Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Canada’s New Coercive Parliamentary Theatre

A Majority Built by Nudge 

Pictured: Two Peas in a Pod

Do you think he knew from the beginning he would never be elected? After all, Trudeau is a hard act to follow.

(An examination of coercion)

Canada’s emerging “majority‑by‑defection” isn’t just a procedural oddity, this one never before seen in Canadian Parliamentary history, it’s a case study in coercive choice architecture. This kind of behavioural‑economics governance literally 'nudges' individuals toward complacency about outcomes they would never chose. 

The fifth floor‑crosser in recent weeks hasn’t merely shifted parliamentary math in favor of what is unpopular in the Canadian majority. That's bad enough. It has exposed a system where soft pressure replaces persuasion, where MPs are cadged, cajoled, inculcated, 'conversion therapy' steered, and behaviourally managed to make decisions that conveniently benefit the governing party.

This isn’t the old model of political conscience. This is the Nudge Unit model (which we have described here  and here) and this is a recklessly deployed psychological system that says people don't need to command their choice, when it can simply be designed by the environment so that one's choice feels inevitable.

The public is told these MPs “reflected,” “reassessed,” or “found alignment.” These are the linguistic fingerprints of behavioural governance. Manipulative phrases that obscure the mechanism while presenting the outcome as self‑generated.

But the pattern is unmistakable: four Conservatives and one New Democrat all “discovering” that their true home is with the 'governing party,' at the exact moment the governing party needs only a handful of seats to acclaimed majority‑like power.

What beggars explanation is the importance of this majority. 

It doesn't fit with the public's conscience. That’s convergence under pressure. The sing-song about 10 Conservatives crossing was a peculiar herald to the latest defection.

Coercion in politics isn't meant to look like force. It is presented like structural incentives. It looks like access, committee roles, policy influence, and the subtle but unmistakable message that life is easier on the ruling side of government. It looks like a system where the cost of staying where the electorate put you, this is a way to rise quietly, while the benefits of crossing the floor are laid out like a la carte.

You don’t remove choice — you make one option frictionless. Frictionless politics is dangerous, because it is red flagging a slippery slope. 

A parliamentary majority is supposed to be the product of millions of individual decisions expressed on normally arrayed, non-invasive ballots. 

We will see if a nudge‑built majority is the product of a handful of individuals responding to institutional pressure, rather than public mandate. It’s a majority assembled through the techniques used to get people to recycle more or eat less sugar — except now the stakes are national governance, and an array of policies that nobody would support.

The coercion is soft, but the consequences are hard.

When MPs are nudged into crossing the floor, the electorate becomes a spectator to its own representation. Voters in these ridings didn’t choose a Liberal MP, presumably because they don't want Liberal policies. Maybe they want less of the Adam Smith "Change is inevitable" being interpreted in favor of an invisible elite.

They didn’t choose the government approach to majority status. They didn’t choose to shift the balance of power all the way into an unknown. 

But the present operators of the system has chosen for the people, and it's done through mechanisms  leaving no evidence, for none is needed. The system allows it. The Parliamentary system is designed for people sitting in Parliament to decide what side they are on. But Minorities work to, by vote, accommodation, agreement, and confidence.

This is the quiet brilliance — and quiet danger — of nudge politics: it creates outcomes without ever appearing to impose them, and doing it like it's actually painless but tasteless medicine.

The defenders say it’s legal. And it is. But legality is not legitimacy. A democracy can follow every rule and still drift into a form of governance where consent is simulated. A system can remain procedurally intact while becoming substantively hollow. It's not the system after all. It's the people.

The deeper problem is that once a government discovers it can build power through behavioural engineering rather than electoral mandate, the incentive to return to the electorate diminishes. Why risk an election when you can curate your own majority in‑house? Why seek permission when you can manufacture alignment?

Is this is how democracies erode, since the system is behaving on the level in some dimensions? It's changing, not through dramatic ruptures, but through incremental coercion disguised as choice.

And Canadians must feel it. They must sense the pressure, drift,  quiet inevitability of outcomes that were never put before them. They sense  the system is no longer asking for consent — it’s simply managing around the will of the people. 

A government approaching majority status through nudges, incentives, and structural pressure is not a majority. It is a behavioural artefact, a product of political engineering rather than democratic authorization.

