade deal would be off without the F-35 buy — a debate has reignited, pitting Lockheed Martin’s stealth fighter jet against Saab’s Gripen.

Leaked 2021 Department of National Defence data show the F-35 beat the Gripen, 95 to 33 per cent in an evaluation of their stealth and sensor fusion capabilities. But those who support the Gripen point to Arctic advantages, such as shorter take-offs and a job-creation pledge from Saab, while some military experts have cautioned that it could be a logistical nightmare.

Defence experts urge Canadian leaders to see the fighter jet purchase as a strategic choice, one that prioritizes military effectiveness and operational independence, over political reactions to U.S. pressure.

Stealth vs. jobs

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly has said she would like to see more economic benefit from the F-35 and has described Swedish aerospace company Saab’s offer to create up to 10,000 Canadian jobs if Canada chooses the Gripen as “very interesting.” She would like to see more jobs offered by Lockheed Martin for the F-35.

But, in terms of ministerial support for the F-35, RCAF Deputy Minister Stephanie Beck has stressed the need for fifth-generation stealth capabilities as non-negotiable, which only the F-35 offers.

“Canada could choose a mixed fleet … to accrue more economic benefits,” said Philippe Lagassé, a Carleton University professor and procurement expert, noting how Saab has offered to build the Gripen in Canada.

 An F-35 fighter jet.

But first, he added, Ottawa must “examine whether the Saab proposal is feasible and how much it would cost.”

Joly’s push for the Gripen plays into the anti-Trump sentiment that is popular these days in Canada, and to which many attribute Carney’s election win, according to Richard Shimooka, a senior fellow and defence expert at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

But, he said, it ignores the DND 2021 evaluation, in which the F-35 soundly beat the Gripen, and prioritizes politics over military assessments. Siding with the Gripen over Saab’s job promises, he added, is based on a “misunderstanding of aerospace development,” noting that 10,000 jobs is “completely unrealistic” given that the Gripen production today supports only around 4,000-5,000 direct and indirect jobs around the world.

“Part of the issue with the Joint Strike Fighter program,” Shimooka said, “is that you cannot actually get industrial benefits. That’s not how it operates.”

Canada joined the consortium early and competes globally for contracts on every F-35 built, securing some 2,500 direct jobs across more than 30 Canadian firms to date based on a “best value” Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that allows competitive bidding for industrial work and ensures ongoing involvement, but not fixed quotas.

Chauncey McIntosh, F-35 VP and General Manager at Lockheed Martin, says, “Over 110 Canadian companies have contributed to the F-35 supply chain with $3 million in Canadian components in each jet in the current fleet … That’s before Canada receives its first aircraft.”

McIntosh added that Lockheed Martin expects to produce over C$15.5 billion in industrial value for Canada, with both the current and projected production opportunities, spanning from the 2007 start of the Joint Strike Fighter program through 2058.

The other consideration here is simply scale. There are over 1,200 F-35s in service today versus fewer than 400 Gripens, and the Gripen is older technology that has been online for nearly 20 years longer.

There has been a lot of media speculation over the possibility of Canada opting for a split buy, investing in both the F-35 and Gripen to hedge its bets, limiting its reliance on solely U.S.-built parts, and also embracing more European partnerships.

 The Swedish Saab Gripen E.

“The long-term costs of maintaining a mixed fleet would be much higher than a single fleet,” said Lagasse. “But the government may determine that these costs are worthwhile from a defence industrial perspective.”

Doing so would prolong the wait to be operational, said Shimooka, pointing to the need to set up two production pipelines and spend more money to include an “aircraft that’s less capable.”

Michael O’Hanlon, director of foreign policy research at the Brookings Institution think tank, said that a split buy is “easily the worst idea.”

“Canada doesn’t have a big enough military budget to be trying to please all people by buying six of this type and 12 of the other type,” he said.

Reducing the number of each plane with a split buy would elevate maintenance and training costs.

“Canada is already punching below its weight in terms of defence budget and the size of its air combat capabilities,” O’Hanlon added.

