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Sheila Gunn Reid is the Alberta Bureau Chief for Rebel News and host of the weekly The Gunn Show with Sheila Gunn Reid. She's a mother of three, conservative activist, and the author of best-selling books including Stop Notley. In February 2016, she was barred from covering an NDP press conference in Alberta with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley of the New Democratic Party rejected The Rebel's press bonafides. The NDP later relented after backlash over press freedom and a lawsuit.In January 2017, Gunn was assaulted by Dion Bews at a women's rally in Edmonton, Canada. He then fled into the crowd of leftist women who moved to protect him. [1] --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tango-romeo/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tango-romeo/support
The Herle Burly was created by Air Quotes Media with support from our presenting sponsor TELUS, as well as CN Rail and Google Canada.Greetings Herle Burly-ites. Whether you've been with this podcast for a few years now, or a few weeks, you know we do our best to get past the talking points of politics and campaigning, economics and public policy and give you a perspective on what's really going on. Not just in the official meetings that take place in Ottawa and so many other boardrooms around the country. But in the meeting AFTER the meeting.Our guest today is a guy who has been in a helluva lot of those “meetings after the meeting”. Brian Topp is here. Brian is one of this country's foremost political strategists. He's a sought-after writer, communications planner and a former union leader. In 2015, he was Chief of Staff to Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and prior to that Deputy Chief of Staff to Roy Romanow in Saskatchewan. In 2006 and 2008, Brian presided over the Orange Wave as the Federal New Democratic Party's national campaign director. And following the death of Jack Layton in 2012, he ran for the party leadership, coming in second to Tom Mulcair. Currently, Brian is a founding partner at GT&Co. Today we're going to tour the full horizon of Canadian politics with a look at how various parties and coalitions are reacting to the mood of the country and how individual politicians are stepping up or falling short with voters.Thank you for joining us on #TheHerleBurly podcast. Please take a moment to give us a rating and review on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts or your favourite podcast app.###
We're back at it after a week away! Minister of Environment and Climate Change, the Hon. Jonathan Wilkinson, joins to discuss the Supreme Court of Canada's recent ruling against Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Ontario's challenge of the federal Carbon Tax. Economist Dr. Andrew Leach, one of the architects of former Alberta Premier Rachel Notley's climate plan, explains why he supports the provinces' challenge of Justin Trudeau's levy. Lawyer, researcher, and pundit Supriya Dwivedi gives her take on the SCoC's ruling, Conservative Party of Canada members saying "no" to bolstering party policy re: climate change, vaccine roll-out across the country, and Canadaland's recent report on Brian Lilley and Ivana Yelich. Plus, it's Monday, so Ryan rolls out a unique edition of Positive Reflections presented by Kuby Energy! 9:48 - Hon. Jonathan Wilkinson 39:37 - Dr. Andrew Leach 1:07:25 - Supriya Dwivedi 1:58:08 - Positive Reflections
Rachel Notley, the 17th Premier of Alberta and current leader of Alberta's NDP Official Opposition, has her roots firmly planted in politics, though she didn't always know it was the route she would take. Rachel initially wanted to teach social studies, but something pulled her in the direction of public service; no doubt, it stemmed from the example her father, Grant Notley, set for her as a trailblazer of the NDP. Since then, Rachel has dedicated her life as an advocate for everyday people. Whether she worked as a labour lawyer, an MLA, or the Premier of Alberta, she always had one goal: to serve those who are most in need. Her efforts to cut child poverty in half, to establish economic growth in Alberta, and her dedication to making sure the government makes decisions on behalf of its people are incredibly inspiring and motivating. This week, Rachel shares stories of her paralyzing initial fear of public speaking, watching her father work, her childhood attitude toward politics, and much more. Her journey is one of determination, sticking to your moral compass, and empowering those around you through leading by example. For more on Rachel and what she's currently working on, check her out on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. Carrie has a Facebook group she would love for you to join! The Inner Circle Facebook Group can be found here. Please rate, review and follow the podcast! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The BC Court of Appeal will consider the question of provincial powers over the future of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project during a five-day hearing that starts today. The BC government wants to know if the province has jurisdiction to regulate the transport of oil through its territory and restrict bitumen shipments from Alberta. When BC filed the reference case last year, Alberta announced it would ban wines from the province. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley's government accused BC Premier John Horgan of trying to break the rules of Confederation. Guest: Keith Baldrey Global BC Legislative Bureau Chief
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Labour Minister Patty Hajdu; MPs Lisa Raitt, Murray Rankin and Marco Mendicino; Alberta Premier Rachel Notley; The Globe and Mail's Robert Fife, CTV News' Joyce Napier, CTV News Chief Political Commentator Craig Oliver, The Toronto Star's Tonda MacCharles, Nanos Research's Nik Nanos and former NDP leader Tom Mulcair.