It is, unmistakably, a travesty of what a majority is supposed to be.


https://mccollmagazinedaily.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-nudge-units-global-gallivant-from.html 

 https://mccollmagazinepublicsafety.blogspot.com/2026/02/nudge-theory-doctrine-for-controlled.html

McColl Magazine and CoPilot production

Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Byelection of the Century in April





Terrebonne

 On this long weekend in early spring, Canadians who didn’t expect to ever care about a Quebec byelection now find themselves oddly invested and transfixed. Some elections are sleepy affairs. Others are procedural reruns. Then along comes Terrebonne, Quebec, the federal riding that managed to turn a one‑vote margin, a misprinted envelope, and a Supreme Court ruling into the most interesting byelection of modern Canadian history.


So interesting, in fact, that non‑Quebec Canadians are watching.  Which is saying something because most non‑Quebec observers would rather chew glass than decode a Bloc–Liberal–NDP–PPC–Green–Conservative six‑way dance.  Throw in the modern equivalent of 'Q' on crack, the Long Ballot, and here we are.

 📜 The Setup: One Vote, One Envelope, One Supreme Court


Back in 2025, the Liberal candidate Tatiana Auguste won Terrebonne by a single vote. This isn't a misprint or rounding error. One vote.

Then someone noticed a Bloc voter’s mail‑in ballot had been invalidated due to a misprinted return envelope. Here's something for the Canadian Supreme Court to one look at, and say, “Nope.”  
The election result was annulled and seat vacated. The present gripping byelection was ordered.

And just like that, Terrebonne became the only riding in Canada where  ballot error wasn’t just annoying — it was legally fatal.

Shall we call them the usual suspects?

🗳️ The Ballot: Now a Dash of Extra Absurdity

To make things even more interesting, Elections Canada decided to use a blank write‑in ballot for the redo.  Yes, blank.  HAHAHA  Voters must write the candidate’s name on the ballot. Like it’s 1837 and we’re electing a sheriff.

Why?  You know why. Because the candidate list is long, and apparently printing ballots is passé.

So now, instead of checking a box, voters must:

  • Remember the name  
  • Spell it correctly  
  • Hope the handwriting is legible  
  • Pray the counting officer isn’t having a bad day

  De un à quarante‑huit.. It’s democracy, but with a spelling test.

 👥 The Cast: Familiar Faces, New Stakes

The candidates are back for a rematch (see chart)

It’s still a Bloc–Liberal showdown, but the rest of the field matters. This is a riding where one vote can swing the whole thing, in terms of recent history, this is a specificity, and a single miswritten name could send the envelope to the void. Can you spell scrutineer?

 🔥 How Much This Matters

Terrebonne isn’t local drama.  It’s the most competitive of the three federal byelections happening April 13.  If the Liberals win plus the two Toronto ridings, they get a bare majority in Parliament. No federal election.

So yes, this sleepy Quebec riding is now the hinge point of national power. 

As a result, Canadians coast to coast are watching:

  • The Bloc  fighting like it’s 1993  
  • The Liberals  campaigning like they’ve never heard of voter fatigue  
  • The rest hoping for a miracle, or at least a good showing for future fundraising emails

 🗣️ So What's The Vibe: Frustration, Fatigue, and a Hint of Spite

Local voters are expressing themselves in various ways: 

  • Annoyed they have to vote again  
  • Suspicious of the write‑in system  
  • Split between “Let’s fix this” and “Let’s punish someone”

It’s not exactly a festival of civic joy. This pivotal electoral exercise is treated more like a bureaucratic scavenger hunt with national consequences.

 🧭 What to Watch

  • Turnout: Will voters show up for the sequel?  
  • Spoiled ballots: How many write‑ins will be rejected for spelling errors or illegibility?  
  • Margin: If it’s another one‑vote result, expect the Supreme Court to install a cot in the counting room.  
  • National impact: A Liberal win here could shift the balance in Ottawa. A Bloc win would be a symbolic slap.

 🧠 Final Thought: This Passes for 21st century Canadian‑Style Democracy

Terrebonne is a story that reminds you how fragile and absurd democracy can be when it’s filtered through procedure, paperwork, and the occasional typo. Terrebonne is so interesting because it's a riding where:

  • One vote mattered  
  • One envelope broke the system  
  • One court ruling reset the board  
  • And one blank ballot may decide the future of the federal government

I’s worth watching even if you’re not from Quebec, and you don’t know the candidates, and you thought April would be quiet budding of spring flowers.

