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I apologize to everyone here. However, our apology is not accepted by the speaker. They are tired of liberal apologies and believe they hold no value. They mention an ethics violation in February and another one now. They criticize our pride on the first day and claim that Justin Trudeau's actions prove we cannot be nonpartisan. They suggest that if we have any integrity, we should step down.

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Mister Trudeau's leadership is precarious, with significant dissent within his party. A fifth of Liberal MPs have called for his resignation, and his deputy prime minister has left, along with his housing minister and several female ministers who have expressed dissatisfaction with his treatment and dishonesty. Currently, 80% of Canadians lack confidence in Trudeau. The pressing question is why Jagmeet Singh is delaying action while awaiting his pension, despite the growing unrest in the country.

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The speaker expresses disappointment that the prime minister announced his decision to stay on only 18 hours after being asked to reflect, a process expected to take until October 28th. The speaker believes more reflection is needed. The speaker questions the group's next steps, noting the lack of a caucus process to remove a leader who doesn't want to leave. Ultimately, the decision rests with the prime minister, but the speaker is disappointed by the quick turnaround after many urged him to step down.

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You claim to be running against the Ottawa establishment, yet you've been part of it for a decade. Why should anyone believe you're not part of the establishment? People can see the dynamics of the race. I resigned because I recognized the need to focus on the threat posed by Donald Trump. Wouldn't you have had a better chance to help Canada by staying in cabinet? No, Canada is strong and will impress the world with our resilience. I take pride in rallying Canadians and advocating for our country every day.

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I am stepping down from the presidential race to focus on preventing Robert Bork's Supreme Court appointment. I am grateful for the support and will continue to fight for justice and idealism in America. Thank you for understanding.

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I announced my candidacy for president but decided to withdraw to focus on preventing a harmful Supreme Court nomination. I am grateful for the support I received and will continue to fight for what I believe in. I aim to rekindle idealism in America and will remain active in politics. Thank you for understanding.

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It's alarming that a candidate running for leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada, potentially our next prime minister, learned of her disqualification via an email received by the media outlet interviewing her. While shocking, it's not surprising. Our internal polls showed my campaign was neck and neck with the front runner. They didn't want me on the debate stage or on the ballot. The Liberal Party wanted to ensure Mark Carney's coronation. The allegations against me are completely false.

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I don't want to lose her as a colleague here at MSNBC, and I believe letting her leave is a mistake. It's not my decision, but that's my opinion. It's unnerving that on a network with only two nonwhite primetime hosts, both are losing their shows, along with Katie Fang on the weekend. Regardless of who replaces them, this situation feels indefensible, and I cannot defend it.

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I lost the conservative leadership race by a small margin, which I initially accepted. However, I realized I wouldn't have enough support to lead effectively. After some reflection, I felt relieved but later became frustrated when my ideas were not considered for the party platform. This led me to resign.

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I want to assure everyone that I've always prioritized Canadians in my work. I'm committed to having your back. That's why I want to emphasize that we are here for you. Even as this government's term nears its end, we will continue to support Canadians both now and in the years to come.

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I will be questioning the RCMP commissioner tomorrow about why they chose not to investigate Justin Trudeau's actions in the SNC Lavalin scandal. Trudeau pressured Jody Wilson Raybould to offer a deal to SNC Lavalin, but she stood firm. I will ask why Trudeau wasn't charged with obstruction of justice. Stay tuned for updates.

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On his first day, President Trump signed an executive order recognizing only two genders: male and female. If elected as prime minister, would you align with this view? I'm aware of only two genders. If there are others, feel free to share. Personally, I believe the government should stay out of people's personal decisions. Regarding gender-neutral passports, my focus is on pressing issues like homelessness, poverty, and rising crime in Canada. With 25% of our population in poverty and housing costs skyrocketing, I find it odd to prioritize gender labels on passports. My goal is to restore the promise of hard work leading to decent pay and affordable living for Canadians. Let others discuss labels; I will focus on what truly matters for our country.

