logo
Should we stay or should we go

Should we stay or should we go

Politico6 hours ago

Presented by The Canadian Medical Association
Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada
Thanks for reading Canada Playbook. It's Friday!
In today's edition:
→ DOMINIC LEBLANC is working the phones.
→ MARK CARNEY and others beg to differ with criticism over First Nations.
→ The House gears up to gear down.
Trade war
COUNTERMOVES — Canada-U.S. Trade Minister DOMINIC LEBLANC will hold a virtual meeting today with United States Trade Representative JAMIESON GREER.
On the agenda: Working the deal.
'The fact that there's now a deadline set by the two leaders, I think, has focused the conversation,' he said Thursday, standing next to Prime Minister MARK CARNEY at a press conference on Parliament Hill.
— Vibe check: LeBlanc said he's optimistic negotiations will advance toward a new security and economic deal.
— Brace for impact: That was Carney's message Thursday when he announced that Canada is prepared to levy additional counter-tariffs on U.S. aluminum and steel imports — but not before July 21 — after the 30-day deadline has come and gone.
— Cold steel welcome: After scrapping a Thursday presser, CATHERINE COBDEN, president of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, and MARTY WARREN, the Canada director of United Steelworkers union, issued a joint statement panning Carney's announcement. 'We will continue to review the details of the measures and work constructively with the federal government to get a plan that works for Canadian steel producers and the thousands of workers that make up our sector,' they said.
— Working the phones: Carney said he'll speak with provincial and territorial premiers today 'to discuss this response and our broader coordination.' That conversation is scheduled for noon.
The PM also said he 'frequently' communicates with President DONALD TRUMP.
— Paging Premier Ford: When the PM returned to Ottawa from the G7 in Kananaskis, one of the first people he called was DOUG FORD.
The Ontario premier had been urging Carney to limit how much steel can be imported into Canada from non-free trade agreement countries, a source familiar with the discussions told Playbook. Playbook granted anonymity to the individual as they weren't authorized to discuss internal matters.
The PM and the premier also remain in regular contact. And Ford continues urge Carney to retaliate against the U.S. after it doubled tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50 percent earlier this month. Canada has 25 percent counter-tariffs in place on U.S. metals.
'If the president doesn't come to the table, I'll give [Carney] my full support on full-out tariffs of 50 percent on steel,' Ford told reporters in Toronto on Thursday.
— After Trump's hike: Ford texted U.S. Commerce Secretary HOWARD LUTNICK: 'I thought no surprises.' The message got Lutnick's attention, though details of their exchange were not disclosed to Playbook.
Ontario does not have a formal role in negotiations, but Ford keeps in contact with Lutnick when White House decisions touch on Ontario workers and businesses.
— Wait, negotiate, react: Canada is so far holding off. Ultimately countermeasures will depend on what Canada and the U.S. achieve in negotiations.
'We'll continue these negotiations, of course, in good faith,' Carney said. 'In parallel, we must reinforce our strength at home and safeguard Canadian workers and businesses from the unjust U.S. tariffs that exist at present.'
— First step, not a final fix: Industry Minister MÉLANIE JOLY later turned up on CBC's 'Power & Politics' with DAVID COCHRANE to reassure anxious workers. 'The most important thing is, ultimately, people having a job and their family being able to, you know — like we say in French — put butter and bread on the table,' she said. 'That's why this is a first response to the steel-aluminum crisis.'
WHO'S UP, WHO'S DOWN
Up: 'The bro-thing.' TONDA MACCHARLES notes in the Star that the PM has yet to invite many women into his top inner governing circle. 'Does it matter? Time will tell.'
Down: The G7 — or is that 6?
DRIVING THE DAY
BBQ READY — The House is expected to rise today.
— But first: The government must pass Bill C-5, controversial legislation that the Liberals promise will use 'nation-building projects' to transform Canada into an economic powerhouse.
Lawmakers must sit until the bill passes the House. MPs need to vote on the amendments made to the bill during Thursday's marathon transport committee meeting. Then the bill is expected to pass its third reading — the final stage, which sends the bill to the Senate.
— Easy peasy: It shouldn't take too long.
The Liberal minority government has forged an unlikely bond with the Conservative caucus to push this major legislation through the House by Canada Day — a promise Carney made on the campaign trail.
The Tories even supported Liberal efforts to expedite Bill C-5. If all goes as expected today, it will have taken just 14 days for the bill to be introduced and passed by the House of Commons.
— Meanwhile in the Senate: The Red Chamber is prepared to sit until June 27 in order to get the bill passed by July 1. We'll be there.
THE ROOMS THAT MATTER
— 12 p.m. The PM will host a virtual First Ministers' Meeting.
— 2 p.m. Canada's Taxpayers' Ombudsperson FRANÇOIS BOILEAU will release his 2024–2025 annual report, containing two recommendations to improve the Canada Revenue Agency.
ON THE HILL
BILL C-5 BACKLASH — The PM is pushing back at critics who say his big bill on building energy projects fast — the one speeding through Parliament — is railroading First Nations.
At his Thursday presser, Carney dismissed warnings that a speedy passage of Bill C-5 will ignite a summer of discontent across Canada.