Politics, at what cost?

Trump hasn’t said anything publicly about the decision, but he’s not shy about voicing his frustrations with Canadian choices. He recently halted U.S.-Canada trade talks over a television ad sponsored by Ontario featuring Ronald Reagan talking negatively about tariffs.

“I think the Americans would react pretty negatively,” to Canada choosing something other than the F-35, said Shimooka, noting how so many American policymakers have tried to get Ottawa to acknowledge its lack of spending on defence spending and especially on continental security issues.

“My view is that we have been severely deficient in providing any security,” he added, noting how this has frustrated American politicians from both sides of the aisle for decades. “Then, finally, when we buy the fighter, and we go to Congress and say, ‘Look, we’re serious about our defence,’ … and then we turn around and almost potentially pull the plug on this program? It’s really hard for a lot of even proponents of Canada within the U.S. national security ecosystem to look at us as a reliable partner.”

Shimooka went so far as to suggest that Carney is using the review as a bargaining chip. “I think this is part of an effort to gain leverage over the United States on trade negotiations,” he said, advising against it.

“I don’t think it’s a great bargaining chip when you’ve already promised it. And if you pull the plug, the consequences (could be) even worse.”

Other experts suggest leaving politics out of the equation altogether.

“I think you’d better make your decision based on what you think is right for you. And if you have to disagree with Trump, just tell him why,” O’Hanlon said.

He noted that Canada can’t really go wrong with either plane. But when it comes to the stealth, compared to the Gripen, the F-35 is a “little more modern” and “harder to pick up on radar, which would matter if you were going into a heavily defended area.”

The review of the jet buys was supposed to be completed by the end of summer, but it remains unclear when Carney will make a final decision. The Department of National Defence is staying tight-lipped.

“The review of the F-35 is still ongoing as Canada continues to consider our Defence Industrial Strategy and work to ensure maximum economic benefits for our businesses and workers,” it said via email.

National Post

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Minister of Justice Sean Fraser arrives to a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025.

OTTAWA — The Liberals have agreed to remove religious exemptions from Canada’s hate-speech laws to secure Bloc Québécois support to help pass its bill targeting hate and terror symbols, National Post has learned through a source close to the talks.

Currently, the law exempts hateful or antisemitic speech if it based in good faith on the interpretation of a religious text, but that immunity is set to be removed. Additionally, the Liberals are expected to back off plans to eliminate the need for a provincial attorney general’s sign-off to pursue a hate-propaganda prosecution.

The removal of the religious exemption is expected to come via an amendment to the Criminal Code in the form of Bill C-9 at the parliamentary justice committee that will be supported by both the Liberals and Bloc, a senior government source confirmed.

The source was granted anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss party negotiations publicly.

“We do have Bloc partnership,” the source said. “The bill is in a place now, even with those Bloc amendments, that everyone is happy,” they added in reference to Liberal and Bloc MPs.

Bill C-9, which fulfilled a campaign promise Prime Minister Mark Carney made during the spring election, was his minority government’s first major justice bill

introduced earlier this fall by Justice Minister Sean Fraser

.

It seeks multiple changes to the Criminal Code to confront the issue of hate, with the Liberals citing a rise in police-reported incidents in recent years, particularly in the wake of sustained anti-Israel protests over the last two years.

Chief among the proposed changes is creating a new offence for intimidating someone to the point of blocking their access to a place of worship or another centre used by an identifiable group, as well as criminalizing the act of promoting hate by displaying a hate or terror symbol, such as one tied to a listed terrorist organization or a swastika.

The Opposition Conservatives have lambasted the current effort as censorship, saying

provisions already exist

within criminal law to counter hate, and that the bill’s proposal to remove the requirement for a provincial attorney general’s (AG) consent to lay a hate propaganda charge took away an “important safeguard,” according to the party.

The Liberals are now expected to accept another amendment eliminating that change from the bill entirely. That, too, was a Bloc request.

