Mark Carney (Trudeau Liberal Replacement) as PM

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., Brookfield Property Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. all list their business address as 73 Front Street, Hamilton, 5th Floor, Bermuda.
According to Brookfield Asset Management’s annual report, the publicly traded Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. boast a combined market capitalization of nearly $50 billion.

CTV News asked the Liberal campaign whether Carney thinks it is ethical for a company like Brookfield Asset Management to register their business entities in so-called tax havens and what rules he would put in place to ensure taxes are paid in Canada.

The campaign’s spokesperson sent a statement in response that did not address the substance of either question.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
115,638
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Low Earth Orbit
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., Brookfield Property Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. all list their business address as 73 Front Street, Hamilton, 5th Floor, Bermuda.
According to Brookfield Asset Management’s annual report, the publicly traded Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. boast a combined market capitalization of nearly $50 billion.

CTV News asked the Liberal campaign whether Carney thinks it is ethical for a company like Brookfield Asset Management to register their business entities in so-called tax havens and what rules he would put in place to ensure taxes are paid in Canada.

The campaign’s spokesperson sent a statement in response that did not address the substance of either question.
They type of person Lefties used to hate. I hope he hides his Tesla.
 

Toro

Senate Member
May 24, 2005
5,455
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Florida, Hurricane Central
If you're a Tory, I would think that would make you happy.

Or is hating the left more important to you than having positions you favour receiving wide support?

If you believe what Mark Carney said as head of the UN Financial/Climate Change group and head of GFANZ, it would absolutely devastate the Canadian economy since so much of it is dependent upon energy, mining and industry.

So no, it does not make me happy
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
27,822
10,348
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., Brookfield Property Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. all list their business address as 73 Front Street, Hamilton, 5th Floor, Bermuda.
According to Brookfield Asset Management’s annual report, the publicly traded Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. boast a combined market capitalization of nearly $50 billion.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
59,570
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Washington DC
If you believe what Mark Carney said as head of the UN Financial/Climate Change group and head of GFANZ, it would absolutely devastate the Canadian economy since so much of it is dependent upon energy, mining and industry.

So no, it does not make me happy
Wait. . . now you're believing Mark Carney?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
115,638
13,671
113
Low Earth Orbit

More Brookfield business entities registered to Bermuda building that houses bike shop​

By Brennan MacDonald and Vassy Kapelos
Updated: April 02, 2025 at 11:59AM EDT
Published: April 02, 2025 at 6:16AM EDT

Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., Brookfield Property Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. all list their business address as 73 Front Street, Hamilton, 5th Floor, Bermuda. (Image credit: Google Maps)

Several entities of global investment giant Brookfield Asset Management’s core business are registered to an address in Bermuda that also houses a local bike shop, CTV News has learned.

Liberal Leader Mark Carney previously served as chair of Brookfield’s board, from August of 2022 until mid-January of this year, when he resigned to run for the party leadership.

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Last week, Radio Canada reported that two Brookfield pension funds, worth a combined $25 billion, were registered in Bermuda.

One of the significant advantages of registering business in Bermuda is the country’s tax regime; until this year the country did not have a corporate income tax. Comparatively, the federal corporate income tax rate in Canada is 15 per cent.

Carney’s rivals, including NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, have accused him of leading a company that doesn’t pay its fare share in Canadian taxes.

“That’s less money for health care. Less money for seniors. That’s less investments in our country,” Singh said last week.


The company’s annual report for the fiscal year ending December 2024 outlines five core areas of its businesses — renewable power and transition, infrastructure, private equity, real estate and credit — along with their corresponding LPs (limited partnerships).

Four of those LPs are registered to an office in a building on Front Street, a busy, waterfront promenade in Bermuda’s capital that is lined with colourful, colonial-era buildings.

Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., Brookfield Property Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. all list their business address as 73 Front Street, Hamilton, 5th Floor, Bermuda.

On the first floor of that pastel-pink building, there is a local cycling shop.

The image was captured by Google Street View in 2015, but an employee at the bike shop confirmed to CTV News that the photo is still accurate, and the shop is still housed at that address.

Other angles of 73 Front Street reviewed by CTV News show the building has a fourth and fifth floor set further back from the street front.

A view of 73 Front Street in Hamilton, Bermuda.
The U.K.-based tax fairness advocacy group Tax Justice Network ranks Bermuda as one of the world’s top corporate tax havens, behind only the Cayman Islands and the British Virgin Islands.

