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Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree speaks to reporters ahead of a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025.

OTTAWA — The federal government estimates there are nearly 2,500 businesses or people in Canada working surreptitiously on behalf of foreign states to influence local politics and governments who will need to register publicly.

That’s according to
proposed regulations for Canada’s long-awaited foreign agent registry
published on Saturday.
 

But despite suggestions by Ottawa that the tool would be up and running by last year, the Liberals have yet to appoint a Foreign Influence Transparency Commissioner to oversee the registry.
 

The proposed regulations flesh out the information businesses and individuals in Canada will have to provide the eventual commissioner when they do work behalf of a foreign government to influence Canadian politics and governments.
 

They also propose penalties ranging from $50 to $1,000,000 to foreign agents who fail to abide by registration rules once the registry is stood up.
 

Notably, the federal government also reveals how many businesses and individuals it estimates will have to register their secret influence activities on behalf of foreign states.
 

According to the document, the government estimates that 1,550 businesses and 872 individuals will need to declare their foreign influence activities targeting Canada once the registry is up and running.
 

The estimation is based on Australia’s experience with a
similar foreign agent registry set up in 2018
.
 

“Unlike some of its allies, Canada lacks a transparent mechanism to ensure the public is informed about attempts by foreign entities to influence Canadian political and governmental processes. As a result, foreign principals and their proxies can secretly seek to shape Canadian decisions and public opinion,” reads the document.
 

For Dennis Molinaro, a former intelligence analyst, the number shows that the transparency registry is far overdue. But he also warned against setting up the registry without ensuring the commissioner has enough teeth to be able to enforce it.
 

“If that’s accurate, it means a scale of influence that’s already significant. A registry of that size only matters if it leads to enforcement, and it raises real capacity concerns,” said Molinaro, author of “Under Assault: Interference and Espionage in China’s Secret War Against Canada”.
 

“I worry about managed compliance rather than deterrence of a counter-intelligence threat,” he added.
 

Canada lags behind many allies such as the U.S., U.K., France and Australia when it comes to setting up a transparency registry for foreign agents.
 

Countries all over the world, many of which are not considered hostile, conduct foreign influence efforts in Canada. Most of those activities are not illegal either.
 

But the issue is when countries seek to secretly influence Canadians and democratic institutions using illegitimate means such as misinformation or disinformation.
 

“Some activities by foreign entities are carried out secretly or in a non-transparent manner, often using proxies and tactics such as spreading misinformation,” reads the consultation document.
 

“Non-transparent foreign influence activities that aim to affect political and governmental processes for the undisclosed benefit of a foreign power undermines Canada’s sovereignty and democracy.”
 

The proposed regulations come over one and a half years after Parliament passed the bill promising the public registry of agents working on behalf of a foreign government which still has not come to be.
 

They will only be finalized after a 30-day consultation period that began at publication on Jan. 3.
 

But the registry won’t be fully set up until Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government appoints the new Foreign Influence Transparency Commissioner. Many national security observers are surprised at how long it has taken.
 

Multiple government sources told National Post that a candidate has been chosen but is still going through various approval stages. That will eventually include consultations with opposition parties, which have not happened yet.
 

None of the sources knew the identity of the chosen candidate. The sources were granted anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the appointment process publicly.
 

Once announced, the commissioner will be responsible for standing up their office, hiring staff and implementing a secure IT solution for the public registry.
 

According to the proposed regulations, the commissioner will be paid between $225,300 and $265,000.
 

Information in the registry could remain in the commissioner’s possession for up to 20 years if the regulations are adopted as proposed.
 

Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree’s spokesperson  Simon Lafortune said the registry can only be launched officially once the commissioner is appointed, the regulations are finalized, and the government has procured the secure IT solution.
 

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com 

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Nunavut NDP MP Lori Idlout says Liberals and constituents have asked her to cross the floor of the House of Commons sit in Mark Carney's caucus.

Another Canadian member of Parliament has revealed that the Liberals have invited her to cross the floor to their side of the House of Commons, tipping it in their favour to form a majority government.

Lori Idlout, the second-term MP for Nunavut, told

CBC

she’d been asked to consider making the move, not only by Liberals, but also by some constituents in Canada’s northernmost riding, who she said believed her decision would be based on what is “best for Nunavummiut.”

“I have decided at this point that I can’t,” she said, noting the decision “weighed heavily” on her.

National Post has contacted Idlout for comment.

Her admission comes the day after B.C. Conservative MP Scott Anderson said he’d also been

courted by the Liberals

to join their ranks, a move he said “would be a betrayal of my constituents, a betrayal of the office to which I have been elected, and a betrayal of my own personal core beliefs.”

“It’ll be a cold day in Hell before I even consider betraying my constituents, and you should probably stop asking because I will certainly advertise it every time you try,” he wrote in a

Facebook post

that also criticized Liberals for not achieving results and not taking the concerns of Canadians seriously when raised in the House of Commons.

Anderson has already seen two of his caucus mates jump ship for the Liberals — Chris d’Entremont (Acadie—Annapolis, N.S) in November and Michael Ma (Markham—Unionville, Ont.) in December. The latter left Prime Minister Mark Carney one seat short of the 172 required for a majority in the House.

 MP for Vernon-Lake Country-Monashee Scott Anderson says it will be a “cold day in Hell” before he crosses the floor of the House of Commons to join the Liberals.

Reports of floor crossing and more overtures don’t come as a surprise to political scientist Laura Stephenson — the ultimate goal of any minority government is to tip the scales to make governance easier.

But the University of Western Ontario professor and department chair is surprised that they’re happening without immediate ministerial appointments, as has often occurred in the past.

“The Liberal Party of Justin Trudeau and maybe the partisan lines of the past may be a bit blurred right now, given the current environment, so it might be a little bit of a different set of considerations for MPs if they are in this situation to think about crossing the floor,” Stephenson told National Post in an interview.

“I’m not saying that their constituents will all be jumping up and down excited, but I can imagine a situation where people maybe aren’t as happy with the way their own parties are operating and want to be part of a different type of policy push that seems very Canada first.”