When the bill was first presented back in September, the Liberals argued that removing the AG requirement would help streamline the process of laying hate propaganda charges, while critics said it was an additional check on a charge with serious implications for free speech.

Once the amendments are passed, the Liberals and Bloc are expected to vote the bill through committee and the House of Commons. However, it is unclear when the justice committee will debate clause-by-clause amendments to the bill.

The House is scheduled to rise on Dec. 12.

The original text of the bill did not contain changes to the existing religious defences for hate speech, but the Bloc has consistently raised the need for it to be addressed.

Currently, Section 319 of the Criminal Code contains an exemption stating no person shall be convicted of promoting hateful or antisemitic speech if they expressed “in good faith” an opinion “based on a belief in a religious text.”

The amendment eliminating the religious exemption defence is expected to reprise a

bill tabled by the Bloc Québécois in November 2023

that proposed to erase it from the Criminal Code. That bill did not advance past first reading.

At the time, the Bloc Québécois argued that its bill was necessary to combat the outpouring of hate speech and antisemitism following the Oct. 7 terrorist attack by Hamas on Israel and the ensuing war. They also pointed to comments by Montreal Imam Adil Charkaoui calling for the extermination of “Zionist aggressors” during a public prayer.

In addition to the Bloc, Jewish and LGBTQ groups have called for years for the Liberal government to remove the religious exemption from hate speech laws, arguing it has allowed for the

proliferation of antisemitic and homophobic comments

.

The Quebec government also called on the Liberals last year to remove the exemption because it was used to “legitimize discriminatory or incendiary comments under the guise of a faith.”

Many Christian organizations and certain civil liberties groups have supported the exemption, arguing that it serves as an important protection of freedom of speech.

In submissions to the justice committee, the Christian Legal Fellowship argued the defences “exist to protect Canadians against imprisonment for good faith expression of sincerely held beliefs.”

“To remove this defence would risk undermining the constitutional integrity of the entire … regime,” it warned.

The amendments were expected to be presented and debated during a Commons justice committee meeting on Thursday last week.

However, a clause-by-clause study of the bill was delayed when Conservatives filibustered the two-hour meeting.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s office has not yet responded to a request for comment.

In a statement, a spokeswoman for the justice minister did not directly address the question of the amendments, saying it would be “inappropriate” to discuss changes to the bill before they are debated by the committee.

“Communities across Canada have been calling for stronger protections in the face of rising hate, and every Conservative delay means those protections are delayed,” Lola Dandybaeva said.

During a committee appearance back in October, Fraser expressed an openness to endorsing the Bloc’s proposal and welcomed committee members to hear from witnesses on the question of removing the religious defences.

He testified that, should “the majority of members agree to make this change, I see no problem with it.”

Bloc Québécois spokesperson Julien Coulombe-Bonnafous declined to comment.

Richard Moon, a law professor at the University of Windsor who specializes in freedom of expression, predicted the change would not make much of an impact because courts have interpreted hate speech as being speech that takes only the most extreme forms.

“For example, if someone believes that homosexuality is sinful, to describe it as sinful or unnatural or wrong in some way would not, almost certainly not count as hate speech, not be seen as sufficiently extreme in character,” Moon said.

“Now, on the other hand, if somebody says, and could look to the Bible for this, that anybody who participates in same sex intimacy should be put to death, then that would almost certainly count as hate speech.”

He suggested the defences around religious text “could be raised in very exceptional situations.”

Moon nonetheless says those who do not fully grasp the law’s provision against hate speech as applying to the most extreme forms of speech may be cautious about the change.

“I think it’s really important, if this exception is removed, that it be made clear that most, almost all of what religious folks might have to say about other religious groups or about LGBTQ community and so forth, would absolutely not be caught by this provision.

“The lay person’s understanding of what counts as hate speech can be pretty vague and pretty general. As you know, people often will attach the label hate speech to speech they just don’t like, or they consider to be objectionable or offensive in some way.”

National Post

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The anti-Israel encampment set up on the University of Windsor campus in 2024.