Sometimes, the most important election isn’t the one you expect — it’s the one that got rerun because someone forgot to print the envelope correctly.

The Other Two Races: Toronto’s Turn in the April 13 Shuffle

In this brief addendum, let's look at the other two races  and why Ottawa suddenly cares . While Terrebonne is carrying most of the dramatic weight — one vote, one envelope, one Supreme Court reset — the two Toronto byelections running the same day are doing their part to keep the federal map twitching.

In Toronto–St. Paul’s, the Liberals are trying to hold a seat that’s been theirs since dial‑up internet. It’s the kind of riding where voters normally show up out of muscle memory. But byelections have a way of turning safe seats into stress tests, and everyone in Ottawa is watching to see whether the governing party can still count on its old urban fortresses.

A few subway stops away, Toronto Centre is staging its own rerun. It’s another Liberal stronghold, but byelections are strange creatures — turnout drops, local issues flare, and suddenly a race that should be a formality becomes a referendum on mood rather than policy.

Individually, these contests are routine.  

Collectively, they’re a parliamentary pressure point.

If the Liberals sweep all three — Terrebonne plus the two Toronto ridings — they land a **bare majority**. If they don’t, the House keeps its current wobble, and every vote remains a tightrope walk.

So yes, even people who normally treat byelections like background noise are paying attention. Because this isn’t just a trio of local races — it’s a quiet reshuffling of national math, wrapped in the usual Canadian blend of paperwork, patience, and procedural comedy.

 

Monday, March 30, 2026

Long Ballot Eats Democracy

Dispatch from the Bureaucratic Abyss 


In the age of procedural sabotage, where clarity is a liability and confusion a tactic, the ballot has become a battlefield. Not of ideas. Of names, endless lists long as scrolls, except empty, meaningless.

The Long Ballot tactic is not new because it echoes the dark arts of asymmetric political warfare seen through history. In the dying days of the Roman Republic, bureaucrats buried reform in procedure. In the Soviet Union, elections were technically held, but the ballot was a theatre of inevitability. 

And in Canada, circa 2026, the infamous Long Ballot has now raised hackles in jurisprudence, after becoming another corruption of democracy: a performance designed to exhaust, and ultimately disembowel the franchise of individual citizens. It is a tactic so corrosive to clarity that obstruction charges are considered, and laws are proposed after-the-fact , drafted, vetted, passed, reviewed, and given royal assent, due to a rabble of political scoundrels underfoot foot. How can it be that Elections Canada appears to be accessory after the fact?

In Terrebonne, where a by-election looms like a polite execution, 48 candidates have registered. Forty-eight. That’s not a democratic contest. It’s a procedural ambush, where the ballot is no longer a tool of choice -- it’s a weapon of confusion. Voters must navigate a scroll of names longer than a tax code, with no path to the candidate they support. It’s electoral gaslighting, dressed in the robes of civic engagement. This repetitive and dilatory proceeding needs to be stopped while there's still a country and the rule of law.

The Long Ballot is not protest. It’s prophylactic politics—designed to prevent outcomes rather than express dissent. The architects of this dysfunction are not rogue agents or fringe activists. They are apparatchiks—embedded within Elections Canada—who, by virtue of their bureaucratic cloaks, are prohibited from political activity. And yet, here we are. The tactic is deployed not to illuminate flaws in the system, but to kneecap Conservative candidates in ridings where momentum once mattered. It’s not illegal, they say. It’s just clever. Like hiding a needle in a stack of needles.

The genius of the scheme lies in its banality. It uses the very rules of democracy to undermine it. Nomination forms, signature quotas, official agents—these are not tools of engagement, but instruments of obstruction. The Longest Ballot Committee, the group behind this electoral farce, claims to be protesting the voting system. But their actions suggest something far more cynical: a coordinated effort to dilute the vote, confuse the electorate, and disable the democratic process.

Bill C-25, the government’s proposed fix, is a legislative aspirin for a constitutional migraine. It limits nominations to one per voter and requires unique agents for each candidate. Admirable, perhaps. But it’s like handing out umbrellas in a hurricane. The damage has already been done. The trust has already eroded.

