Prime Minister Mark Carney and Danielle Smith signed that MOU which will set up the conditions for Alberta to set up a process to build a bitumen pipeline to the coast where the tanker ban would be eviscerated, while also giving them a bunch of exemptions to other emissions reductions regulations, and the promise on Alberta’s part is to reduce emission intensity—meaning as they produce more, emissions are still increasing, just by a smaller amount in theory, though I certainly believe that intensity reductions in the oilsands flatlined a while ago. It also means that this relies even more on Pathways, which is expensive and is going to keep demanding money, and I have no confidence that Carney’s government will resist the calls to subsidise it directly. David Eby went on to refer to this future pipeline as an “energy vampire,” while coastal First Nations continue to insist it’ll never happen. And then Steven Guilbeault resigned from Cabinet, because this goes against everything he has been fighting for his entire life, and his time in office, while other MPs in his caucus are increasingly angry about how they are being treated over this issue.
https://bsky.app/profile/supriya.bsky.social/post/3m6ngogmhqs2x
In the midst of this, Andrew Leach has been reminding us about the real history of Northern Gateway, not the sanitized and revisionist version that the Conservatives have been promoting, and the fact that their constant demands that the government “get out of the way” didn’t seem to apply to the entirety of the Harper government, as the project started under the Martin government, and ultimately failed at the end of Harper’s tenure, when his government couldn’t even be arsed to follow their own process for Indigenous consultation.
In pundit reaction, Jason Markusoff notes that this agreement will do little to mollify the separatists in Danielle Smith’s base when her leadership review comes up. Andrew Coyne sees this as a shift in Canadian politics back toward building things, and capturing the political centre. Stephen Maher wonders just how politically canny Carney really is, considering the traps for himself that this agreement sets.
No it fucking won't. They've been gorging themselves on grievance porn for decades now. Nothing any government does is going to calm them.
— Dale Smith (@journodale.bsky.social) 2025-11-28T03:30:10.597Z
Danielle Smith Celebrates Her Glorious Pipeline Victoryyoutu.be/GVk54cla9zw
— Clare Blackwood (@clareblackwood.bsky.social) 2025-11-27T21:13:16.340Z
Ukraine Dispatch
Putin claims that Russian forces have surrounded Pokrovsk, while Ukraine contends that the fighting continues in the city centre, and that they are pushing back hard. He also says it’s no use signing an agreement with “illegitimate” Ukrainian leadership (because he really wants peace, you guys).
https://twitter.com/ukraine_world/status/1994013852753702989
Good reads:
- Anita Anand told the Senate foreign affairs committee that there are no plans to reopen diplomatic relations with Iran.
- Lina Diab says she is unaware of a directive Marco Rubio sent to all allied embassies to get their ambassadors to pressure countries to reduce immigration levels.
- Elections Canada admitted that a lack of planning and oversight in Nunavik, Quebec, led to polls closing early and a lack of access to early voting services.
- FINTRAC is warning of a rise in the online sexual extortion of minors, often linked to organised crime.
- The steel sector is mostly happy with the measures Carney announced on Wednesday, but still have lingering concerns.
- Veterinarians are concerned that drugs for animals are less available in Canada as producers don’t want to pay for Canadian inspections of production facilities.
- The Logic profiles the Quebec twentysomething who set up supports for people dealing with chatbot-induced psychosis.
- It looks like MPs will be transitioning to benches and not desks when they return to the restored House of Commons in Centre Block.
- NDP leadership candidates held their *ahem* “French” debate in Montreal.
- The government of Nova Scotia has received their report on the province’s history of environmental racism, but have no apologies planned as of yet.
Odds and ends:
For National Magazine, I delve into Ontario’s plans to institute cash bail, and why it’s likely unconstitutional and will only create more problems while solving none.
Hey BSers! Need a copy of my book, for yourself or for a holiday gift? @dundurnpress.bsky.social is having their holiday sale! Use code HOLIDAY25 to save 25% on this, or any Dundurn book. Check out my book #UnbrokenMachine, or the book I contributed a chapter to, #RoyalProgress.
— Dale Smith (@journodale.bsky.social) 2025-11-19T02:01:04.435Z
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Let’s face it, Carney’s a shady character. He got many votes, including my own, when honest reservations were tempered by his public face as a climate guy. And of course, Steven Guilbeault’s endorsement, as well as others, certainly helped him.
At what point, if Carney keeps recruiting Conservatives and right-of-center candidates, does it turn into a hijacking of the Liberal Party into a reconstituted, and particularly self-regarding, Progressive Conservative party? That’s a real question.