A leading Jewish group is continuing its legal battle against the University of Windsor’s boycott of Israel, enacted as part of an agreement with protesters to end anti-Israel encampments on campus last year.

“The agreements are discriminatory and signify a dangerous capitulation to extremists,” Richard Marceau, senior vice-president of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA), said in a statement after the group appealed a court ruling that left intact a provincial decision upholding the agreement.

The

deal with anti-Israel protesters

, who were part of a wave of anti-Israel protests at universities across Canada, included a mandate for the university to develop anti-racism initiatives, divest from investments in organizations involved in Israel’s offensive in Gaza, review academic partnerships with Israeli universities, as well as provide opportunities supporting Palestinian students and scholars.

It was signed by the university and by protesters, who called themselves the “Windsor Liberation Zone Team,” following weeks of negotiation.

On Oct. 29, the Divisional Court dismissed the CIJA’s request for judicial review of the Ontario Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery’s decision upholding the deal.

“The academic boycott … singles out Israeli universities — and only Israeli universities — for exclusion,” CIJA says in a news release. “This constitutes overt discrimination based on nationality, place of origin, and geographic location.”

CIJA’s argument centred on a key provision stipulating the university “not … pursue any institutional academic agreements with Israeli universities … unless supported by the (University of Windsor) senate.” It contended this could be interpreted as refusing or failing “to employ a person,” contrary to the Ontario Discriminatory Business Practices Act.

The ministry director who reviewed the complaint disagreed.

The agreement with protesters acknowledged that the university does not have any academic partnerships with Israeli institutions. However, it goes on to state that because of “the challenging environment for academic collaboration the University agrees not to pursue any institutional agreements with Israeli universities until the right of Palestinian self-determination has been realized, as determined by the United Nations, unless supported by the (University of Windsor) Senate. This does not prevent individual academics at the University of Windsor from working (or collaborating) with academics in Israel. ”

The court wrote in

its decision

that institutional academic agreements fall “within a core non-business purpose” of the university, and therefore it was “reasonable for the (ministry) director to conclude the university was not a business, nor engaging in business in relation to the provision.”

Further, it wrote “any uncertainty about the impact on professors is expressly addressed (within) the provision itself.”

CIJA has filed a motion to appeal, saying that in the midst of a surge in antisemitism across Ontario’s campuses and public institutions, the court “failed to properly apply the law in a manner that would prevent discrimination.”

Said Marceau: “We continue to urge the University of Windsor to rescind the harmful agreements and take further steps to restore the Jewish campus community’s confidence in the institution.”

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.


The U.S. and Canada flags flutter next to the Blue Water Bridge border crossing in Point Edward, Ont., on Oct. 24, 2025.

Amid the economic uncertainty of the trade war between the United States and Canada are some silver linings. Companies are choosing to leave the U.S. for a new home north of the border, thanks to changes in trading policies, immigration practices and even energy regulations under the Trump administration.

“Each one has a slightly different context in this larger picture,” Julian Karaguesian, a lecturer at McGill University and an expert on international trade, told National Post. “But they all have the same common theme, that amidst a broader pullback of American companies from Canada, we’re having these small, symbolic victories, which are great at this time when people are hurting.”

Here are a few examples.

Brewing school moves to Montreal from Chicago after 154 years

The

Siebel Institute of Technology

, the oldest beer brewing school in the Americas, is moving to Montreal citing regulatory changes in the United States. Siebel said this month in a

social media post

that it would move to a site near Molson’s original brewery on Jan. 1, 2026.

“The decision follows a comprehensive review of operational costs, industry trends (and) increased student visa challenges to enter the United States,” it said.

This year, the Trump administration made cuts to academic research, reduced the number of visas for foreign students and increased taxes on some elite schools. It revoked Harvard’s ability to enrol foreign students, a move later blocked by a federal judge.

John Hannafan, Siebel’s general manager and director of education, said: “Recent regulatory changes in the U.S. have made it much more challenging for many of our international students, who have become the majority of our student body, to attend classes in person. This relocation of North America classroom operations to Montreal allows us to pivot without sacrificing the student experience.”