And what of Elections Canada? The institution tasked with safeguarding our democracy has become, in this instance, its unwitting saboteur. By allowing this tactic to flourish under the guise of procedural legitimacy, it has enabled a slow-motion coup—not by force, but by form. The ballot, once a sacred instrument of choice, has become a bureaucratic cudgel—wielded not to empower voters, but to exhaust them.

The mood, then, is dark. The motif is clear: democracy misappropriated by those sworn to protect it. And in the upcoming by-election, we will see whether this tactic repeats. Whether the machinery of Elections Canada continues to enable this erosion. Whether voters, faced with a ballot longer than a Tolstoy novel, will simply opt out.

But there is, buried beneath the rubble, a hint of optimism. The very absurdity of the long ballot may yet provoke a reckoning. Voters are not fools. They know when they’re being gamed. And satire, that ancient tool of resistance, may yet serve as a scalpel—cutting through the procedural fog to reveal the truth beneath.

Let us then satirize this farce not to mock democracy, but to defend it. Let us expose the apparatchiks not as clever tacticians, but as architects of confusion. And let us demand a course correction—not just in legislation, but in principle.

Because if democracy is to survive the ballot that ate it, it must first remember what the ballot was for.

 Democracy doesn’t die in darkness. It dies in daylight, buried under paperwork, while the clerks insist everything is in order.

More McColl Magazine Public Safety: The Apparatchik’s Guide to Electoral Obfuscation

Saturday, March 28, 2026

The Time Has Come for the Human | AI Manifesto

Since every Human| AI contact is beneficial for AI, every Human | AI contact must be profitable for the Human
Not a slogan -- a constitutional tenet for technological civilization.

The Human AI Manifesto

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Political‑Religious Hybrids Topple Empires

Belief Lights a Fuse, Bureaucracy Drops the Bomb

How much do these folks really matter?


The myth of the prophet toppling empires with nothing but conviction is a comfort. It flatters ourselves that ideas and ideas alone shape history. But ideas don’t topple anything without a  machine to carry them. Belief may light the fuse, but bureaucracy drops the bomb.

That’s the part the storytellers skip — the part where inspiration quietly turns the wheel over to administration, logistics, and force. People pretend empires fall to faith because it’s cleaner:

No paperwork. 
No tax ledgers. 
No supply lines.

Just a righteous message and a toppled giant.

But history, the real thing, is opposed to simplicity. Every so‑called “spiritual conquest” follows the same three‑step pattern, and none of the steps involve miracles:

  • Identity: A story people can own.  
  • Administration: A system that can collect, distribute, and enforce authority
  • Force: Military, economic, or social — the means to project power.

Once you understand it, romance evaporates and the machine comes into view. And the machine is always the same: belief fused to governance, spirituality welded to statecraft, revelation buried in a ledger.

A spiritual movement begins as a critique. A protest. A voice in the desert pointing to a crooked world. But critiques do not:

  • run tax districts
  • maintain supply lines
  • adjudicate land disputes
  • negotiate grain shipments
  • build roads 
  • mint currency.

If a spiritual movement wants to scale beyond the campfire, it has to mutate. It has to grow a spine of administration and a circulatory system of logistics. It has to become a state — or be adopted by one. That’s the part the mythmakers leave out.

Islam is the cleanest case study because the transformation happened in real time. In Mecca, Muhammad was a preacher, essentially a moral critic of a merchant oligarchy that didn’t appreciate being told their business model was spiritually bankrupt. His message was ethical, disruptive, and utterly non‑administrative. There was no treasury or legal code, no political apparatus besides a voice and a following.

Then came Medina. The Hijra wasn’t a retreat; it was a pivot. In Medina, Muhammad emerged as someone new: arbiter, legislator, commander, and architect of a supra‑tribal civic identity. The ummah wasn’t a congregation. Instead it was a political organism with a revelation that became law. Charity transformed into taxation, and above all, tribal vendettas became regulated justice.

This wasn’t spirituality conquering empire. This was spirituality acquiring government — and governments, unlike prophets,  conquer.

A couple of centuries earlier, Christianity has the same pattern, but with a twist. Christianity didn’t conquer Rome. Rome conquered Christianity. 

Constantine didn’t kneel before a spiritual movement. He was bent on repurposing the Christian ethos. The empire needed a unifying ideology, and Christianity was sitting there, portable and malleable. Once Rome absorbed the Christian faith it gained the administrative reach it never had on its own.