Idlout, who reclaimed her riding by just 77 votes over Liberal competitor Kilikvak Kabloona last April, told CBC one of her concerns about crossing was limiting her ability to criticize the government while still advocating for the people of Nunavut.

“I thought it was actually quite a thoughtful response that was very pragmatic, but rooted in representational concerns for one’s constituents, which really is, ideally, how our democratic system should work,” Stephenson explained.

Idlout, one of the two NDP MPs to abstain from the fall budget vote and help it pass, highlighted the One Canadian Economy Act, Arctic sovereignty and security, housing and health care as areas she wanted to press government on.

Recently, she has been pressing the federal government to investigate food costs in Canada’s north and the effectiveness of the Nutrition North subsidy program, which aims to make more healthy food and essential items more affordable. The program was started by former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2012.

“The rate of hunger in Nunavut should be a national embarrassment,” Idlout stated in

a December news release.

“The cost of food is out of control. Today, 42 percent of Inuit children arrive at school hungry — more than anywhere else in Canada.”

When contacted about Idlout, a spokesperson for the Liberal Party of Canada shared the same response they sent regarding inquiries about Anderson’s recruitment.

“As mentioned, while we have no added updates on our caucus at this time, we’re ready to work collaboratively with Parliamentarians from all parties to build a stronger Canada, and we welcome all support for the serious solutions we are bringing forward,” they wrote via email.

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Diana Fox Carney, wife of Prime Minister Mark Carney, watches the play closely during a scrimmage game with the Cape Breton Blizzard and Cape Breton Capers at Kehoe Forum in Sydney on Tuesday.

Diana Fox Carney, the usually low-profile wife of Prime Minister Mark Carney, not only attended the opening of a women’s-only hockey rink in Sydney, Nova Scotia, on Tuesday — she strapped on her skates and tested it out.

Fox Carney appeared alongside her husband while he was on the campaign trail; however, she has largely stayed out of the spotlight since Carney became prime minister in March 2025. Her career has focused on sustainability, climate finance and investing, according to her LinkedIn page. She shares four children with Carney.

One of her more recent public appearances, aside from the Nova Scotia hockey rink, was last month with Carney at the FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Draw in Washington, D.C. She was also by Carney’s side during a Remembrance Day ceremony in Ottawa on Nov. 11.

 Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, and wife Diana Fox Carney attend the red carpet prior to the FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Draw at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on December 05, 2025 in Washington, DC.

In September, she addressed the 80th United Nations General Assembly, “stressing the importance of the international mission to secure the return of Ukrainian children unlawfully deported by Russia,”

according to the Embassy of Ukraine

.

The cause on Tuesday was close to Fox Carney’s heart, as a former player “known for her ability to skate rings around her opponents and move effortlessly through the opposing defensive line,” while she was a member of the

Oxford University Ice Hockey Club. 

The 60-year-old appeared at the Cape Breton University (CBU) arena dressed in hockey gear, complete with the university’s women’s team jersey that read “Capers” diagonally across the front in red and black letters.

Fox Carney was tasked with officially dropping the puck in a matchup game between Sweden and Switzerland, said MP Mike Kelloway in a

Facebook post

about the event, held at The Kehoe Forum. It is the first arena dedicated to women’s and girl’s hockey, the university said in a statement.

“This is more than a rink — it’s a statement about equity, opportunity, and the growth of women’s sport in Canada and beyond,” Kelloway wrote.

Fox Carney echoed the MP’s sentiments.

“I learned to play hockey in the U.K. where our practice times were 1 a.m. to 2 a.m., and we never imagined that we could get mainstream practice times,” Fox Carney said, according to

a university news release

.

“It’s great the way that CBU has championed the rights of female athletes. I think the Kehoe Forum is fantastic in terms of prioritizing women and making a point that women’s hockey is just as important as men’s.”

 Diana Fox Carney, left, took to the ice with members of the Cape Breton Blizzard Female Hockey Association and the Cape Breton Capers women’s hockey team on Tuesday afternoon at Kehoe Forum in Sydney.

Kelloway also posted photos from the event, including a picture of himself posing with Fox Carney alongside the university’s president, David Dingwall.

Dingwall was previously a cabinet minister for Jean Chrétien. He faced criticism over purportedly

high expenses

while he was the head of the Royal Canadian Mint in 2005 and eventually stepped down. Notably, he told a parliamentary committee meeting that discussed the expenses and his pension that he was

“entitled to his entitlements.”

Also in attendance on Tuesday were members of the Cape Breton Blizzard Female Hockey Association, for girls between the ages of five and 18. Fox Carney was photographed speaking to the girls on the ice and played a scrimmage game with them,

Cape Breton Post reported

.

She called the rink “fantastic” and shared that it’s been 13 years since she played.

“I’m tempted to go back, but sometimes I think I’m vulnerable to be injured, let’s put it that way, but I do miss it, and I miss it more when I play it,” she said, per the publication.

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Canada Revenue Agency building. (BRUNSWICK NEWS)

A phone call proved costly for the CRA after a collections officer “provided minimal reasoning” to a Toronto financial firm for refusing to refund $879,092.36 collected for allegedly owed GST. As a result, the federal tax agency has been

ordered by the Federal Court of Canada

to pay $9,500 in legal costs.

The court-costs order was imposed by Justice Danielle Ferron in December last year, at the conclusion of a judicial review of the officer’s decision. Meanwhile, the file has been sent back to the CRA to reconsider issues surrounding the refund.

The back and forth between

Hillcore Financial

and CRA has been going on since August 2017, when the agency alleged the firm owed $1.7 million in unpaid GST. The agency proceeded to garnish funds from Hillcore to the tune of $879,093.36. (Garnishment is a legal tool available to the CRA to intercept monies from an employer or bank owed to a taxpayer, then use the funds for repayment of unpaid taxes.)

Then in mid-2020, the CRA cancelled its GST reassessment. But instead of returning the $879K to Hillcore the CRA kept the funds, with the intention of using them to pay down Hillcore’s allegedly unpaid income tax. (Between 2012 and 2017, Hillcore allegedly built up over $40 million in unpaid income tax.)

The firm found out about the CRA switch when it received new income tax reassessments. The company was simultaneously informed the balance remaining on its GST account was now $0.