Canada has reduced its own student visas over the last two years from record highs. But Karaguesian said it’s a different story in the U.S.

“The idea that you could potentially be rounded up in the street, even temporarily, by an ICE agent, scared a lot of foreign students,” he said. “

It’s not the Canadian way to go and round up people. And we don’t have anywhere near the kind of anti-foreigner message in our country that’s currently the case in the United States.”

 Siebel plans to move near the original Molson brew site in January.

Liqueur maker moves production to Montreal from Minnesota

Phillips Distilling Company, the maker of Sour Puss liquor, recently signed a

five-year deal

to produce its colourful sweet-and-sour beverage in Montreal after several provinces stopped stocking American-made alcohol.

“The vast, vast majority — about 98 per cent — is sold in Canada,” Andy England, the company’s CEO,

told Global News

. “In many ways, we think of it as being a Canadian brand. All the more reason we should produce it in Canada now.” Production began at Montreal’s Station 22 distillery in the city’s east end this month.

“I was totally against retaliatory tariffs,” said Karaguesian, “but the use of procurement policy by provincial liquor boards, taking U.S.-made alcohol off the shelves, in this case it produced a small victory. And also the main market is here.”

 Andy England, CEO of Phillips Distilling Company, with a bottle of Sour Puss flavoured liqueur.

Alberta’s Deep Sky becomes new home for U.S. carbon capture facility

CarbonCapture Inc., which was set to build a

direct air capture facility

in Arizona this year, pivoted when U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright terminated billions of dollars in incentives from the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations. Now it’s up and running in Innisfail, Alberta, in partnership with Canadian company Deep Sky.

Alex Petre,

CEO of Deep Sky

, told National Post that “recent changes in the U.S. and I would say the overall political instability” was behind the move.

She added that Deep Sky does not actively seek out such businesses. But “interest from American companies in Canada has definitely increased tremendously in the past year.”

In September, Trump gave a

speech at the United Nations

in which he called climate change a “con job” and said talk of rising temperatures came from “stupid people.” He added: “The carbon footprint is a hoax made up by people with evil intentions.”

Petre said Washington’s stance on carbon capture “has really been unclear and sometimes unfavourable in this past year. It’s hard to set yourself up to innovate and to deploy new technology if you do not have regulatory stability, as well as line of sight to how to fund such endeavours.”

She added: “On the flip side, Canada has what is probably one of the most supportive regulatory and financial systems currently set up for carbon removal, and specifically for direct air capture.”

 Deep Sky’s direct air capture facility in Innisfail, Alberta.

Is it all a reaction to Trump?

Karaguesian said that, while much can be tied to recent changes in U.S. foreign and domestic policy, the Trump administration isn’t the first to battle Canada on the business front.

“We should remember that during (U.S. President Joe) Biden it was also bad,” he said. “The Inflation Reduction Act put a trillion dollars in tax credits to relocate to the United States. Trump is using tariffs. Biden was using subsidies, and that pulled away investment from Canada. The trend started more than a decade ago. It really started in the aftermath of the financial crisis.”

Will there be others examples like these?

“I don’t want to read too much into what happens afterwards, but it’s almost some kind of omen (of) the future direction of international trade,” Karaguesian said. “I don’t think we’re going back to deep globalization. And I don’t think the Americans are.”

But he looked at Sour Puss as “a microcosm, an example of a company now moving to produce the product close to its market. And maybe that’s a sign of the future.”

He also pointed out that Canada has a lot of untapped wealth. “We’re sitting on, per capita, the largest inheritance in the world in terms of natural mineral wealth and natural resource wealth, and the second largest in absolute terms, after Russia.”

He added: “And we’re perfect trading partners for East Asia. So that gives me hope that … we will be able to offset some of this by diversifying trade. Part of it will be companies moving back to Canada to be close to their markets, or because we have more clean energy credits, or because we’re not rounding up people in the streets.”

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