Former Liberal Justice Minister JODY WILSON-RAYBOULD is among those urging First Nations to draw a 'line in the sand.'
Carney said Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution, is reflected in the bill, and guarantees 'free, prior and informed consent' and 'full consultations with Indigenous peoples to define what is a nation-building project.' He said the bill would ensure full economic participation by Indigenous groups.
— Other voices: STEVE MACKINNON, the Liberal Government House Leader, said C5 would ensure the full participation of Indigenous groups, many of which fully support the bill and the economic benefits new projects will bring to their communities.
'What I don't hear in the questioning is those Indigenous communities in this country, Indigenous Nations that wish to participate economically — whether in equity stakes or with job creation in these major national projects,' MacKinnon said Thursday. 'They exist all over the country and they deserve to have their voices heard.'
— Case in point: The First Nations Major Projects Coalition includes more than 170 Indigenous groups with an equity stake in 18 projects valued at C$45 billion. When the bill was introduced June 6, the group issued a statement emphasizing the continued imperative for First Nations to be 'true partners at every step of the process' in national interest projects.
Chief SHARLEEN GALE of the Fort Nelson First Nation and the chair of the FNMPC's board of directors said in a June 6 statement that she understands the need to move fast. 'History has shown us that speed without partnership leads to delay — not progress. This legislation could be a turning point if it is designed and administered in true partnership with First Nations.'
— Over here: Playbook asked FNMPC to speak with Gale, but we haven't heard back. We're still interested, so contact us here.
— About time: HEATHER EXNER-PIROT, the director of Macdonald-Laurier Institute's energy and resources program, told MPs on Wednesday night that although the bill is not perfect, it is long overdue. She said it is 'refreshing' that the Liberals and Conservatives have banded together to support it.
'For 10 years, much of the resource sector in this country has been in fight-or-flight mode, but the past few weeks, I've been hearing optimism and bullishness from Prairie premiers and energy CEOs,' she said. 'They believe this government actually intends to build some infrastructure and position Canada to be an energy superpower.'
Want more POLITICO? Download our mobile app to save stories, get notifications on U.S.-Canada relations, and more. In iOS or Android .
MORNING MUST-CLICKS
— 'The Carney-Sabia combo will be felt profoundly and fast,' KATHRYN MAY writes in The Functionary. She adds: 'A senior shuffle is expected any day, and departments are already being asked to map out spending-cut scenarios for a looming expenditure review.'
— Foreign Affairs Minister ANITA ANAND spoke with CP's DYLAN ROBERTSON ahead of next week's trip to Europe, which includes the NATO summit.
— From CATHERINE LÉVESQUE at the National Post: Doug Ford apologizes to Ontario First Nations for his 'passionate' comments.
— From the Star's NICHOLAS KEUNG: Carney government clarifies Canadian border bill's asylum changes as critics call for complete withdrawal.
— ALEX BOUTILIER of Global News writes on JAGMEET SINGH's life under RCMP protection.
— And the Globe's CHRIS HANNAY reports: 23andMe probe highlights Privacy Commissioner's lack of powers compared to U.K counterpart.
PLAYBOOKERS
Birthdays: HBD to PHILIP LAWRENCE and to public affairs pro ROMEO TELLO.
On Sunday: Former MPs WAYNE EASTER and BEV SHIPLEY.
Spotted: Former PMs JEAN CHRÉTIEN and STEPHEN HARPER having a convivial lunch at the Rideau Club.
And in QP, MARK CARNEY, accidentally calling the speaker 'Mr. Prime Minister.'
Noted: Finance Minister FRANÇOIS-PHILIPPE CHAMPAGNE said Thursday that Canada is 'going ahead' with the digital services tax.
Canada's competition watchdog is advising Ottawa that Canadians want more competition in a domestic airline industry dominated by Air Canada and WestJet. The Competition Bureau shared 10 recommendations to the government — including one that would allow more foreign investment in Canadian airlines.
Lobby watch: Grain Growers of Canada met Thursday with Conservative MP KYLE SEEBACK. They also met with Secretary of State of Rural Development BUCKLEY BELANGER. … LEAH YOUNG of National Marine Manufacturers Association Canada met with Conservative MP TONY BALDINELLI, 'to advocate for tariff remissions on recreational marine products impacted by cross-border duties.'
Send Playbookers tips to canadaplaybook@politico.com
PROZONE
For Pro subscribers, our latest policy newsletter from MIKE BLANCHFIELD and SUE ALLAN: Carney puts Trump on notice.
In other Pro headlines:
— How Trump's cuts could weaken wildfire prevention.
— Chamber memo forecasts 'meaningfully higher' Trump tariffs.
— Canada to adjust US metal tariffs on July 21.
— Trump to open over 80 percent of Alaskan reserve to oil leasing.
— GOP frustrated but unwilling to act on Trump's TikTok extension.
Trivia
Thursday's answer: ANDRÉE CHAMPAGNE.
Props to SEAN SUNDERLAND, LISA HALEY, MALCOLM MCKAY, SHEILA GERVAIS, JOHN PEPPER, ROBERT MCDOUGALL, FELIX BERNIER, JUSTIN DE BEAUCAMP, NANCI WAUGH, ELIZABETH BURN, HUGUES THEORET, STEVEN HOGUE, SCOTT MCCORD, RAY DEL BIANCO, LYNE FORTIN-MARCOTTE, SEAN P. WEBSTER, PATRICK ST-JACQUES and MARCEL MARCOTTE.
Friday's question: Who signed the proclamation requesting that Canadians celebrate July 1? Hint: It happened on this date in history.
Answer to canadaplaybook@politico.com
Writing Monday's Playbook: MIKE BLANCHFIELD