Hillcore wasn’t happy about this CRA move and wrote a letter, registering its complaint, in 2023. It requested a refund of the $879K.

They received the officer’s phone call response to the letter in November 2023. The firm then brought the application for judicial review.

Ferron was faced with deciding if the collections officer even had proper authority to refuse the refund.

She noted that the Collections Officer did not forward 
Hillcore
’s request to anyone else. “This alone constitutes a breach of procedural fairness … because if he did not have the authority to deal with this matter, it prevented any genuine consideration of (Hillcore’s) request.”

During his testimony the officer seemed to be confused about this. Ferron found “the record … unclear. During his testimony the officer said “he didn’t ‘believe’ he could have authorized a refund without the approval of his management.”

Despite this, Ferron points out collections officer “never informed Hillcore” he lacked authority to grant the refund it sought. Furthermore, she wrote, “his actions … appear to suggest that he did in fact believe he had the authority to make this decision.”

And based on this, she ruled he made a reviewable decision.

Then she turned to the phone call.

“The record is … clear that (he) did not specifically identify which policies he consulted, nor did he provide a copy to (Hillcore). Furthermore, it is admitted that (he) did not refer to any legislative provision and that beyond reading the policies (provided by a CRA field officer), he did not conduct any research of his own, nor did he ask further questions to the field support officer or anyone else at the CRA. Lastly,

it is also admitted that the Collections Officer refused to provide written reasons to 
Hillcore
.”

Ferron agreed with 
Hillcore
 that the decision “rendered verbally provided minimal reasoning and no supporting details. It was clearly not justified, transparent nor intelligible.” She therefore found it “unreasonable.”

Based on the trouble Hillcore faced with the officer and in bringing the judicial review, Ferron imposed court costs of $9,500 on the CRA.

However, that’s not the end of the dispute. Hillcore argued

“there is only one possible outcome in this matter

” which would be to “issue the requested refund.”

Ferron was not convinced, even though she recognized that

Hillcore
had raised “a strong argument.” So, she
returned Hillcore’s concern to the agency to “be adequately considered.”

National Post has reached out to Hillcore for comment.

The CRA responded to the Post by email late Tuesday: “The c

onfidentiality provisions of the laws we administer prevent the Canada Revenue Agency from disclosing taxpayer information and as a result, we do not comment on the specific details of court cases.”

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Rubio confers with Trump at the White House in October.

Denmark and Greenland are seeking a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, hoping to calm tensions between the two countries after the Trump administration doubled down on its intention to take over the Danish territory.

Despite the rhetoric, The Wall Street Journal

has reported

that Rubio told congressional lawmakers during a closed-door briefing Monday that Trump’s goal is to buy the island from Denmark rather than take it by force.

Here’s the latest as tensions escalate:

Trump ‘not the first U.S. president that has examined how we could acquire Greenland,’ Rubio says

Marco Rubio in remarks to reporters on Wednesday stated that acquiring Greenland had always been Trump’s intent since his first term.

“That’s always been the president’s intent from the very beginning,” Rubio told reporters on Capitol Hill where he was to address Senate and the House, The Associated Press reports. “He’s not the first U.S. president that has examined or looked at how we could acquire Greenland.”

Trump’s aspirations to obtain Greenland date back to his first presidency. In 2019, he offered (unsuccessfully) to buy the world’s largest island from Denmark. The Danish government responded by pledging to upgrade military spending in Greenland to the tune of 1.5 billion Danish crowns (roughly $320 million) for surveillance.

Denmark wants to discuss ‘U.S.’s strong statements on Greenland’

“Naalakkersuisut (Greenland’s official name) and the Danish government have approached the U.S. Department of State with a request for an immediate ministerial meeting between U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Naalakkersuisut’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and Research Vivian Motzfeldt and Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen,” the government of Greenland

said in a statement

. “The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the U.S.’s strong statements on Greenland.”

The statement added: “It has not previously been possible for U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio to meet with Naalakkersuisut. This is despite the fact that Naalakkersuisut and the Danish government have continuously requested a meeting at foreign ministerial level in 2025.”

 U.S. President Donald Trump and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen gather for a group photo before a plenary session of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Heads of State and Government summit in The Hague, on June 25, 2025.

Lars-Christian Brask, vice-chairman of the Danish foreign policy committee, stressed the importance of the meeting to Bloomberg TV in an interview.

“The next two weeks, they’re critical,” Brask told the outlet. “But let’s get the meeting with the three foreign ministers together, clear up the misunderstandings, try to understand what it is everybody wants to achieve, and then I’m sure we are more informed and there’s less misinformation after that meeting.”

The White House said on Tuesday that U.S. President Trump is weighing using the U.S. military to acquire the Danish territory of Greenland.

“President Trump has made it well known that acquiring Greenland is a national security priority of the United States, and it’s vital to deter our adversaries in the Arctic region,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.

Rubio confirmed Wednesday that he will meet the Danish officials next week.

 This aerial view shows snow-covered buildings in Nuuk, Greenland, on March 7, 2025.

Trump casts doubt on NATO’s usefulness

Trump levelled fresh criticism at NATO on Wednesday, days after the Danish Prime Minister had said his desired takeover of Greenland would mean the end of the military alliance.

“Remember, for all of those big NATO fans, they were at 2% GDP, and most weren’t paying their bills, UNTIL I CAME ALONG,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social on Wednesday morning. “The USA was, foolishly, paying for them!”

He added in all caps: “RUSSIA AND CHINA HAVE ZERO FEAR OF NATO WITHOUT THE UNITED STATES, AND I DOUBT NATO WOULD BE THERE FOR US IF WE REALLY NEEDED THEM. EVERYONE IS LUCKY THAT I REBUILT OUR MILITARY IN MY FIRST TERM, AND CONTINUE TO DO SO.” He continued: “We will always be there for NATO, even if they won’t be there for us.”

On Monday, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen told Danish broadcaster TV2: “If the United States chooses to attack another NATO country militarily, then everything stops. That is, including our NATO and thus the security that has been provided since the end of the Second World War.”

