The chair of a group of parliamentarians who raised a red alert about foreign interference in Canadian politics says it’s now up to the police to help deal with their findings.
“And it is up to the RCMP to decide, on the basis of any intelligence or evidence they may have in their possession, whether they are going to take steps or not.”for the rest of their lives. They waived their parliamentary privilege to sit on the committee. If they inadvertently reveal information, they can be prosecuted, he said.from its response to the release of the document, to be taking the issue seriously.
The central bank’s governing council lowered the policy rate to 4.75 per cent from 5 per cent, a two-decade high reached last summerMartin Appelt, senior director of animal health programs for the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, says not a single case of the disease has been found in Canadian cows, but the agency has initiated“What will the deportation accomplish? Will it make any Canadian safer? Will it make Canada a better place to live? And the answer is, it will not.
“We have been working really hard to create the economic conditions which would make it possible for the bank to lower rates and today we see the fruit of that hard work,” –, during a news conference at Parliament Hill, on the Bank of Canada’s interest-rate announcement, today. She left without answering media questions about foreign interference.