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I am resigning as Speaker of the House of Commons due to my mistake in recognizing an individual during a joint address. I apologize for causing pain to the Jewish community, survivors of Nazi atrocities, and others. My resignation is effective tomorrow to allow for the election of a new speaker. Thank you for your support during my term.

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I am resigning as Speaker of the House of Commons due to recognizing an individual during a joint address, causing pain to various communities. My resignation is effective tomorrow to allow for the election of a new speaker. Thank you for your support during my term.

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I haven't received official word from the Liberal Party about my disqualification. It's shocking that I learned about it from a news headline before receiving any direct communication. This is alarming. It speaks to the state of the Liberal Party that I'm finding out about my disqualification on air. It's not surprising, though. Our internal polls showed we were neck and neck with the frontrunner. They didn't want me on the debate stage or on the ballot because the Liberal Party of Canada wanted to complete the coronation of Mark Carney. All allegations are completely false and fabricated. I won't allow the Liberal Party of Canada or anyone to smear my name or the name of thousands of volunteers in our campaign.

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Donald Trump doesn't like me, and I don't have much respect for his representatives either. During his first term, I fought hard for Canadian jobs and our economy, and we succeeded. I left Trudeau's cabinet because I know how to win that fight again. Trump and his wealthy allies think they can take advantage of us, but I won't let that happen. Canada is a proud, strong, and free country filled with hardworking people. Pierre Polyaev, however, would bow to Trump and compromise our interests. This moment is crucial for all Canadians. I'm running to lead the Liberal Party and become your next prime minister to fight for you and for Canada. Join me in this fight.

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My Democratic colleagues were worried I would hurt their chances in the race, so I decided to drop out. I didn't want to be a distraction.

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My Democratic colleagues were worried I would affect their races, so I dropped out of the race. I didn't want to be a distraction.

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I've reflected over the holidays and discussed my future with my family. Any success I've had is due to their support. Last night, I informed my kids of my decision to resign as party leader and prime minister after the party selects a new leader through a competitive process. I asked the president of the Liberal Party to initiate this process. This country deserves a real choice in the next election, and I've realized that if I'm engaged in internal conflicts, I cannot be the best candidate for that election.

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I apologize for my remarks in the leaked video, which seemed to make light of the COVID-19 rules. I regret those comments and apologize to everyone at home. Working in government is a privilege, and I have always tried to behave with civility and decency. I am proud of the progress made on climate change and nature at COP 26. I understand the anger and frustration people feel, especially those who lost loved ones or struggled with their businesses. I am truly sorry. I am offering my resignation to the prime minister. Thank you for your time.

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These leadership race rules are opaque and internally determined. Everything operates in secrecy. As candidates, we questioned data sciences' affiliation with the Prime Minister and how we could ensure integrity with them controlling the Liberal Party's registered member lists. Questions arose regarding Mr. Carney's donors with foreign addresses. But unless you're favored, these questions go unanswered. As the first woman of color running from a multicultural community for the Liberal Party leadership and potentially Canada's next prime minister, I faced false, fabricated allegations.

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I feel relieved about Ruby Dalla's disqualification. Some friends and I found her social media postings puzzling, especially her anti-WEF stance rooted in conspiracy theories and her harsh attacks on Prime Minister Trudeau and Mark Carney. While some leadership candidates seek attention, this felt different. I worked on the Hill when Dalla was an MP and remember some problematic issues. Her recent social media activity didn't align with the Liberal Party's goals, especially seeking a fourth term. There wasn't much about Canadian politics in 2024 or the few years prior. While there's nothing wrong with being an influencer, I wouldn't want one as Prime Minister. I'm glad the vetting process was rigorous and that this was caught early, as my fear was that these issues would surface later.