According to Brookfield Asset Management’s annual report, the publicly traded Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., and Brookfield Business Partners L.P. boast a combined market capitalization of nearly $50 billion.

Carney faced questions over the pension funds’ registry in Bermuda last week. He defended the practice, saying the flow through of pensions to beneficiaries of the pension funds ultimately means the pensioners pay taxes on their pensions.

“I know the way the world works,” he told reporters last Wednesday. “I have the ability to put in place all of the necessary rules to ensure that the appropriate taxes are paid here in Canada.”

CTV News asked the Liberal campaign whether Carney thinks it is ethical for a company like Brookfield Asset Management to register their business entities in so-called tax havens and what rules he would put in place to ensure taxes are paid in Canada.

The campaign’s spokesperson sent a statement in response that did not address the substance of either question.

“Poilievre continually attacks Mark Carney’s expertise in business and finance because he has no expertise of his own,” Mohammad Hussain wrote.

“Mr. Carney worked for Brookfield from August 2020-January 2025 and no longer has any involvement in the firm. Specific questions about Brookfield should be sent to the firm directly.”

The Liberals promised during the 2021 federal election campaign to significantly increase the resources of the Canada Revenue Agency to combat aggressive tax planning and tax avoidance.

The non-profit Canadians for Tax Fairness wrote in February of this year that the promise “resulted in actions that play around the edges of the issue without addressing the root causes.”

“The government did modestly increase funding for the Canada Revenue Agency to go after wealthy tax cheats, improve Canada’s general anti-tax avoidance rule, and implement the Global Minimum Tax Act, however, nothing was done to address the biggest channel for tax evasion and avoidance: the bilateral tax treaties that Canada has with tax haven,” wrote Silas Xuereb, a researcher and policy analyst at Canadians for Tax Fairness.

Xuereb noted that five of the seven countries with the most Canadian direct investment were “known tax havens,” including Bermuda.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,211
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North Vancouver federal election candidate has U.S. convictions for illegal firearms
Oliver King, formerly known as Hamid Malekpour, was convicted of five counts in May 2011 in Seattle courtroom

Author of the article:Kim Bolan
Published Apr 02, 2025 • Last updated 14 hours ago • 4 minute read

Photograph of Oliver King from his campaign website.
Photograph of Oliver King from his campaign website.
A North Vancouver federal candidate running as an Independent has convictions in the U.S. for illegally dealing in firearms and lying to border authorities, Postmedia News has learned.


Oliver King, formerly known as Hamid Malekpour, was convicted of five counts in May 2011 in a Seattle courtroom. He was initially sentenced to almost six years in jail. But after he filed an appeal, one count was dropped by prosecutors and his sentence was reduced to 30 months.

King was also previously convicted in Denmark for attempted fraud, according to documents filed in the U.S. prosecution.

Reached by phone Monday, King refused to comment on his criminal history. He appeared to hang up three times on a reporter when asked about the U.S. convictions.

“Who gave you permission?” King asked, declining to clarify what he meant. “You’re (a) waste of time.”

He wouldn’t comment on whether the voters should know about his record for unlawfully dealing in firearms and making false statements to U.S. border officials on three occasions.


King’s U.S. troubles began in February 2009 when he crossed the B.C. border into Washington state and gave “conflicting statements” for why he was in the U.S. He was sent for secondary inspection and more questions.

“By the end of the conversation, King was annoyed, accused the agents of racism and delaying him because he was born in Iran, and announced he no longer wished to enter the United States,” a government sentencing memo filed in 2011 said.

King, who changed his name in 2008, crossed the border 18 times over the subsequent 15 months “each time explaining he was coming to pick up consumer goods, his wife or her parents, or to check his mail at a border-town mail service, Hagen’s of Blaine.”

Surveillance showed “his activities were always at odds with his stated reason for entry. The three false statement convictions arise from false statements made by Mr. King at the border related to his purpose for entering the United States.”


He was arrested on May 19, 2010, after he travelled from B.C. to McMinnville, Ore., and brought guns back to Ferndale, Wash. Police searched his vehicle and a storage locker and “recovered 21 high-end firearms, gun magazines … scopes and rounds of ammunition, along with his computer, cellular phone and miscellaneous documents, including two valid Canadian passports,” the 2011 prosecution sentencing memo said.