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President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Palm Beach, Fla., as Secretary of State Marco Rubio listens.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The new year began with a stark demonstration of U.S. power on Jan. 3 when American forces conducted a military raid in Caracas to seize Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.

While many were shocked by the aggressive operation, the White House had already signalled its intentions for the Western Hemisphere. Late last year, the Trump administration issued its National Security Strategy (NSS), declaring a will to “reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere, and to protect our homeland and our access to key geographies throughout the region.”

It also vowed to “deny non-Hemispheric competitors the ability to position forces … or to own or control strategically vital assets, in our Hemisphere,” dubbing it the “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine and presenting it as a blueprint for restoring American power and security interests throughout the region.

The move on Maduro was apparently its first practical application, but was it setting a precedent for using military — alongside economic and legal — coercion against weaker states to secure what Washington deems to be key resources or chokepoints? With the U.S. now explicitly dedicated to dominating the Western Hemisphere, and in the wake of Trump’s threats about seizing the Panama Canal, taking Greenland, and making Canada the “51st state,” how far does the White House plan to push the “Trump Corollary”?

“It’s a policy now of might is right — not only tariff baton or tantrum diplomacy, but might is right,” said Michael Bociurkiw, a global affairs analyst and senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. “And Trump’s statements recently about Greenland, about ‘fixing’ Mexico, even about Colombia and Cuba should put Canada on alert footing … There’s a new sheriff in the hemisphere.”

So what could this mean for Ottawa in terms of economic or even military coercion from Washington?

Oil: symptom or leverage?

Some analysts have suggested that the harnessing of Venezuelan oil was Trump’s goal – and that U.S. access to it could hurt Alberta oil exports to the United States. Canada is currently the largest oil exporter to the United States.

Bociurkiw, a native Albertan, warned that the move on Venezuela poses a long-term threat to Canadian oil exports, which he argued could fall by 25 per cent over the next four years — and as much as 50 per cent over the next six.

While acknowledging that getting Venezuelan oil production up to competitive levels would take “a long, long time and billions of dollars,” he warned that Canada should not be complacent. Trump, he said, could use the Venezuelan oil economy “as leverage against Canada” just as he has with tariffs. This, he added, “should set off alarm bells in Edmonton, Ottawa, and beyond.”

Others, however, see oil as the symptom, not the cause or main goal.

The oil could help pay for the operation, making it politically feasible, explained Landon Derentz, vice president of energy and infrastructure at the Atlantic Council.

He said a compelling policy argument for the move in Venezuela would’ve been pointing out the country’s energy resources to Trump as a way of paying for the operation, rather than saddling U.S. taxpayers with the cost. This, he said, would justify the institutionalization of a broader foreign policy of the United States as the dominating influence in the Western Hemisphere.

The other upside? U.S. companies can develop those resources and economically benefit, he said, while giving the Venezuelans more stability.

Jennifer Kavanagh, a senior fellow and director of military analysis at Defense Priorities and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies, also sees oil as a symptom, not the cause, but her outlook is more stark. She sees it as an example of Trump’s desire “to exert U.S. military, economic, and political will everywhere in the Western Hemisphere without impediment.”

Getting Venezuelan oil production online, in any case, would take up to a decade and cost billions, and U.S. oil firms are unlikely, the analysts said, to clamour for a chance to spend that in a high-risk environment like Venezuela.

But will military coercion in the Western Hemisphere stop with Maduro?

Who’s next?

Many analysts think that Venezuela was simply the first stop, but they disagree on Trump’s most likely future targets.

Following the intervention in Venezuela, Chatham House analysts looked at the U.S. definition of hemispheric control in the NSS and wrote that “Canada, Panama, and Greenland, which fall within that geographical definition, have good cause for concern about the president’s intentions – and the lengths to which he may go in pursuing them.”

Bronwen Maddox, director and chief executive of Chatham House and one of the authors of the report, she said she doesn’t see imminent danger for Ottawa.

“I don’t think Canada is in his sights at the moment. Canada has done quite a good job of diffusing that … and is benefiting from the fact that Trump is looking elsewhere.”

Kavanagh also believes the Trump administration will now be emboldened to use military force against other countries, pointing to Cuba, Colombia, and Mexico.

“I think Canada’s sort of at the bottom of the list … but not out of the woods,” she said.

Most analysts tend to agree, but when it comes to Greenland, it’s a different story.

Over the past few days, rhetoric from top Trump aide Stephen Miller has raised concern that Greenland could indeed be next. His wife, Katie Miller, posted on X an image of the American flag superimposed over a map of Greenland, with the single word “SOON” shortly after the intervention in Venezuela.

On Monday, Stephen Miller told CNN that Greenland “should be part of the United States,” adding that “nobody’s going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland.”

According t

o press reports, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has told

lawmakers that Trump wants to buy Greenland, downplaying any talk of military action.

Maddox believes Greenland could face a real risk, whereas the threat to Canada is more hypothetical, she said.

When asked what targets could be next for Trump, Maddox pointed to the countries that “don’t have much ability at this point to push back on the U.S., like Greenland or Cuba.”

Yet, despite Miller’s rhetoric, others doubt that there would be any appetite in Washington for a military takeover of Greenland. Kavanagh is skeptical that the U.S. would use force in the Danish territory.

The administration is talking about wanting to take it over, she acknowledged, “but let’s think seriously about what that means. It doesn’t mean kidnapping the leader. It doesn’t mean putting a thousand forces on the ground and planting a flag.”

To really take control of Greenland’s government, she said, would require a massive ground presence. “I don’t think that’s the type of thing the administration is willing to do. They don’t want to do anything hard. They just want to do big, flashy things.”

Alexander Gray, the former chief of staff of the U.S. National Security Council and a current nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, agrees that Trump is unlikely to move militarily against Greenland, but noted that Trump has other tools he can use there.

“The president’s been very clear. He wants Greenland to be part of the United States,” Gray said. “There are a lot of things (Trump) can do to bring Greenland closer to the U.S.

“Venezuela is a unique situation,” he said. “I think what is likely to happen, what I hope will happen, is that the United States pays more attention to destabilizing regimes in the hemisphere like Cuba. Like Nicaragua.”

