Mark Carney (Trudeau Liberal Replacement) as PM

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Carney's firm Brookfield has been accused of breaching Indigenous rights in 4 countries​



Allegations in Brazil, Canada, Colombia and U.S. involve dams, wind farm, other operations​


Brett Forester - CBC News

Under Mark Carney's leadership, global investment firm Brookfield was accused of breaching Indigenous rights or harming the environment in at least four countries, CBC Indigenous has found.

Carney, who is running for prime minister as Liberal leader, spent more than four years as vice chair and then chair at Brookfield Asset Management, where he focused on green investing and renewable energy.

During that period from 2020 to 2024, Brookfield businesses faced reports of serious human rights abuses in Brazil, Indigenous resistance in Colombia, a First Nation's $100-million lawsuit in Ontario and an environmental dispute in Maine.

In Ontario, Maine and Colombia, Brookfield-owned hydroelectric dams and one wind farm allegedly threatened Indigenous rights or damaged the environment. In Brazil, international NGO Global Witness accused Brookfield and subsidiaries of deforestation and human rights violations, including the attempted eviction of an Indigenous group and breach of anti-slave labour law in 2021.

While the multinational conglomerate denied any wrongdoing, the disputes have raised questions about the former central banker and UN climate action envoy's track record.

"I'm not trying to point a finger at him personally, but the company of Brookfield, no, is not measuring up to what they could do and should do, and now we're saying must do, legally," said Toronto lawyer Kate Kempton.

Kempton represents Mississauga First Nation in a lawsuit against Ontario and Brookfield Renewable. It was filed in 2022 over four dams on the Mississagi River on Lake Huron's north shore.

It was filed as a last resort after "Brookfield shut the door in our face" when approached about a benefits-sharing agreement, said Kempton.

NDP questions Carney over First Nation's $100M lawsuit against Brookfield subsidiary
Carney advocates for more economic benefits-sharing agreements and economic reconciliation in his book, Values, but Mississauga First Nation's chief says they didn't experience that at all from Brookfield Renewable's Canadian firm, Evolugen.

"If anything, we've been ignored," Brent Niganobe told CBC Indigenous last month.

The chief said the dams in question devastated the community by destroying fishing sites, flooding territory and displacing people. While that was decades before Brookfield bought the dams in 2002, the First Nation alleges Brookfield benefited from prejudicial regulatory changes in 2019.

Meanwhile, the dams continue to impact the land, said Niganobe.

"There's still impacts with the fish. There was a spill at one of them that we didn't find out about till later, so it continues to create havoc on the environment."

From Maine to Colombia
In Maine, conservation groups sued Brookfield Renewable in 2021.

The groups alleged four dams on the Kennebec River were violating American federal law by repeatedly killing Atlantic salmon from an endangered population. The groups withdrew the claim in 2023, vowing to focus on the relicensing process instead, but they and local Wabanaki nations continue to advocate for the dams' removal.

The groups alleged four dams on the Kennebec River were violating American federal law by repeatedly killing Atlantic salmon from an endangered population. The groups withdrew the claim in 2023, vowing to focus on the relicensing process instead, but they and local Wabanaki nations continue to advocate for the dams' removal.

Failure to do so will "jeopardize the future of our sustenance fishing heritage," said Chief Kirk Francis of the Penobscot Nation and Chief Clarissa Sabattis of the Houlton Band of Maliseet in a March 5 news release.

More than 4,000 kilometres away in northern Colombia, the Sogamoso Dam, owned by Brookfield's Colombian business Isagen, caused significant damage to ecosystems and local communities, according to a 2023 collaborative report by some 50 civil society groups.

Meanwhile, the Wayuu people are resisting an Isagen wind farm in La Guajira, Colombia's northernmost peninsula. Nacion Wayuu, a local NGO, accuses Isagen of invading their ancestral territories and advancing the project without consent.

Company has denied allegations
In a statement, the Carney campaign declined to address the reports directly.

"Mr. Carney left his career in business and finance to run for office and is focused exclusively on serving the people of Canada," wrote Liberal spokesperson Jenna Ghassabeh.

"He is deeply committed to advancing reconciliation and upholding the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples."

Questions about Brookfield should be sent directly to the firm, she added.

Brookfield didn't respond to media requests but it has previously denied the allegations.
 
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Ron in Regina

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"Mr. Carney left his career in business and finance to run for office and is focused exclusively on serving the people of Canada," wrote Liberal spokesperson Jenna Ghassabeh.
…& if he doesn’t win the big chair, does he stay on to service the leader of the opposition…(?)….to serve the people of Canada…(?)…or is he gone?
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
115,939
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…& if he doesn’t win the big chair, does he stay on to service the leader of the opposition…(?)….to serve the people of Canada…(?)…or is he gone?
He's not going to win no matter how many Chinese, Wagner and Eurasia Group bots taint the online polls.