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley joins Maclean’s senior writer Paul Wells for a candid conversation in front of a live audience at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. (November 28, 2018)
Amid a fiscal crisis caused by the low price of oil, Alberta Premier Rachel Notley took the drastic step to cut oil production. The move is seen as an attempt to shrink the difference between the price on Alberta oil and global benchmarks. We look at how industry is reacting, whether it will help Alberta’s financial picture, and how federal policy has played a role. Dave is joined by Calgary Herald business columnist Chris Varcoe.
Just as construction was set to begin on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, the Federal Court of Appeal threw a wrench into the process. Dave and Edmonton Journal columnist Graham Thomson look at what the court ruling means for the future of the project, and for the future of two of its biggest backers, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley.
Justin Trudeau recently challenged "hateful online rhetoric" against politicians, citing reports that Alberta Premier Rachel Notley has received 11 death threats during her 3 years in office. Elsewhere, Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has met with Twitter executives in an effort to push the online platform to be more attentive about what is posted about politicians. Roy asks callers to weigh in on this issue and asks if politicians are setting a dangerous precedent - one that would lead to reasonable criticism being shut down. (Photo: Alastair Grant/AP Photo) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the ongoing dispute over the Trans Mountain pipeline, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says British Columbia's legal question into potentially permitting oil coming into the province is a stalling tactic. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says the move would put Canada in “economic gridlock” if it succeeds. Meanwhile in 2015, Eastern Canadian refineries were importing 650 barrels of oil per day from Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Angola, Algeria and more. Roy asks callers - should the project be bought by the federal government? Who's going to be hurt most by the continued delay of the pipeline expansion? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and B.C.'s Premier John Horgan in Ottawa to seek a resolution to the ongoing dispute on the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline. So what came out of Sunday's summit? Tune in to The West Block on Global TV tonight at 11:30 p.m.
Yesterday, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe told us on air that delaying oil access to British Columbia ports costs the Saskatchewan economy $1.8 billion per year. If Alberta were to pass legislation that would cut off energy supply to British Columbia, Premier Moe says Saskatchewan would do likewise. Today, Justin Trudeau, B.C. Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley met over the Trans Mountain issue. What was the result of that meeting? Guest: Charles Adler, host of the Charles Adler Show on Global News Radio, broadcasting from Vancouver - Roy asks for callers' opinions on what Prime Minister Trudeau actually wants. Is he determined to see the pipeline extension built or does he want to phase out the oilsands? Roy also replays part of his interview with Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, and compares Prime Minister Trudeau's contradictory statements regarding the Trans Mountain Pipeline. (Photo: Justin Tang/The Canadian Press) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Roy Green Show Yesterday, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe told us on air that delaying oil access to British Columbia ports costs the Saskatchewan economy $1.8 billion per year. If Alberta were to pass legislation that would cut off energy supply to British Columbia, Premier Moe says Saskatchewan would do likewise. Today, Justin Trudeau, B.C. Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley met over the Trans Mountain issue. What was the result of that meeting? Guest: Charles Adler, host of the Charles Adler Show on Global News Radio, broadcasting from Vancouver - Last time our guests joined us, a different pipeline was being strongly opposed: the Energy East Pipeline. Denis Coderre was the mayor of Montreal at the time and he openly refused to support the project. In light of those developments, three grassroot Albertans joined us on air to discuss whether Alberta should opt out of Canada. Now, with the Trans Mountain Pipeline bringing up familiar debates, we welcome them back to the show to find out how they feel about the same issue with a new pipeline. Guests: Bill Chris Gerry - Tom Quiggin is a nationally certified court expert on terrorism and security who has worked with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Canadian Armed Forces and the United Nations. But YouTube refuses to allow him to upload a video for his podcast, The Quiggin Report. And he subsequently lost his Gmail account. Guest: Tom Quiggin, Court certified Canadian expert on terrorism, Intelligence work for RCMP, CAF, UN, and War Crimes Tribunals, Author of ‘SUBMISSION: The Danger of Political Islam to Canada.' - Lauren McNabb shares her sory of venturing through a blizzard, to St. Paul Minnesota for tonight's playoff game between the Winnipeg Jets and the Minnesota Wild. Guest: Lauren McNabb, Anchor with Global News Winnipeg See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Roy Green Show The war between Tim Hortons and its franchisees continues behind the scenes. The federal government is looking into concerns raised by some Tim Hortons franchisees that Restaurant Brands International has failed to live up to promises made to the federal government under the Investment Canada Act in 2014. Guest: Ned Levitt, specialist in franchise law - Tomorrow Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returns from Peru and will meet with B.C. Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley. The focus will be the conflict between the provinces over the extension of the Trans Mountain pipeline and Kinder Morgan's withdrawal of funding for the pipeline unless they can be assured that there will be no more protests or interruptions. Meanwhile, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe has warned Horgan that his province may cut off oil flow to the province. Why hasn't Scott Moe been invited to participate in the meeting? Guest: Scott Moe, Premier of Saskatchewan - Last night, the United States, Britain and France took joint military action by firing airstrikes in Syria aimed at crippling the Assad regime's chemical weapons capabilities. Should the West now be concerned about possible reaction from Assad's protectors Russia and Iran? Guest: Colonel Peter Mansoor, former executive officer to General David Petraeus during The Surge in Iraq, author of ‘Surge: My Journey With General David Petraeus and the Remaking of the Iraq War' - Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared before a U.S. Congressional hearing concerning revelations about Cambridge Analytica and the misuse of information from 87 million people. Guest: David Fraser, Internet security expert, partner at McInnes Cooper in Halifax, and founder of the Canadian privacy law blog See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Time for the weekly Beauties and the Beast segment. Catherine, Linada and Michelle are ready to break down the questions raised by the news this week. What exactly will happen at the meeting between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Premier John Horgan of British Columbia and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley? Why is Tim Hortons losing the trust of Canadians? Guests: Catherine Swift Michelle Simson Linda Leatherdale (Photo: Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tomorrow Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returns from Peru and will meet with B.C. Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley. The focus will be the conflict between the provinces over the extension of the Trans Mountain pipeline and Kinder Morgan's withdrawal of funding for the pipeline unless they can be assured that there will be no more protests or interruptions. Meanwhile, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe has warned Horgan that his province may cut off oil flow to the province. Why hasn't Scott Moe been invited to participate in the meeting? Guest: Scott Moe, Premier of Saskatchewan (Photo: Dayne Winter/Global News) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This episode includes exclusive interviews with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and Official Opposition leader Jason Kenney. Dave Cournoyer and Ryan Hastman asked both leaders a few questions they thought would provide a glimpse into the party building, political issues and political narratives that will define the next 12 months until the 2019 provincial election. The […]
We're back! After a brief hiatus because Ryan was down south helping Make America Great Again, we are back with a new episode of The Daveberta Podcast. In this episode, Dave and Ryan discuss the ongoing dispute between Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and British Columbia Premier John Horgan over the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline […]
The Roy Green Show Jack Letts, dubbed 'Jihadi Jack' by U.K. media, is a British-Canadian Muslim convert who found himself in the ISIS capital of Raqqa in Syria. His parents claim their son denounced the terror group and was locked up in nine successive ISIS jails after being put on trial by ISIS for denouncing them as un-Islamic. Letts says that he escaped and managed to make his way to Kurdish territory, where he was arrested as a suspected member of ISIS. The British government doesn't seem interested in helping him. Should Canada negotiate his release and bring him to our country? Guest: John Letts, Jack's father - Tensions are rising between Alberta and British Columbia. Both provinces have shut down the importing of crucial resources between each other, and neither B.C. Premier John Horgan nor Alberta Premier Rachel Notley seems interested in soothing the situation. Does Ottawa have any plans to ease or end the tensions between the two provinces? Guests: Jon McComb, host of The Jon McComb Show, 980 CKNW, Vancouver Ryan Jespersen, host of The Ryan Jespersen Show, 630 CHED, Edmonton - There were stock market convulsions like never before during the past week. What's the reason for this? Employment figures in the U.S. are strong and the economy is steadily growing. Is it all about rising interest rates? Guest: Tom Caldwell, Chairman of Caldwell Securities, with seats on both the New York and Toronto stock exchanges See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tensions are rising between Alberta and British Columbia. Both provinces have shut down the importing of crucial resources between each other, and neither B.C. Premier John Horgan nor Alberta Premier Rachel Notley seems interested in soothing the situation. Does Ottawa have any plans to ease or end the tensions between the two provinces? Guests: Jon McComb, host of The Jon McComb Show, 980 CKNW, Vancouver Ryan Jespersen, host of The Ryan Jespersen Show, 630 CHED, Edmonton (Photos: Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press & Jason Franson/The Canadian Press) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Premier John Horgan responds to Alberta Premier Rachel Notley as she moves to ban B.C. wine in retaliation for the Horgan government putting roadblocks in the way of the Trans Mountain pipeline.
BIV reporters Tyler Orton and Hayley Woodin discuss the continuing escalation of the softwood lumber dispute with Canada's decision to go to the World Trade Organization to argue against new tariffs. Later, Tyler and Hayley discuss Alberta Premier Rachel Notley's trip to Vancouver to discuss the benefits of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion. See more of Tyler's and Hayley's reporting at www.biv.com/
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall continue to share words over the provincial border regarding their respective budgets.
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley comes to BC to win support for the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion. The Trudeau Liberals launch MyDemocracy.ca, yet another tool to consult Canadians on electoral reform, this time to wide ridicule on social media. Then Ian & Scott discuss cash for access controversies and the dark side of Alberta politics. Links:... The post Ep 12: Rachel Notley comes to town appeared first on PolitiCoast.
This week, on CKUA's Green Energy Futures podcast, we visit some Alberta students who want to call the shot when it comes to climate change education. For the second year in a row, Alberta Premier Rachel Notley comes to hear what these stupendous students have to say.