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Look for a few minutes at the Liberal Hall Of Shame for 2015 to 02/2021. Liberal MP William Amos was caught twice on house Zoom proceedings in indecent positions. Liberal MP Yasmin Rathansi was wrongfully employing her sister with taxpayers' dollars and deliberately hiding this information from Canadians. Liberal MP Ramesh Sengha was removed from the Liberal Caucus in January 2021 after he accused multiple other Liberal MPs of supporting the calisthenia movement. Liberal MP Darshan Singh Kang had to leave the Liberal Caucus in 2015 over accusations of sexual harassment. Liberal MP Nikola Di Laurio didn't show up for work for a year after he announced his resignation in 02/2018. Then the public found out, oh, he actually didn't resign. He still collected his salary as an MP even if he was working full time in a law firm in Montreal. To this today to this day, this situation has never been clearly explained by Trudeau and the Liberals. Liberal MP Raj Greywall admitted he racked up millions of dollars in debts, paying casino blackjack, and ended up resigning from the Liberal caucus in 2018 after the news came to light. Following an RCMP investigation. But after suddenly announcing he had paid off his 7 figure debts, he stayed on as a member of parliament for the rest of the parliamentary session. You may recall that mister Graywald was already under investigation by the federal ethics commissioner at the time and was later found guilty of being in violation of conflict of interest. Then there was a liberal MP Marwin Tabarro. He was allowed to run against again for the liberal party in February even though detailed allegations of sexual harassment had been made against him. After being arrested in April 2020, he remained in caucus for almost two months because the prime minister's office claimed they knew nothing about it, took a newspaper article for the liberals to kick him out of caucus. Then former Liberal MP Frank Bayless signed one of those juicy sole source contracts with the Liberal government during the COVID epidemic. He received $237,000,000. Public health agency figures disclosed that more than 90% of the 10,000 Bayless Medical Company ventilators it bought were never used in any clinic or any hospital. Sadly, these ethical lapses were even worse amongst cabinet ministers. Let me give you a few examples. Anita Anad's husband was the recipient of one of those juicy COVID contracts. LifeLabs received tens of millions of dollars of COVID contracts. They sell test kits. Anita Anad's husband, John Knowlton, is a director of LifeLabs. The LifeLabs division has received multiple contracts worth millions since Anad was elected to the parliament in 2019. Navdeep Baines was industry minister and, as such, promised to crack down on big telcos who overcharge Canadians for Internet and cell phone service. Guess what? He found a job at Rogers after leaving the government. The lobbying commissioner said she was frustrated at this, but liberals will always find loopholes that means more money for them. Then there was Bill Blair, on several occasions, lied, meddled into the work of the RCMP regarding the worst mass killing in the history of Canada in Porta Peak, Nova Scotia. While he was the president of the Treasury Board, Scott Bryson tried to block approval for the contract of a navy supply ship being built at the navy shipyard in Quebec because he was lobbied to do so by New Brunswick's powerful Irving family, owners of the rival Halifax shipyard. Minister Bryson also tried to argue there was no need for him to set up a conflict of interest screen to prevent him from participating in government decisions involving two of Atlantic Canada's wealthiest families, even though he used to chair one of their investment firms and that his spouse continued to sit on the company's board of directors. Francois Philippe Champagne owned two apartments in London, England worth millions of dollars. His mortgages were with a Chinese bank. Strange indeed for a Canadian in The UK, Canadian MP in The UK to have to go to a Chinese bank for a mortgage. Judy Foote got involved in the Frank Norman affair. I will talk about that in a bit. But what is interesting here is that she resigned for health reasons. But suddenly, her health improved, and she was rewarded with the job of lieutenant governor in Lupinland and Labrador. Steven Gebel forgot to pay his taxes, but he never forgot to travel, especially to China. This minister is running around the globe, busy lecturing Canadians, but patting Chinese or Gulf Emirates officials on the back. Catherine McKenna and John Wilkinson, his predecessors, and environment were of the same ilk, jetting around the world to lecture the common folks that they should bicycle to work. Foreign affairs minister Melanie Jolie's office staff didn't read an email that said her department was sending a representative to a Russian embassy party. So we had a representative at a party drinking vodka with the Russian officials just after Putin invaded Ukraine. Not reading their emails is a hallmark of Trudeau ministers and their staff. It was the excuse given by Bill Blair and Marco Mendocino and, of course, Justin Trudeau. When David LaMetti was turfed from cabinet, a lot of people wondered why. He had actually, after all, done much of Trudeau's bidding, we thought. Well, in the last few weeks, we learned that LaMetti canceled a verdict of first degree murder against Jacques Delisle, a former judge, even if all the experts were against this decision. Lemetti and the government refused to come clean on why he did that, even though Delisle later pleaded guilty to manslaughter. You all heard senators' nonanswers to our questions on this issue. What about Dominique Leblanc, who, despite despite connection to the powerful Irving family, was appointed to be