He won't stick around.
 
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Taxslave2

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"Mr. Carney left his career in business and finance to run for office and is focused exclusively on serving the people of Canada," wrote Liberal spokesperson Jenna Ghassabeh.
SO more of the same kind of "service" we got daily from turdOWE?
How can a guy with three passports even say is working for Canada with a straight face?
 
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Taxslave2

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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.
He spelled avoided wrong.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
28,035
10,465
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Pronounce it as you will, either way we are still going to get it up the ass.
"We are going to fight these tariffs with countermeasures, we are going to protect our workers, and we are going to build the strongest economy with a chicken in every pot and a Volkswagen in every garage. We will fight them on the beaches, we will fight them and their bitches, we will fight them on the fields and the streets, from the boardrooms to bordellos, Portage to Main, through sleet and hail and plagues of locust, we’ll…what where we talking about again?”
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
28,035
10,465
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
The Bloc is getting a little pissy with da’Libs:

“I don’t feel the love. I don’t feel interest for Quebec. I don’t feel interest for the differences. I don’t feel interest for the language. I don’t feel interest for the culture. I don’t feel interest for anything which is Quebec,” he said.

Blanchet said he felt Carney didn’t want to speak French and that it seemed to annoy him. He also lamented the fact that, according to him, Carney “doesn’t pronounce the words lumber,” “aluminum,” “fisheries,” and “aerospace,” which are all essential sectors in the province. Oh well.

Point it out during the debates (English & French) there Blanchet, if you’re allowed to do so…depending on just how “scripted” these “debates” actually are.
(The Liberal Party of Canada did not react to Blanchet’s comments)
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
28,035
10,465
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Last December, as calls for Justin Trudeau’s termination were heard nationwide, the polls showed overwhelming support for a Conservative supermajority. Why, there were even whispers that the Liberals wouldn’t retain their party status in the new legislature. Since then, the tables supposedly turned, and we are now facing a fourth term of the most destructive government Canada has ever known.

Nothing has changed and nothing will change if Carney is elected. It’s the same old government, run by the very same people, with the same mandate that turned a once proud and successful Canada into a post-national state with a strangled resource sector and zero hope for its young people.

Carney has never been elected to public office, cannot speak French and calls the offering up of a Conservative candidate to fetch a bounty from the Chinese government “a teachable moment.”

It seems that Trump is the only issue on which Carney waxes poetic. The rest of the time, he is blatantly stealing ideas from the Conservative party platform without batting an eye. Liberals and the legacy media — one and the same, really — are applauding this agent of change as if he’s a saviour.
The same voices are accusing Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre — the only man who can deliver real change in this election — of not having properly identified the “ballot question.” What drivel!

Poilievre and the Conservatives identified the ballot issue months, if not years, ago: affordability.

The Trump tariffs, threats of annexation and general treatment of Canada are important issues, but they are not as important as the pressure Canadians feel from housing, jobs, immigration, health care and wages.

The “new” Liberal party is now pivoting towards the ideas that Poilievre first put forward years ago. Should we trust the same Liberals to implement the very policies that they completely opposed until Trump took office?
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{Lt.-Gen. (retd.) Michel Maisonneuve spent 35 years in the Canadian Army and 10 more as Academic Director of RMC Saint-Jean. His book, In Defence of Canada: Reflections of a Patriot, was published in October 2024 by Sutherland House. Major (retd.) Barbara Krasij spent 21 years in the Royal Canadian Air Force}
 
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Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
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The Bloc is getting a little pissy with da’Libs:

“I don’t feel the love. I don’t feel interest for Quebec. I don’t feel interest for the differences. I don’t feel interest for the language. I don’t feel interest for the culture. I don’t feel interest for anything which is Quebec,” he said.

Blanchet said he felt Carney didn’t want to speak French and that it seemed to annoy him. He also lamented the fact that, according to him, Carney “doesn’t pronounce the words lumber,” “aluminum,” “fisheries,” and “aerospace,” which are all essential sectors in the province. Oh well.

Point it out during the debates (English & French) there Blanchet, if you’re allowed to do so…depending on just how “scripted” these “debates” actually are.
(The Liberal Party of Canada did not react to Blanchet’s comments)
The only thing Blanchet is not feeling is more transfer payments. How is Quebec industry supposed to operate without regular welfare cheques?