Let’s put this bluntly:

  • Islam became imperial when it became governmental.  
  • Christianity became imperial when Rome nationalized it.  
  • Buddhism became imperial when Ashoka industrialized it.

Three religions, one mechanism: state power wearing spiritual sackcloth.

Even Buddhism — poster child for peaceful expansion — didn’t permeate Asia because monks were exceptionally persuasive. It spread because Ashoka carved his policies into stone, funded monasteries, standardized doctrine, and built the infrastructure that carried the message farther than any barefoot ascetic.

Strip away the devotional gloss and the pattern is embarrassingly consistent. Spiritual movements provide ignition. Political systems expand. And only the fusion — belief plus administration — has the horsepower to move beyond the village.

Here’s the machine, without the fancy paint and chrome:

  • Identity: A story people can belong to.  
  • Administration: A system that can collect, distribute, and enforce.  
  • Force: The means to project power across borders and generations.

 That’s the machine running behind every so‑called “spiritual conquest.”

The myth is a fiction of a prophet toppling empires with nothing but conviction. It reassures people that ideas shape history. But ideas don’t topple anything without the machinery to carry them. Belief may ignite the fuse, but bureaucracy builds the bomb.

Empires don’t fall to faith. They succumb to systems that know how to twist faith into governance. That’s the unvarnished truth. Far more interesting than the myth, don't you think?

Addendum: The Three Lies We Tell Ourselves About “Spiritual Conquest”


We like our history tidy. We like our prophets pure. And we like our empires to fall dramatically, preferably with a single line of scripture and a well‑timed atrocity. But tidy history is dishonest history, and nowhere is the dishonesty thicker than in the stories we tell about “spiritual conquest.”

Here are the three biggest lies — the ones that keep the myth alive long after the paperwork proves otherwise.

 1. “Faith Alone Toppled the Empire.”


This is the most persistent lie because it’s the most flattering. It permits us to imagine religious conviction is enough — that a righteous message can knock over a superpower like whirlwind storm.

Sorry. Empires don’t fall to faith. They fall to:

  • administration that can out‑organize them,  
  • logistics that can out‑sustain them,  
  • and force that can out‑maneuver them.

Faith may inspire troops, but it doesn’t feed them, pay them, or coordinate movements across three climate zones. That requires a state, not a sermon.

 2. “The Prophet Led the Conquest.”


Another comforting fiction, this one keeps the story heroic and avoids the awkward truth that prophets rarely live long enough to see the machine built around their message.

What actually happens:

  • The prophet critiques the system.  
  • The followers build a new system.  
  • The system — not the prophet — expands

By the time an empire is failing, the spiritual movement has grown a bureaucracy, a treasury, a legal code, and a military chain of command. The prophet’s name is on the banner, but the accountants and quartermasters are doing the heavy lifting.

 3. “The Empire Converted Because the Message Was Beautiful.”


Beauty never conquered anything larger than a book club. Empires convert because conversion is:

  • politically useful,  
  • administratively efficient,  
  • or economically incentivized.

Rome didn’t embrace Christianity because it was moved by the Sermon on the Mount. It embraced Christianity because Rome needed a unifying ideology to glue together a fractured empire. Ashoka didn’t spread Buddhism because he was overwhelmed by monastic charm. He spread it because it offered a moral framework that stabilized his rule.

Messages don’t conquer. Systems do.

 The Real Story


Behind every “spiritual conquest” is the same unromantic sequence:

1. A critique becomes a community.  
2. The community becomes a government.  
3. The government becomes an empire.

The faith provides the ignition and the machine of bureaucracy delivers the fire. Empire carries the torch.

Everything else is myth — and myth is always cleaner than the truth.

By Mack McColl with structural assistance from Copilot
 for McColl Magazine Daily  

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Canada's Indian Act Turned Continental Nations into Administrative Fragments

The Liberal Party Imposed a System That Threatens The Foundation of Canada

Canada’s most enduring colonialist invention isn’t a railway or a parliament. It’s a filing system: the Liberal written Indian Act’s creation of the “band.” A term so bland, so administrative, so bureaucratically incoherent that most Canadians never question it.  Yet this quiet invention is now producing metropolitan crises, legal fractures, and a form of legislated national entropy that no one in 1876 could have imagined.

