We have the whole package here:
Life is more affordable than in 2015?
— Kris Sims (@kris_sims) May 29, 2022
You should probably get our of your bubble, drive for 90 minutes in any direction and walk around and talk to people and ask them if they think life is more affordable now than it was in 2015. pic.twitter.com/wATuW7eHde
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“As I near the third of my mandate, I’m feeling more frustrated than hopeful,” Hogan, who took the job in June 2020, said during a press conference Tuesday after her office published its four latest audits.
“As much as I’d like to report that government programs and services improve once weaknesses are identified, I find that is seldom the case.”
Tuesday, the office of the auditor general (OAG) published four new reports, three of which were follow-ups on previous audits done within the last decade.
Though the topics — systemic barriers at Correctional Service Canada (CSC), access to federal benefits for hard-to-reach populations, the processing of disability benefits for veterans and an assessment of the government’s gender-based analysis plus — were quite different, her conclusions were essentially the same: the government has failed to act, and previously-known issues largely impacting vulnerable people have not improved.
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COVID-19 restrictions at the border will remain in place for at least another month after a Conservative motion calling for the removal of all pandemic travel restrictions was shot down.
The motion put forward by Conservative MP Melissa Lantsman (Thornhill) was defeated 202 to 117 on Monday in the House of Commons.
Put the same restrictions on Justin.
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They're contracting you, you stupid b!#ch:
Canadians can now wait an average three months to renew a passport, Social Development Minister Karina Gould said yesterday. Gould recommended the public take complaints to their MP: “I would recommend you contact your Member of Parliament.”
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What is on your cell phone, fatty?:
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino yesterday defended a cellphone search bill as necessary and constitutional. Liberal-appointed senators likened the bill to a fascist measure that would promote racial profiling: “It’s the same kind of searches I witnessed in Spain during Franco.”
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