Trump’s desire to control part of the Arctic via Greenland, however, raises security questions for Canada by proxy. When pushed on whether Washington’s desire to bolster its Arctic sphere of influence could spell trouble for Canada, Gray flipped the script and pointed to the need to meet the capabilities of rivals like China and Russia in the region.

“I think it’s a great thing for Canada to have America focused on the Arctic,” Gray said, describing how Canada would benefit from U.S. investment in more icebreakers.

Gray recommended that Prime Minister Mark Carney use the ramped-up defence spending he has promised to do more in the high North “to free the U.S. up to handle other things.”

“I think that would be a tremendous boon for both countries,” he said, adding that “as kind of the NATO anchor in the high North, Canada should want a Western hemisphere-focused United States.”

NATO sanctity

The other reason analysts think Greenland will be spared from military intervention is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Military intervention in Greenland would blow up NATO because Denmark, the sovereign power over the island and NATO member, would invoke Article 5, calling for collective defence. This would force European allies to decide whether to take on Trump — or watch the alliance disintegrate.

While Kavanagh doesn’t think an invasion is coming, she disagreed with others on Trump’s regard for NATO.

“Trump doesn’t respect NATO and wouldn’t care if it collapsed,” she said.

Others disagree.

“I do not see (Trump) invading Greenland and blowing up NATO,” said Derentz.

Gray went so far as to say that Trump was the best thing to happen to the alliance.

“NATO was a declining alliance with military capabilities that were atrophying until Donald Trump started pressuring it to increase its defence spending,” Gray said.

Other international organizations, however, may soon be targeted.

Derentz said there are rumours in Washington that an executive order will soon drop about U.S. participation in multinational and international organizations “that will contract the United States from those institutions.”

Most of that is pointed at the United Nations, but NATO “remains in a pretty strong place,” he said, noting how there is strong Republican support for the alliance.

NATO allies kowtowing to Trump, however, could set a dangerous precedent and open them up to even more forms of coercion.

Both Maddox and Kavanagh think European allies should have been more vocal in condemning Trump’s intervention in Venezuela. While none were fans of Maduro, most have failed to strongly condemn the aggressive intervention in a sovereign country.

“They’ve accepted a precedent now that opens the door for Trump to do the same thing towards them or towards Greenland and to coerce them even more,” said Kavanagh.

“I think it’s a mistake.”

National Post

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Cubans in Havana hold a Venezuelan national flag with a Cuban one during a rally in support of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, after U.S. forces captured him, Jan. 3, 2026.

Shortly after the American military operation to capture left-wing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, a key regional ally of Cuba,

large-scale protests

were organized

in front of the

 American embassy in Havana, encouraged by the Cuban government.

The speakers, who included Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, called for the liberation of Maduro from American custody and an end to “yankee imperialism.”

The Cuban government

confirmed

 that 32 members of the Cuban armed forces and intelligence agencies were killed in the American operation. Both Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chávez,

reportedly

 made extensive use of Cuban intelligence services and bodyguards for personal protection and the consolidation of internal political power.

Prominent American leaders, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Senator Lindsey Graham, have suggested that Cuba may be next on the American chopping block.

Rubio

warned

 in a press conference held on Saturday that “If I lived in Havana, and I was in the government, I’d be concerned – at least a little bit.”

Graham, speaking on Sunday,

accused

 Cuba of being a “Communist dictatorship that’s killed priests and nuns … their days are numbered.”

Conversely, President Donald Trump has

suggested

 that a targeted regime change operation may not be necessary to bring about political change in Cuba. According to the American president, Cuba “now has no income” following the removal of Maduro and the expected reduction in the oil supply from Venezuela to Cuba. Venezuelan oil supplies to Cuba, despite having decreased in recent years, have

long helped

 to sustain the Cuban economy in times of crisis.

However, not all are convinced by Trump’s assumption that Cuba would be an easy target. Helen Yaffe, a professor of Latin American political economy at the University of Glasgow and co-host of the Cuba Analysis podcast, told National Post that “it is inconceivable … that there is enough opposition (to the current government) in Cuba” to allow for a smooth regime change operation.

The economic strategy, Yaffe points out, has also yielded little success thus far: “Since 1960 the U.S. has pursued a strategy to bring about the complete economic suffocation of Cuba in order to precipitate regime change.”

The decades-long U.S. embargo against Cuba has indeed

failed

 in its fundamental aim of toppling the communist government on the island even in the most economically testing of times. Sanctions, for example, didn’t cripple Cuba during the 1990s, after the country

lost access

 to the favourable Soviet market and before the

historic oil agreement

 between Fidel Castro’s Cuba and Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela.

Given that history, Yaffe contends that “the Cubans wrote the rule book on resilience” and therefore should not be underestimated.

Alian Collazo, a former Republican candidate for the Florida House of Representatives and current executive director of Cuban Freedom March, holds a different view. Collazo, who was born in Cuba but now lives in the U.S., spoke to National Post about the importance of Maduro’s removal for the Cuban opposition movement.

Maduro’s forced exile to the U.S. “helps Cuba greatly,” he argues. The absence of a Venezuelan government that “funnels oil revenue into … the dictatorship in Havana,” which is then, according to Collazo, used to “fill the coffers” of Cuban government functionaries and fund “repression … against the Cuban people” would be a particularly positive development in his eyes.

Also, Collazo believes that political pressure on Cuba to embrace multi-party democracy and economic liberalization will likely gain momentum after Maduro’s removal. The salient message for Cuba’s political leadership after the Maduro operation, Collazo summarizes, is reform and democratize or “you guys could be next.”

However, both Collazo and Yaffe recognize that Maduro’s exit does not necessarily spell the end of the current Venezuelan political system. Collazo stresses that the structures propping up Maduro “are still there … and need to go.”

Yaffe also argues that it is highly unlikely that the Venezuelan political establishment has significantly “transferred allegiance to the U.S.” and away from Maduro and revolutionary Bolivarianism. As the British professor notes, Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez, acting president in Maduro’s absence, was unequivocal in her

demand

for Maduro’s “immediate” release and description of the American operation as an “illegal and illegitimate” kidnapping.