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WestJet cyberattack remains unresolved one week in, but operations unaffected
WestJet cyberattack remains unresolved one week in, but operations unaffected

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

WestJet cyberattack remains unresolved one week in, but operations unaffected

WestJet says a cyberattack that began last week remains unresolved, as questions linger about the nature and fallout of the breach. The country's second-largest airline says it is working to assess whether sensitive data or customers' personal information was compromised after hackers accessed its internal systems. An online advisory says the attack, which was detected late last week, has not affected operations but that some customers may run into "intermittent interruptions or errors" on WestJet's website and app. Spokesman Josh Yeats says investigations in collaboration with law enforcement are ongoing, but the company has not specified the type of the incident, such as a malware or ransomware attack. The breach at the Alberta-based airline arrived just ahead of foreign leaders, who gathered last weekend for the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., though no direct link to the event has been identified. Airlines and airports have become increasingly popular prey for hackers, as their troves of personal and financial data and global reach make for tempting targets. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025. Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

COVU Completes 4th Acquisition with Ford Insurance Agency, Cementing Leadership in AI-Native Insurance Servicing
COVU Completes 4th Acquisition with Ford Insurance Agency, Cementing Leadership in AI-Native Insurance Servicing

Business Wire

timean hour ago

  • Business Wire

COVU Completes 4th Acquisition with Ford Insurance Agency, Cementing Leadership in AI-Native Insurance Servicing

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--COVU, Inc., the leader in AI-native customer servicing for the insurance industry, today announced the acquisition of Ford Insurance Agency, a 100+ year-old, family-owned business based in Maine. This marks the 4th strategic acquisition —building the foundation for a national platform that gives agencies the ability to scale or exit on their terms. With this milestone, COVU affirms its mission to empower independent agencies through flexible, AI-native solutions that protect customer relationships, deepen carrier value, and elevate operational performance—without replacing the human touch. 'Now that we have COVU's support, I think the moon is the limit. The growth potential is huge. If we keep it going the way it's going, it'll be a very good company,' said Gary Lonsinger, former owner of Ford Insurance Agency. 'We chose to sell to COVU because they were the only buyer that offered a stock sale while preserving our brand and legacy, which gave us the confidence that our customers—and our agency's name—would continue on with the same care and reputation we built over generations.' A Century of Trust Meets a Platform for the Future Founded over 100 years ago and operated by the Lonsinger family, Ford Insurance Agency is one of Maine's most trusted independent providers of commercial and personal lines coverage. With relationships across Progressive, Safeco, The Hartford, Travelers, CNA, and others, Ford is known for high retention (101% policy retention, 105% revenue retention) and an exceptional loss ratio record. COVU will transition Ford's operations to its digital-first platform while retaining key service personnel—preserving the agency's relationship-based culture while eliminating unnecessary overhead. Four Acquisitions, One Unified Vision With the completion of its fourth deal, COVU has now acquired: CIII Insurance Services (CA) – premium book, VIP servicing Lords Insurance Agency (CA) – community-based agency with Vietnamese client base Uno Insurance Services (TX) – culturally fluent, fast-growing agency with M&A experience Ford Insurance Agency (ME) – century-old agency with elite retention and brand trust These acquisitions allow COVU to aggregate scale, deepen carrier relationships, and deliver consistent, high-quality customer service through AI + human expertise—whether through agency partnerships or full integration. Enabling the Future of Insurance Servicing COVU's dual-path platform gives agencies the flexibility to evolve or exit. For those seeking growth, COVU provides modern infrastructure, top-tier staff, and AI-native workflows. For those ready to step away, COVU offers a seamless transition that maintains customer care and brand integrity. 'We're not just acquiring agencies—we're building the best servicing platform in insurance,' said Ali Safavi, CEO of COVU. 'We're here to be the best customer manager for everything risk and insurance, through our partners.' About COVU COVU is a transformative platform designed to revolutionize the insurance servicing industry through AI-native solutions combined with human support. The company is dedicated to enhancing customer experiences and operational efficiency for insurance agencies while providing flexible servicing models to meet the demands of modern consumers.