At his first sentencing hearing in May 2011, U.S. District Judge James L. Robart highlighted King’s “pattern of lying,” including some “incredible” testimony that the B.C. man offered at a pretrial hearing.

At his second sentencing hearing, after one of five counts was dropped, King’s lawyer said he was merely a firearms collector and that there was “no indication he at any time transferred or agreed to sell any of these firearms to others.”


But the second prosecution sentencing memo said the evidence at his jury trial showed King and an accomplice intended to transfer some of the firearms to Canada.

“The court heard trial testimony sufficient to find this to be King’s intent in at least two such instances. The most egregious was the apparent anticipated transfer of the guns to Canada in violation of export laws and Canadian firearms laws,” the July 2012 document said.

King announced his intention to run for federal office on Instagram in June 2023. Since then, he has posted regularly on social media and his own campaign website.

A Farsi language video posted on both his X and Instagram accounts shows King dressed in camouflage, firearm in hand, shooting at a target.

Elections Canada’s website indicates King has registered to run in the riding of North Vancouver-Capilano. Someone with a criminal record can run for office in Canada, except for those who have violated certain sections of the Canada Elections Act.


His campaign website says he believes in “streamlining government, streamlining enforcement, enhancing sustainability as (an) economic market” and expanding international trade potential.

In a video he posted to X in October 2023, King told an interviewer that he was born in Iran and “adopted at a young age by Europeans.”

“I was raised in Europe. My family was very active in politics. So from a young age, I was involved in politics,” he said. “And about 22 years ago, I was invited by the Canadian consulate in Europe, to emigrate to Canada.”

He said he has owned several companies and wants to represent his constituents in North Van.

“I was born in Iran, so I still get the Iranian treatment,” he said, adding that “Canada has been ruled by Europeans and by all European rules. That has to change.”

He said Canada needs to reestablish diplomatic relations with Iran.

“We have a big community … They have to open our embassies. There is no reason why our embassies are closed,” he said. “We have to have a relationship with our people, our background. We have to have trade, this would boost our economy. We won’t have tourists coming to Canada from Iran, unrestricted, visa-free.”

kbolan@postmedia.com

x.com/kbolan

Bluesky: @kimbolan.bsky.social
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,211
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This election campaign has seen both Tomfoolery and sabotage
Whether it's vandalizing election signs or hacking surveys, there are some dark arts happening in this federal election campaign


Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Apr 03, 2025 • Last updated 8 hours ago • 4 minute read

They don’t call the “Dark Arts” just because of the sinister nature of election campaign obstruction these methods employ.

They also call it that because often election sabotage happens under the cover of night where at best all you see are murky figures on security cameras that make it difficult to find who did it, let alone hold the culprits responsible.

It was like that in Oakville East where Conservative candidate Ron Chhinzer, whose signs would be there at sundown but overnight would either disappear or be cut in half and thrown across the street.

In York Centre, Conservative candidate Roman Baber had his sign covered up by Liberal signs.

But in Conservative Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman’s case in Thornhill, the person trying to disrupt her chance for re-election didn’t seem to care who saw what and posted it proudly to social media.




Sure, there was effort to conceal the person’s head, but you can see his or her blue jeans and shoes, and the act itself of taking about five Lantsman election signs and throwing them into the dumpster before stepping on them.

Lanstman, who has been victim of many antisemitic attacks, told the Toronto Sun they brought it to the police’s attention.

“I feel it’s both a potential hate crime and an election violation,” said Meir Weinstein, of Irsrael Now, who posted the video.



He might be right and police are on it. Many feel there would be more fuss if these crimes were on Liberal election signs.

But during election campaigns, strange stuff occurs.

One of the strangest things was brought out by a woman named Lisa who was part of an Angus Reid survey group when she received a series of questions from surveys.angusreidforum.com that were not flattering toward Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.



Here’s what the online survey said: “Now we’ll turn to some reasons people give to support or oppose the parties in the upcoming election. You’ve been chosen to hear about Mark Carney and the Liberals: Which of the following statements comes closest to your own view on why people should vote Liberal in the next election, even if none is exactly right?”

Answer One: “Pierre Poilievre is a radical extremist who would risk the rights of Canadians. We cannot let him win and become prime minister. The only way to stop them is to vote for Mark Carney and the Liberals. They’re the only ones high enough in the polls to stop the Conservatives.”