— Latin America Reports 

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John Franco Bonaldo blew over twice the legal limit on a breathalyzer at a police station.

A drunk driver who killed a Somali immigrant and severely injured her daughter when he ran them over as they were walking across a Niagara Falls intersection, then fled the scene only to crash into two parked cars a short distance away, has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

John Franco Bonaldo met friends at a restaurant on the evening of Nov. 16, 2024. The Ontario Court of Justice heard the 32-year-old consumed six pints of beer over four hours before getting behind the wheel at 12:42 a.m.

“Every drunk driver is a potential killer. That this does not happen in most cases of drunk driving is simply a matter of chance,” Justice Joseph De Filippis wrote in a recent decision.

“The direction I take from Parliament and decisions of other judges is that those who take this chance and harm others will pay a heavy price, especially if they flee from the scene to avoid detection, and notwithstanding that they are otherwise of good character.”

Dahiro Hussein Hasan and her adult daughter, Fadumo Cali Aden, arrived here from Somalia in January 2024 “eager to pursue their dreams of a better life in Canada,” said the judge.

“Ms. Aden found employment, during the night shift, as a laundry attendant at a hotel in Niagara Falls. She walked to that job, always escorted by her mother.”

Minutes after Bonaldo left the restaurant, he struck the mother and daughter.

“Ms. Hassan was killed. Ms. Aden sustained life altering injuries. Mr. Bonaldo did not remain at the scene,” De Filippis said.

Bonaldo pleaded guilty to impaired operation of a conveyance causing death, impaired operation of a conveyance causing bodily harm, and failure to stop after an accident, knowing death or serious bodily harm resulting in death had been caused.

“Within ten months of arrival, the dreams Ms. Hasan and Ms. Aden brought to Canada were shattered,” said the judge.

The Crown recommended Bonaldo get eight years behind bars. The defence lawyer argued for six.

“I conclude that the Crown’s position is a measured response to the offence and offender,” De Filippis said in his decision dated Jan. 5.

“As a result of the collision, Ms. Aden was thrown an approximate distance of 13 meters and slid another four meters southbound on the roadway. Ms. Hasan was thrown approximately seven meters southwest of the point of collision off the road.”

Bonaldo “did not stop following the collision,” said the judge. “He continued driving southbound on Drummond Road for approximately 150 meters, before making a right-hand turn onto Culp Street. The defendant continued west on Culp Street for approximately 150 meters before colliding with two parked vehicles. His vehicle was disabled.”

When police arrested Bonaldo, he “smelled of alcohol and admitted to consuming it,” said the decision. “Several empty beer cans were found in the defendant’s motor vehicle, including one in the driver’s footwell. The defendant was cooperative with police and apologetic.”

When cops got Bonaldo to a police station, he blew over twice the legal limit on a breathalyzer.

Hassan was pronounced dead at the scene.

Paramedics rushed Aden to the Hamilton General Hospital Trauma Unit where she was treated for multiple fractures, including a broken vertebra, said the decision. She underwent surgery and was discharged from the hospital on Nov. 26, 2024.

Adan told the court that her pain she endures is not just physical; “it is accompanied by the emotional agony of losing my mother, who had been my rock and my guiding light.”

She is now living with disabilities “that make daily life incredibly challenging. I can no longer generate income to support myself as I once did, and I depend on others for help. Simple tasks like cooking and taking care of myself, which I used to manage easily, have become monumental struggles. Each day is a battle against both physical pain and the emotional weight of my trauma.”

Adan said the support she has received from the community since her mother’s death has been overwhelming.

“Relatives, neighbours, and the community at large have rallied around me, offering assistance and encouragement during this challenging time,” she said in a victim impact statement.

“This outpouring of kindness has been instrumental in my healing process, reminding me that there is still goodness in the world, even amidst tragedy.”

Bonaldo submitted 29 letters of support from family, friends, his employer and co-workers.

He “addressed the court and apologized to victim and to his family and has let himself down,” said the decision. “He added that he will never forget what he has done.”

The first offender has always been steadily employed, said the judge.

“He does not have dependents. The theme that emerges from all sources is that these offences are out of character, that the defendant is not a bad person, but one who made a bad decision to drink and drive. It appears that the defendant had recently begun abusing alcohol because of a difficult intimate relationship. He is consumed with remorse. He has not had a drink of alcohol since this event and volunteers weekly at a soup kitchen to do something good for the community to atone for his actions. ”

The judge also handed Bonaldo an eighteen-year driving prohibition.

“By law, this begins immediately and reflects my intent to impose a 10-year driving prohibition for the period after imprisonment,” De Filippis said.

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Longtime Ontario snowbirds Leslie and Michael Burns driving through Florida in 2023. Despite the often overheated rhetoric around the Canada-U.S. political tensions, Leslie reports that

Leslie Burns and her husband Michael have wintered in Tavernier, a small, laid-back community in the Florida Keys, since 2010. The Collingwood, Ont., couple doesn’t see themselves as tourists anymore. “We stay in a residential neighbourhood and do our best to blend in,” Leslie said from their long-term winter rental where the weather reached 21 degrees Celsius this week under “Windex-blue” skies.

The retired couple is part of a formidable flock of snowbirds still wintering in the U.S. New border scrutiny and anger over the U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs have thinned the flock. However, “you just can’t beat the weather,” said cross-border real estate advisor Miles Zimbaluk, a Canadian from Saskatchewan who went down to Phoenix, Ariz., 11 years ago in the middle of January for a little golf and never left. “That’s not going to change,” said Zimbaluk, CEO of Canada to USA Inc. “As long as it’s going to be minus 20 or 30 in Canada, I think the Canadians are going to keep coming, no matter what the political environment.”

While the Burnses are patriotic, “we’re not hyper-patriotic,” Leslie explained. “We can’t overlook that we’re Canadians and guests in this country.” They don’t discuss religion or politics, whether in Florida or at home, in social settings. She understands that for some the decision to avoid a country “you’re not ‘friends’ with, on a political level,” can be a principled one. However, “it’s not unsafe here and it’s business as usual at the local level,” she said. The retired couple have been Nexus (the “trusted-traveller program”) card holders for seven years and said they didn’t experience “any additional heat” crossing the border in early December.