minister of fisheries, oceans, and the Canadian Coast Guard. He had to consult with the Essex commissioner for weeks in order to figure out how to stick handle around this very obvious conflict of interest. Then there was a time when minister LeBlanc flew from Moncton to Montreal and back aboard a jet owned by JD Irving Limited. Nothing to see here, folks. But when the ethics commissioner, Mario Dion, found minister LeBlanc guilty of breaking a conflict of interest act because he awarded a lucrative Arctic surf clam license to a company linked to his wife's cousin. He couldn't wiggle out of that. Speaking of Dominique Leblanc and Scott Bryson, we still don't know what their exact role was in the vice admiral Norman affair. The Liberals tried to renege on a contract for a supply ship in order to give it back to the Irvings. When they got caught, they decided they would get the height ahead of vice admiral Norman. The prime minister even sent him to trial before the police had investigated its investigation. Scott Bryson and Judy Foote left their positions, and taxpayers ended up being invoiced for an undisclosed sum of money paid out to vice admiral Norman. That is a first class cover up. Marco Mendocino's case was hopeless. Conflicts of interest, emails not read, bold lies in public, pure incompetence. When you are so bad that even Justin Trudeau thinks you're bad, you've hit the bottom. Someday, I will have a speech just on Marco Mendocino's scandals. I may need my unlimited time for that. It happens that ministers organize fundraisers outside their writings, but when you represent a downtown Montreal riding, this is strange. It is even stranger if this fundraiser happens to be in New York. New York, USA. To my knowledge, that is the first, and this honor belongs to Mark Miller. Mary Anne Monsoff had to admit that she was actually not born in Afghanistan, as she had told people and led people to believe for years. Bill Morneau is another minister who was scandal prone. He started his political career with violating the Elections Act, for which he was fined. This is, after all, the same finance minister who forgot that he had and forgot to declare his villa in France in his ethics reporting. This is the same finance minister who sponsored Bill C27, which happened to increase the value of pensions sold by the minister's own company, Morneau Shepell. When the bill was tabled in the House of Commons, the value of Morneau Shepell shares joked, and minister Morneau just happened to still be holding $21,000,000 worth of shares. And as I already mentioned, his role in the We Charity scandal, when he quit, he pretended he was going to the OECD top position. No one knows for sure if this was true. One thing is true, and it's real. Taxpayers footed the bill for his failed campaign. I still have an order paper question on the true cost. Still unanswered after twenty five months, it was reported in the media that this phony campaign cost at least $11,000,000. Mary Ang was found guilty by the ethics commissioner for giving contracts to her best friend. In a Trudeau government, that means you pretend to be sorry, and that has no consequences. How about Seamus O'Regan? The government spent $180,000 defending him in a defamation suit. And do you remember Hunter Tootoo? He had to leave cabinet to deal with, sadly, addiction issues. But what was strange was when he said that Justin Trudeau had hugged him after he revealed that he had an inappropriate relationship with a staff member. Harjit Sajid was found to have lied about his role in Afghanistan. But this happy bunch knows how to organize a party sorry, a cabinet retreat. The three affordability retreats held in Charlottetown, Vancouver, and Hamilton between 2022 and August 2023 cost 1,325,000. Hey, life is better with lobster and white wine, especially when you are discussing affordability. It's not surprising to see all those ethical lapses. After all, this is the leader of an organization who sets the tone. Justin Trudeau does not believe the rules of ethics apply to him. So how could he insist that his officials, his MPs, and his ministers be any better? In 02/2015, we learned that Justin Trudeau was billing charities for speaking engagements, even as an MP. This was a First Colleagues, a sitting politician who charges people to hear him speak. When he got caught, he said he was sorry and wrote a check. A few weeks later, he was caught again. He had charged the House of Commons for expenses that had also been reimbursed by the organizations to which he spoke. Again, we had the, I'm sorry, here's a check routine. This was a preview of things to come. Who can forget the thank you for your donation comment and incident where the PM's elitist and condescending attitude was on full display when he jeered at an indigenous protester before that? Before that, we had Elbowgate when Justin Trudeau pushed aside fellow MP Ruth Ellen Brasso Brasso because he was in a hurry to vote. His time was more precious than others, and pushing aside women who get in the way is something our fake feminist prime minister does without hesitation. That was in line with Justin Trudeau's behavior in the Kokanee grope incident where he groped a female journalist. Then he said, oh my, I would not have done this had I known that the woman was a national reporter. I guess in his mind, it's more acceptable to grope a person that is not a national reporter than one that is. Now we all remember, of course, that our prime minister decided that this was indeed a lesson, not just for him, but for all of us. We all know that some people experience things differently, he said. Now let's not forget the three, four, five, maybe more incidents where Justin Trudeau wore blackface because he thought it was funny to pretend that he was black. We don't know how many times he did that because he can't re

