Happy Victoria Day Monday, Canadians I respect. And happy early Memorial Day to our still-friends to the south. Hope it’s a good one next weekend.
Join us below for a column and an interview, and do consider taking out a paid subscription for as low as the price of a Starbucks’ Americano per month. I’d do this for free if I could, but, well, you know, this country first turned heel on its yobs — and now, its future.
Hey, We Tried To Warn Them
By Alexander Brown
After a week of open insults to Western Canada and Canada’s great energy producers, a refusal to address the generational housing crisis concerns held by millions of Canadians, and (another) refusal to table a federal budget, one might be forgiven for assuming we’re living the last decade all over again.
But in many ways, so far, we are.
“This has been as bad a start as it can get,” I put in a press release Thursday morning, and on that, there can be little doubt.
Gregor Robertson, Carney’s new housing minister, already represents a Brantford Boomer-style middle-finger to young and working Canadians. The architect of Vancouver’s historic affordability crisis, and one of the pioneer early-allowers of the ‘Vancouver model’ of foreign investment fraud, Robertson, just days into his federal role, declared that home prices “don't need to come down,” dismissing the struggles of millions of Canadians priced out of the market. This tone-deaf stance, his apparent refusal to understand basic principles of supply and demand, coupled with his track record of overseeing Vancouver’s affordability crisis and the price of new homes soaring by 140%, suggests the Liberals have no plan to deliver on their promise to allow Canadian under-50s back into the housing market.
On pipelines and the dire need to kill Bill C-69, both Steven Guilbeault — a walking, talking unity crisis — and Dominic LeBlanc have already contradicted Mark Carney’s carefully-worded half-promises on becoming an “energy superpower.” The provinces may well be committed to working together — even, perhaps surprisingly, Carney’s Liberal-lite allies at Queen’s Park — but if the feds continue to be adversarial towards Canadian unity and prosperity, the doldrums of the past few years won’t just continue — they’ll accelerate.
On budgets — well, there isn’t one. (Maybe a mini one in the fall.) Still coasting on the convenient excuse of Donald Trump, even with those elbows down already, the Carney PMO, run by the same Trudeau advisers, who champion the PM as some “economic genius” (the collapse of GFANZ would suggest otherwise), have picked up right where Justin left off when it comes to economic unaccountability.
The decision to appoint Sean Fraser as minister of justice is just as troubling. Fraser, who previously oversaw historically unsustainable immigration levels as immigration minister and delivered no measurable results as housing minister, now takes on a justice portfolio at a time when random violent attacks are leaving families shaken across Canada. Reports of stabbings, assaults, and public safety breakdowns dominate headlines, yet Fraser’s early comments suggest he may prioritize working from home over tackling the crime wave head-on. Canadians need a justice minister focused on restoring safety and locking up criminals, not one repeatedly failing upward into another role he’s unprepared to handle. Like the endless healthcare wait-times coupled with unvetted mass-immigration, the continuation of a status-quo on drugs, crime, chaos, and catch-and-release will quite literally kill, and kill by the thousands.
On all of this, the hollowness of “elbows up,” the cynical fear-mongering, the blaringly-obvious rhetorical hedges to ever avoid saying “oil,” “gas,” or “pipeline” on the campaign trail, the lack of movement on crime or chaos, and the threat of more of the same on housing, we tried to warn Liberal voters.
That it didn’t matter to them, that it still won’t, will be a source of frustration and alienation that doesn’t bode well for the future of ‘Team Canada,’ if that team still even exists at all. You deserved better. Your kids and grandkids deserved better. There’s still time to right some of this wrong, to soften the beginnings of a new lost Liberal decade, that, together, we may mercifully cut short. But this is bad. There’s no beating around the bush.
We tried. We failed. They failed.
We get up, and try again.
Alexander Brown is a columnist, the publisher of the best-selling Acceptable Views newsletter on Substack, and the Director of the National Citizens Coalition.
(Time-stamped appearance starting at 15:35)
“There’s a piece in the Globe today that says ‘Oh, we’ve been had!’ Speak for yourself. WE saw this coming . . . I’m hearing from sources in Ottawa saying, ‘Oh, this is the worst start ever.’ What the heck did you expect? What the heck did these people expect?” -Me
It’s pure behavioural manipulation. A certain type (heavily predominant in Canada) will follow the predominant group dynamics no matter what. Even to their own financial and physical detriment. I saw “elbows” and immediately thought here we go again with “2 weeks to you-know-what” “we aren’t really all in this together” and “ my mask shows I’m a better person than you”
I am a random American interested in Canadian politics... I grew up in Rochester, our elementary school had multiple field trips to the Ontario Science Centre in much-less-built-up-back-then Don Mills, and our family went to the Niagara Region and to Toronto on vacation quite a few times.
I have a question... I remember Joe Clark's minority PC Government in 1979 lasting something like six months. If Mr. Carney's Government can't pass a budget in a similar time frame, will his Government also have to resign... or did Joe Clark choose to risk a vote of confidence before he absolutely had to and came up short? Another way to put my question would be how long does the Carney Government have to pass a budget? Six months? A year?