In response to a fellow Canadian’s urging on a snowbird’s Facebook page that “all good Canadians” ought to boycott the “hostile” U.S., Leslie shared her opinion that the “fear/hostility mongering is home spun and at ground level all is calm.”

While tens of thousands of Canadian winter escapees are in fact abandoning American sunbelt destinations this season, “hundreds of thousands” are still travelling south, according to a letters and concerns column in the latest winter issue of the Canadian Snowbirds Association’s

news magazine.

“We suspect that many of them are doing it quietly,” the Bird Talk editor added, in response to a Toronto couple whose neighbours, family and friends are urging them not to winter this year in their Florida vacation home. “The media loves a negative story and gets lots of attention when they amplify the rhetoric,” the advice reads. “Do what is right for you, your family and your conscience. Enjoy your winter and travel well!.”

About one million Canadian snowbirds have migrated south to the U.S. in recent years, according to the CSA. This year, about 10 to 15 per cent have chosen to travel elsewhere or stay home, said Evan Rachkovsky, the CSA’s director of research and communications.

According to the tourism website

visitflorida.org,

507,000 Canadians visited the state in the third quarter (July to September) of 2025, a 15 per cent drop from the previous third quarter, which saw 597,000 Canadian visitors, and a 28 per cent drop from Q3 2019.

Overall, Florida tourism inched up, helped by a boost in overseas visitors. But the 2.2 million Canadian visitations up to and including the third quarter of 2025 represents a 15.5 per cent drop from the same period last year.

It’s a relatively modest decline when compared to the leisure travel market, meaning shorter stays like one-week trips to Las Vegas or Walt Disney World, industry watchers said. In October, the number of Canadian-resident returns trips from the U.S. was down 26.3 per cent, year over year, according to Statistics Canada.

In November, return trips by air from the United States declined 19.3 per cent from the same month last year, to 465,800. The number of Canadian-resident return trips by automobile totalled 1.3 million, a 28.6 per cent drop from the same month in 2024, “marking the 11th consecutive month of year-over-year declines,”

StatsCan reported.

A

survey by Snowbird Advisor

of 4,000 members in October found 70 per cent of respondents said they intended to spend this winter in the U.S., compared to 82 per cent of respondents who wintered in America last year, a 15 per cent year-over-year decline. The number of snowbirds intending to depart for non-U.S. destinations like Mexico, Portugal or Spain nearly doubled, from 12 per cent to 23 per cent.

“I think we’ll need to see another couple of seasons before we can determine whether this is a shorter-term or longer-term trend,” said Snowbird Advisor’s president, Stephen Fine.

While some report that their Florida bookings have declined,

The Logic

reported in August that Canadians were “locking down” longer-term stays earlier than last year “and paying a 70 per cent premium to do so.”

“The U.S., in my opinion, will always be the number one destination for snowbirds,” for a number of reasons, Fine said.

For one, snowbirds are a different breed of travellers. “They’re not going away for a week or a weekend to see the sites somewhere,” Fine said. They spend upwards of six months away from Canada. “They’re much more tied to their destinations than other travellers would be.”

Seventy per cent of snowbirds who winter in the U.S. drive there. “If you want to have your car with you for the winter the U.S. is really your only option,” Fine said.

More than 30 per cent of snowbirds also own properties in the U.S. “If you own a property, you’re going to go to that property. You’re not going to let it sit vacant for the winter,” Fine said.

He’s not seeing a lot of buying going on. “But we didn’t see as much selling going on as other surveys.” A

Royal Lepage survey

released in August suggested more than half (54 per cent) of Canadians who own a residential property in the U.S. are considering selling it within the next year, with two-thirds pointing to tensions over the Trump administration’s policies and the current political climate.

People aren’t offloading properties for purely ideological reasons. Some factors are purely practical, including personal and financial reasons,

like a tumultuous year for the loonie.

Five per cent of those in the Royal Lepage survey said they were motivated by hurricanes and other increasingly extreme weather events. Florida home insurance has become very expensive, Fine said.

Still, only six per cent of respondents to the Snowbird Advisor survey said they have sold their vacation property in the past 12 months.

Zimbaluk said he’s had a couple of clients sell their Arizona properties purely because of the politics. “But it’s pretty rare.

“The majority of the people we see selling are because they’re getting older, or because costs are getting higher, too.” Real estate prices are also significantly more than when they purchased 10, 15 or 20 years ago.

When Trump came into power in January, “everything kind of stopped,” Zimbaluk said. “We didn’t have anybody looking to purchase property for the first half of the year. And now it’s starting to come back. We’re getting quite a few calls from people who want to buy property again.”

One south Florida real estate agent told

Realtor.com

that Canadians are still in the market for U.S. homes. Of four groups of potential buyers at a recent open house for a US$1.8 million, four-bedroom luxury build, three were Canadian.

One family with nine members “comes down every winter and are tired of renting,” Elaine Veasy said. “They didn’t even blink at the price.”

Canadians own an estimated $60 billion in Florida residential properties, contributing more than $600 million annually in property taxes. But those looking to sell are facing a slumping market, with listings outstripping demand and prices predicted to drop further in

2026.

Amongst those snowbirds crossing the border for the winter, “there’s sort of a split,” Fine said. “Some of them, it’s business as usual. Some of them are concerned, but they’re going anyway. They have some sort of reluctance, but they are still going.”

“Most people are not happy with a lot of what’s gone on over the past year, with respect to the trade dispute or the rhetoric of the 51st state,” he said.

 “As long as it’s going to be minus 20 or 30 in Canada, I think Canadians are going to keep coming, no matter what the political environment.”

New entry rules and registration requirements, including the collection of biometric (facial photographs, digital fingerprinting) information, are also creating some anxiety and confusion. “A small subset of our membership have had issues at the border,” Rachkovsky, of Canadian Snowbirds Association, said.

There have been anecdotal reports of snowbirds being made to feel unwelcome. One letter writer to Bird Talk wondered if it would be acceptable to remove his front Ontario licence plate while in Florida “to potentially reduce the risk of damage to my vehicle while it is parked.” (If a front plate is required in a home jurisdiction like Ontario, it must remain on the vehicle while in Florida “otherwise you will be breaking the law,” the Ottawa man was advised.)