Answer Two: “Pierre Poilievre would bow down to Trump and let him walk all over Canada. He wants to privatize our healthcare system to be more like for-profit American care. He wants you to pay for your healthcare. We have to stop him at any cost. The Liberals are best placed to challenge him. Mark Carney is the best guy to stand up to Trump.”

Other options included, “None of the above,” and “Don’t know/Not sure.”



Lisa didn’t answer the questions. Instead, she saved them and posted them to X.

“(I) find it strange, indeed,” she told me.



I reached out to Angus Reid who was just as a perplexed as Lisa.

“Yes, we’ve been made aware and had to do some digging to figure out the origin of this. As I stated in previous correspondence, ARI (Angus Reid Institute) is a non-profit research institution, whereas ARF (Angus Reid Forum) is a commercial operation that takes surveys from clients and distributes them to Canadians. We are not privy to all non-ARI surveys, which is 95% of what Forum participants will receive,” said Angus Reid Research Director Dave Korzinski. “The multiple AR names certainly creates some confusion, we are painfully aware! …this isn’t our work.”



That is a relief. And a horror. Somebody may have hacked them.

Shachi Kurl, the president of the Angus Reid Institute, responded on X saying, “We’ve reviewed the question. It came from a 3rd party that uses @angusreidgroup sample services, not @angusreidorg or @angusreidroup. That said, it did not meet our own standards and never should have been fielded. This study was cancelled and pulled from field.”

Even though these strange questions were asked in a survey, Angus Reid says it was not done by them -- supplied photo
Even though these strange questions were asked in a survey, Angus Reid says it was not done by them — supplied photo
She added: “Thanks for flagging. This isn’t a question from @angusreidorg, which is a separate entity from @AngusReidGroup. It’s not a question that would have ever been approved by me or my colleagues at ARI. We’re looking into where it came from.”

It’s good that Lisa caught it and that Angus Reid removed it.

It is a reminder that not everything is always as it appears and that even the polling world can be sabotaged – just as Conservative candidates have been.

jwarmington@postmedia.com
1743749311011.png
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
27,822
10,348
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
It’s certain after Trump’s posturing that Canada should build the strongest possible economy we can. This would involve developing our energy and natural resources to finally tap into Canada’s long-ignored economic potential. However, if Carney’s past, as an advocate of onerous climate policies, up until the day before throwing his hat into the Liberal leadership ring indicates his future agenda, he is unlikely to pursue conventional energy projects such as oil and LNG pipelines.

Besides now being head of the party for whom he formerly served as economic advisor, the party responsible for over-regulating the process of building energy projects which helped drive away investors in the first place, Carney may be even more focused on clean rather than conventional energy than climate activist former environment minister Steven Guilbeault.

Not convinced? Read his 2021 book, Value(s): Building a Better World for All, where he states twice that 80 per cent of fossil fuels need to remain in the ground. Still not convinced? Then note his former role as UN Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance, his co-founding of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ), and the funds he created at Brookfield for the purposes of transitioning the world off of fossil fuels.

More importantly, instead of seizing on the fact that CUSMA is still, mostly, being honoured, and reassuring Canadians that he’s the man to renegotiate a new trade agreement with the U.S., Carney continued with the war language that’s been working for himself and the Liberal party thus far, telling reporters that he’s going to “fight these tariffs with countermeasures.”

It’s not yet clear whether that’s necessary or wise.
And there’s evidence that seeking exemptions through negotiations, rather than aggressive language and counter-tariffs, might be more a useful approach. At least until we wait out the effects Trump’s tariffs may have on his own voters.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith celebrated Canada’s escaping the new round of tariffs, and the Americans largely respecting CUSMA. “This is precisely what I have been advocating for from the U.S. Administration for months,” she said.

Now, the day after Canada avoided further tariffs, Carney has chosen the elbow’s up approach, choosing to escalate with 25 per cent counter-tariffs on U.S. autos, that are not compliant under CUSMA.

It isn’t clear that an immediate elbows up approach, even though it seems to have reinvigorated the Liberal base, is the correct response for Canadians economic interests and any future relationship with our neighbours to the south.

Carney, at this point, is still a caretaker prime minister until he’s officially elected by Canadians. His choice to escalate with countermeasures now, when the situation is the same as it was before “Liberation Day,” is curious. Is Carney making this decision as a caretaker PM who is running in an election and knows elbows up has pleased the Liberal base so far, or is he making it in a thoughtful and measured capacity?
(YouTube & LILLEY UNLEASHED: Carney’s bad habit of not telling the truth)