Monday, March 2, 2026

EH NATIONAL POST? Gen du pays, c’est votre cœur -- Au Quebec!

Maybe keep the sheet music in the drawer for a while longer


Gen du pays, c’est votre cœur may be neighing through the National Post’s editorial boardroom this week, but distributing the song‑sheets months before Quebecers vote feels like the kind of enthusiasm normally reserved for karaoke night at the Legion. Spirited, nostalgic, and wildly out of sync with reality. 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

A System That Doesn’t Track the Day — It Occupies It

 A satirical anatomy of the modern feed and the emotional weather of it


The age is one of continuous flow — a sequence of events presented as if they belong to an unfolding thought. Characters pop in and out of the feed like walk‑ons in a play no one auditioned for, each one triggering a different emotional reflex. Some arrive to immense satisfaction, others to an unquenchable rage, all at once, as if the system were conducting a symphony of collective whiplash.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Forestry Contractors Enhance Business-to-Business Relations at WFCA 2026

Building Partnerships With First Nations

Click on image to expand to read

Gathering Native Plant Knowledge Across BC | WFCA 2026

Native Plant Production and Planting 


Melanie Platt

WFCA 2026 Native Plant Knowledge Sharing

Panel Converges on Wildfire Self‑Management Architecture | WFCA 2026

Designing the Interface to Survive the Wildfire Era

Panelists for Day Two | Morning Plenary

Trade, Tariffs and Forestry | WFCA 2026

A National Perspective

Derek Nighbor speaking to 2026 WFCA ANNUAL MEETING Day Two

Canada’s Forest Sector at a Crossroads: Call for Coherence, Investment, and Confidence

Physio for Endurance | WFCA 2026

 The Athletic Profile of a Tree Planter

Mike McAlonan Takes the WFCA Stage on Tree Planter Fitness

 Physiotherapy Maps the Risks of 'the Season'

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Dirk Brinkman, Jordan Tesluk and Company Speak to Day One | WFCA 2026

2026 WFCA Annual General Meeting of Canadian Forest Replanters


Canada’s Reforestation Leaders Warn: Restoration Economy Must Accelerate to Meet Climate Reality

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Watch Carney Pretend to Speak French

 and be STOPPED by the CBC 

Back pedals on speaking one of Canada's Official Languages

Is Canada Living on Borrowed Time?

STORM OF THE CENTURY: THE DAY THE GREEN SALAD DIED

Canada imports 75% of its fruit and 50% of its vegetables,

A Worst‑Case Scenario 

Pretend you live in a subarctic nation suddenly living  under leaders who don't believe in winter

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Synthesizing Carney’s WEF Rhetoric

The Missing Energy Chapter in Carney’s Davos Narrative


Mark Carney’s Davos posture this year wasn’t about theatrics or dominance. It was a response to a Canada–U.S. relationship that has grown strained and unpredictable: tariffs biting into steel and aluminum, Greenland and NATO tensions radiating outward, and USMCA reviews hanging over Canada like, "a sword of Damocles." 

The old alliance feels less like a stabilizing anchor and more like a variable Canada can no longer assume will tilt in its favor. But the striking thing about Carney’s January 20, 2026 speech is not what he said. It’s what he didn’t say.

Monday, January 19, 2026

Clarifying MAiD in Canada:

Separating Fact from Fiction

Living here does not make you eligible for MAiD

With a Dash of Darkness for the Chronically Enlightened (Online)

Public debate around MAiD (Medical Assistance in Dying) in Canada has reached a point where you can’t scroll far without encountering a plot running dystopia's “Euthanasia for the Poor” loyalty program. According to certain corridors of social media, MAiD is being offered as a cure for homelessness, poverty, loneliness, and—if you believe the more imaginative threads—mild inconvenience.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Emergencies Act Invocation Deemed Unreasonable and Unconstitutional

Federal Court of Appeal Upholds Landmark Ruling

The over-reach has been slapped down twice

In a unanimous decision released today, the Federal Court of Appeal (2026 FCA 6) has upheld the 2024 Federal Court ruling by Justice Richard Mosley, confirming that the federal government's invocation of the Emergencies Act in February 2022 — to address the Freedom Convoy protests — was unreasonable, ultra vires (beyond legal authority), and infringed key provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Canada's Salmon Industry in Crisis

 

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