Rachkovsky said he’s not hearing any significant issues from members “in terms of how they’re being treated. They’ve established very tight-knit connections down there and, for the most part, things have been as they normally have in past winters.”

Zimbaluk also said he hasn’t come across hostility. “I’ve heard lots of my clients telling me they’ve had Americans apologizing to them — that they’re sorry for how they’re being treated and glad they came back.”

As to whether people are going south “quietly,” even within families there may be pressure to snub the U.S., “particularly under the current administration,” Rachkovsky said. “They might have friends or family that are trying to pressure them, telling them not to go down.

“They’re going down, regardless of those factors.”

Tavernier, said Leslie, isn’t a big city “like Fort Myers, Tampa or Miami.” The Keys have a ’70s vibe, a pace unlike the rest of Florida. The climate is temperate, sub-tropical, she said. “But if you fish and boat and appreciate the communities along these shores, this is the place to be.”

“We have a really nice network of friends of all ages, most of whom are U.S. citizens. We’ve always felt part of this community.”

She did notice fewer Ontario licence plates during the drive down in December, though other people she knows from Ontario are planning to come.

“It’s hard, no matter what’s in the news, to decipher what’s real, what’s manufactured and what’s hearsay,” she said. “We’re grateful to be able to come to the Keys and hope the current differences can be resolved peacefully.”

National Post

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Cameron Davies, leader of the Republican Party of Alberta, is pictured with his truck in Red Deer, Alta. on May 7, 2025.

OTTAWA —

Referendum talk is heating up

in both Quebec and Alberta to start the year, but the pro-independence talk is coming from opposite sides of the political spectrum.

While the (mostly) centre-left Parti Québécois and democratic socialist Québec Solidaire have long fronted Quebec’s separatist movement, Alberta separatism is an almost entirely right-wing phenomenon.

Recent polls show that

support for independence is widespread

among supporters of Alberta’s governing United Conservative Party, but almost non-existent among those who back the Alberta NDP.

And

the Stetson-hatted cheerleaders

of Alberta’s independence movement have shown no interest in making it a cross-partisan one, regularly spitting out

MAGA-infused talking points

about how the province’s rugged individualism

makes it culturally incompatible

with Canada’s woke, post-national malaise.

Cameron Davies, leader of the separatist Republican Party of Alberta, said in a recent interview that he’d be focusing future outreach efforts exclusively on right-leaning partners, and not centrist and centre-left groups like the U.S. Democratic Party.

“I’ve never seen evidence that the Democratic side really values the ideals of freedom and independence, so I don’t think (meeting with Democrats) would be a really valuable use of my time,” said Davies.

Davies said he’ll be rooting for Republican candidates in November’s midterm elections and is planning engagements with the “freedom loving” right-wing governments of El Salvador and Argentina.

Joseph Heath, a political philosopher at the University of Toronto, said that Davies’s positioning fits within a long history of separatism on Alberta’s populist right, starting with the

social credit movement

of the 1920s and 1930s.

“The roots of Alberta separatism have always been tied to the social credit movement, and have always been part of that social credit, populist strain on the right in Alberta,” said Heath.

The movement, which sought to free individuals from oppressive economic systems via the issuance of universal basic incomes, rose to prominence in Alberta, and elsewhere in the Prairies, during the Great Depression.

Alberta’s first brush with separatism took place in the mid-1930s, when Ottawa put the kibosh on Social Credit premier William “Bible Bill” Aberhart’s push to flood the province’s economy with

quasi-monetary “prosperity certificates.”

Heath noted that a second wave of Alberta separatism emerged during the energy crises of the 1970s, this time focusing on control over the province’s abundant oil and gas reserves.

He said there was a new cultural dimension to this era of separatism, which coincided with Albertans patterning their dress and customs after depictions of Texas and other parts of the U.S. frontier in American popular culture.

“A lot of Albertans were sort of re-imagining themselves at the time to match what they saw on their screens when they were

watching shows like Dynasty and Dallas

,” said Heath.

Heath, who grew up in Saskatchewan in the 1970s and early 1980s, says he still remembers making fun of Albertans for wearing pointed cowboy boots instead of rounded ones.

“That was usually a sign that someone had been watching too much American TV,” said Heath.

These two historical currents intersected in 1982 when separatist Gordon Kesler, a 36-year-old oil scout and rodeo rider, pulled of a

surprising byelection win

in the Social Credit stronghold of Olds-Didsbury, a result seen as a death knell for the party.

Daniel Miller, a

leader of Texas’s independence movement

, says that his state’s rugged disposition makes it a kindred spirit with Alberta.

“The Albertans I’ve spoken to have gotten a bit miffed whenever I’ve called Alberta the Texas of Canada. They like to respond, no, Texas is the Alberta of the United States,” joked Miller.

Miller says the two oil-rich jurisdictions would be critical allies as independent states.

“The idea that Texas and Alberta are very similar economically is the key,” said Miller.

Miller, whose home in east Texas is just a few miles away from where the terminus of the cancelled Keystone XL pipeline would have been, says the cross-border energy relationship is critical for both jurisdictions.

“A key part of the Texas economy is refining petroleum products,” said Miller, adding he was skeptical that Venezuelan oil would displace the Alberta crude that flows into Gulf Coast refineries anytime soon.

Miller says

he supports Alberta independence

and has had conversations with “various” pro-independence organizations and individuals.

Daniel Beland, a political science professor at McGill University, says that Alberta’s right-wing strain of separatism mirrors right-leaning independence movements in other relatively well-off places like Belgium’s Flanders region and northern Italy.

“In Alberta and other relatively rich areas, substate nationalism is often a reflection of wanting to cut off what are seen as unjustified economic transfers to poorer regions,” said Beland.

Beland said this ideology isn’t viable in the relatively poor Quebec, which sees

a massive net-benefit

from equalization and other federal transfers.

“So I think there’s a bigger story … about the dynamics of federation, and where the specific region or unit stands in terms of (relative) wealth,” said Beland.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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