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The RCMP is reportedly holding firm to its decision back in 2019 to seize cannabis plants during the raid of a weed grow-up at a former school in Coles Island, N.B. based on cultivation limits being breached, according to the
Jeremy Barton was arrested, but never charged, after the RCMP seized and destroyed some cannabis plants being grown at the former Coles Island School. Barton was never compensated for the lost plants.
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RCMP maintain grow-op at former school in N B breached legal limit for cannabis plants leaderpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from leaderpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Federal government should hike GST, abandon $100B stimulus plans as COVID-19 spending mounts: report The C.D. Howe Institute report warned about a bleak outlook for Canada should the Liberal government neglect to correct it s fiscal course
Author of the article: Jesse Snyder
Publishing date: Apr 07, 2021 • 3 hours ago • 4 minute read • Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland speaks to news media before unveiling a fiscal update on Nov. 30, 2020. Freeland is scheduled to table the first budget in more than two years on April 19. Photo by Blair Gable/Reuters
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OTTAWA The Liberal government should abandon most of its $100-billion stimulus plans and increase GST as a way to recoup massive COVID-19 spending levels, according to a new report that says Canada is in need of a considerable fiscal reset.
Ivison: Preposterous NDP policy resolutions suggest the inmates are taking over The NDP has its own stinking albatross - the mistrust felt by Canadians toward a party whose knee-jerk reaction to any problem is to tax it, regulate it or nationalize it
Author of the article: John Ivison
Publishing date: Apr 05, 2021 • 23 hours ago • 4 minute read • NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has the highest net approval rating among the three major national party leaders and polls suggest the NDP is seeing levels of support higher than it received in the 2019 election. Photo by Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press/File
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The NDP policy convention, taking place online this week, rarely disappoints.
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The Trudeau government’s brazen dismissal of the will of the House of Commons, when it comes to sending political aides to testify before parliamentary committees, is deepening divisions between partisans.
“Why would anyone vote for the Liberals?” bemoaned one Conservative on social media, citing WE, SNC, rail blockades and vaccine missteps as evidence that hanging is too good for them.
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Yet for the silent majority of non-partisans, there are compelling reasons why they don’t feel that it is time for a change in Ottawa. Principal among them is the wealth effect created by a six-figure increase in house prices in the past year.