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I'm leaving Twitter within the next 24 hours. There's nothing more to say; we lost both houses and the White House. I'm concerned about what will happen next, especially with pardons. At almost 80 years old, I feel it's time to go. I've been fighting since 2017, believing that those with active minds would prevail, but we lost to ignorance. I cherish all of you who have been part of my life, and I will miss you. Take care of yourselves.

The Dr. Jordan B. Peterson Podcast

Trudeau, Women, & Minorities: the Brutal Reality | Celina Caesar-Chavannes | EP 493
Guests: Celina Caesar-Chavannes
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Jordan Peterson announces a tour for his new book, "We Who Wrestle With God," focusing on biblical stories and their significance in civilization. He discusses the challenges faced by Justin Trudeau's administration, highlighting scandals and the departure of key figures from his cabinet, including Celina Caesar-Chavannes, who shares her experiences as a former parliamentary secretary. Celina Caesar-Chavannes recounts her journey into politics, her election in 2015, and her initial excitement about working closely with Trudeau. However, she quickly became disillusioned due to a lack of communication and support from the Prime Minister's Office. Despite her qualifications and experience, she felt sidelined and tokenized, particularly as the only Black woman in the House of Commons. She describes her efforts to advocate for a national brain strategy and her frustrations with being unable to speak in the House or to the media. Her relationship with Trudeau deteriorated, culminating in a tense phone call where she confronted him about his privilege and the sacrifices she made for her role. This confrontation led to feelings of fear and anxiety about her future in politics. After witnessing the treatment of Jody Wilson-Raybould, another prominent figure in Trudeau's government, Caesar-Chavannes decided to speak out against the Prime Minister's behavior. She pressed send on a tweet criticizing Trudeau's public statements, prioritizing her integrity over potential career repercussions. She reflects on the importance of standing by one's principles and the consequences of failing to do so. Despite her bravery, she faced challenges in finding work after leaving politics, as many colleagues were scooped up into lucrative positions while she struggled. She emphasizes the need for accountability in leadership and the media's role in holding powerful figures responsible. Her book, "Can You Hear Me Now?" published in 2021, details her life experiences and advocacy for those who feel marginalized.
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