37 anglophone schools in N.B. to test 2 monthly professional learning days
37 anglophone schools in N.B. to test 2 monthly professional learning days

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

37 anglophone schools in N.B. to test 2 monthly professional learning days

New Brunswick will add up to two professional learning days a month for staff at some schools in a pilot project starting this fall, Education Minister Claire Johnson says. At 37 anglophone schools across the province, teachers will get up to 10 more days for professional learning, planning or training during the school year. "This is not a day off," Johnson said at the announcement Friday in Saint John. "Teachers are going to be working hard on these days and doing things that are intentional and specific, because teachers have told us this is what they need, this is what they want. "They've consistently told us that they need more time to learn, more time to plan, more time to collaborate with colleagues and to reflect on students' progress." Johnson said the days will fall on Fridays "to minimize disruptions for families." She said the New Brunswick Teachers' Association and the Anglophone school districts consulted with parents from the school support committees and looked at other jurisdictions to see what is being done elsewhere. Johnson said francophone schools have been doing this for a while now and undertook a similar pilot a few years ago. Those results have been promising in terms of teacher happiness and improvements with literacy, numeracy and curbing chronic absenteeism, she said. The anglophone pilot, she said, will be heavily evaluated with check-ins throughout the year and the tracking of teacher engagement and satisfaction and student success. The pilot will create additional student days off each month, but John said she believes it will also help with chronic absenteeism. "When we know we're going to have a specific day off, and that's why it needs to be predictable, then students know that they're going to have a catch-up day, they're going to have a day to rest, which means that they may be going to school the rest of the time," she said. Knowing the specific Fridays in advance could also allow for better planning of sports tournaments so that students don't need to be absent for sports as much, she said. The learning time at participating schools will be the same as it is in provinces showing the best results in recent assessment tests, the government said. Parent Laura Lynn Steeves, whose son is next year's student council president at Harbour View High School in Saint John, attended the news conference and talked to reporters afterward. From conversations with her son, she said, she believes the pilot will be a chance for students to better balance academics with their extracurricular activities and community involvement. "I think it's going to help all students from all aspects, even students that are struggling," she said. "It's going to give them a day to sort of breathe, you know, spend some time at their own pace, working within their limits." Steeves, who is also the chair of Harbour View's parent school support committee, said she thinks the pilot will also help with teacher retention and recruitment because it will give them needed days for curriculum and lesson planning. Peter Lagacy, the president of the New Brunswick Teachers' Association, said having the time to plan and "do your job well" has been lacking. He said 136 schools stepped up to volunteer for the pilot, but the selection of 37 schools provincewide is a good sample size. Lagacy agrees the project will likely have an effect on chronic absenteeism. "One thing that we understand for sure is that, you know, the most important piece in a child's education is the teacher," he said. The pilot will allow teachers to have well-planned lessons, collaboration with other professionals and the ability to look at a student's individual support needs, he said. "I think [if] we can make that connection and make a better connection, then we'll certainly see absentee rates improve." The following schools will be part of the pilot: Anglophone West Bath Community School Bristol Elementary School Carleton North High School Florenceville Middle School Florenceville Elementary School Centreville Community School Anglophone North Napan Elementary School Nelson Rural School King Street Elementary School Dr. Losier Middle School James M. Hill High School Parkwood Heights Elementary School Terry Fox Elementary School Superior Middle School Bathurst High School Miramichi Rural School Anglophone South Sir James Dunn Academy Vincent Massey Elementary Harbour View High School Saint John High School St. Malachy's Memorial High School Simonds High School Fairvale Elementary School Rothesay High School Kennebecasis Valley High School Quispamsis Middle School Anglophone East Harrison Trimble High School Queen Elizabeth School Beaverbrook School Magnetic Hill School Birchmount School Maplehurst School Northrop Frye School Havelock School Petitcodiac Regional School Salisbury Elementary School Salisbury Regional School

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store