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A US climate conspiracy has spread to Canada — and local politicians haven't been warned
A US climate conspiracy has spread to Canada — and local politicians haven't been warned

National Observer

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • National Observer

A US climate conspiracy has spread to Canada — and local politicians haven't been warned

In a crowded room in Ottawa in April 2024, a woman stands in front of a screen displaying a bill from Tennessee. 'This is what we're aiming for,' she says, pointing at the text. 'We have their original resolution … and now we're making a Canadian version.' The Tennessee bill is uncompromising: it bans any city, municipality or school district from implementing climate policies traceable to the United Nations' Agenda 21, Agenda 2030 or net-zero goals if they in any way impact private property rights. A man in the crowd calls out that the UN is creating a 'one-world government' under its 'total control.' The woman onstage, Maggie Hope Braun, agrees and begins promoting the toolkits of Tom DeWeese, a US Tea Party influencer who claims that climate change is a hoax designed to usher in global socialism. Five months later, in September 2024, Maggie Hope Braun stood in front of the Peterborough County Council in Ontario and gave a far more polished speech. This time was different: she didn't mention Tennessee, provincial bans, a UN-takeover or a one-world government. Instead, she focused on fiscal responsibility, recommending that Peterborough County leave Canada's flagship local net-zero program. Mayor Carolyn Amyotte of North Kawartha was in the chamber that day. She said that Braun sounded 'reasonable, credible, legitimate and totally evidence-based. There's a lot of people I think that could be susceptible to it.' It wasn't until Amyotte came across Canada's National Observer's investigation into Braun's group KICLEI in May 2025 that she realized the full scope of what she had witnessed. Multiple councillors have told Canada's National Observer that they did not receive warnings from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities about KICLEI's misinformation campaign, even though it knew politicians were being exposed. Our investigation found that KICLEI – named to mimic the sustainability network ICLEI – is using an AI chatbot to turn climate misinformation into reasonable-sounding and convincing speeches, reports and letters to target 8,000-plus elected officials across Canada. The goal is to get municipalities to abandon net-zero policies. Three scientists at NASA, the US National Centre for Atmospheric Research, and University of Melbourne told us Braun's group KICLEI misrepresented their research. On June 4, Amyotte introduced a motion to share Canada's National Observer's investigation with all elected officials in Peterborough County. But there are signs that her warnings are not reaching everyone. As this Tea Party-inspired misinformation campaign continues, the institutions responsible for the targeted net-zero program appear to be avoiding giving it oxygen. Multiple councillors told Canada's National Observer that they did not receive warnings from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities about KICLEI, even though our reporting has found it knew that politicians across the country were being exposed to its misinformation. They still are. Last Monday, Patrick Wilson, a councillor in the town of Cochrane, Alberta, introduced a motion to leave a national climate initiative, which will be voted upon on June 23. He quoted extensively from KICLEI's website, saying that it expresses concerns 'much better and more eloquently than I could.' 'Make it so they don't know which side it's coming from' KICLEI was created in 2023 by Braun, an erstwhile Freedom Convoy activist, with the aim of convincing municipalities across Canada, like Cochrane and Peterborough, to leave a voluntary net-zero framework called Partners for Climate Protection. The framework was developed by ICLEI Canada and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities to help municipalities transition to net-zero (through a process covering emissions inventories, target-setting, action planning, implementation, and monitoring), based on international climate agreements, including the UN's Paris Agreement and Sustainable Development Goals. But those UN ties got the conspiracy gears turning, just as they did 15 years ago in the US. Dozens of US cities left ICLEI around 2010 due to a Tea Party backlash against the UN's Agenda 21, which they saw as threatening property rights. Campaigns in small rural municipalities eventually snowballed into state-level legislation. KICLEI is explicitly trying to replicate the Tea Party's American blueprint in Canada. In a YouTube video recorded in Ottawa in April 2024, Braun displays Tennessee's bill banning UN-linked climate policies and announces plans to 'do what they've done here.' 'They're tapping into conspiracist sentiments, which have been long-held beliefs in far-right circles in the US,' said Wes Regan, a researcher at the University of British Columbia investigating how conspiracies impact municipal planning. But they face an uphill battle. In its 2010 heyday, the movement failed to spread to Canada, which Regan suspects is because Canadian audiences are more moderate and less receptive to US Tea Party terms like 'climate hoax,' 'UN takeover' or 'one-world-government.' The movement has adapted. At a bustling information session in Pembroke, Ontario, Braun advised supporters to 'remove every triggering word — make it so they don't know which side it's coming from.' This tactic is streamlined by KICLEI's AI chatbot, which uses language like 'local consultation' and 'environmental stewardship' over overt ideological signals. Regan is troubled by this shift toward outward moderation while the underlying ideology hasn't changed. 'They're taking the right-wing conspiracist, anti-globalist playbook and using language that's friendly, positive and empathetic,' he said. Braun disagrees. 'There's nothing deceptive about using language that connects,' she told Canada's National Observe r in her written response to questions. For her, avoiding terms like 'Agenda 21' is simply good communication. She denied importing US laws. Braun published a blog post with detailed answers but refused to give an interview with Canada's National Observer. 'I actually thought they were an environmental group' To find out whether elected officials are falling for KICLEI's campaign, we attended the annual conference of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) – a body that represents over 2,000 councils across Canada. FCM organizes many environmental programs, including the Green Municipal Fund and the PCP program, which has been targeted by KICLEI. Canada's National Observer sent its findings by email to FCM three weeks before the conference, which started May 29. That afternoon, FCM hosted a workshop on misinformation, attended by hundreds of elected officials. Multiple councillors told Canada's National Observer that AI was mentioned only in passing and KICLEI's misinformation was not addressed. Councillor Mara Nagy from Pickering, Ont. said that she expressed concerns about KICLEI during the workshop because her colleague had fallen for it. The panel did not directly answer that part of her question. 'I would've liked for KICLEI to be addressed head-on,' said Nagy. She explained that the confusion is causing frustration among elected officials. 'I've not heard from FCM since,' she added. This silence was 'out of respect' for ICLEI, according to Ewa Jackson, managing director of ICLEI Canada. Jackson explained that they try not to amplify KICLEI's misinformation, instead providing support to municipalities who reach out with concerns. ICLEI has known about the campaign for almost two years – they stated that they have warned members and that it was raised by elected officials during a recent Sustainable Communities Conference. Jackson accepts that the campaign has caused confusion. When she introduced herself to elected officials in the misinformation workshop, she was mistaken for a representative of KICLEI. Another attendee of the workshop was James Leduc, mayor of Bradford West Gwillimbury, Ont., who started receiving KICLEI's correspondence after the town adopted its climate plan in November. 'I actually thought they were an environmental group,' he said. According to Chris Russill, an expert in climate communication at Carleton University, this confusion provides 'opportunities' to shape the opinions of elected officials. Russill also warned that AI has caused an 'exacerbation' of long-standing democratic vulnerabilities, including the lack of resources for local governments to fact-check correspondence. Faced with this, elected officials like Leduc look towards institutions like FCM for guidance. 'We really need their support,' he said. In a written response to Canada's National Observer, FCM acknowledged that 'disinformation campaigns have caused frustration for some members' but said that they have only received a 'small number of inquiries' about KICLEI's campaign. FCM's annual conference now appears to be a missed opportunity to set the record straight. In attendance at the event were multiple elected officials from Cochrane, Alta. – the same town that will vote next Monday on whether to leave the PCP program. During a press conference at the event, FCM President Rebecca Bligh said that FCM is 'alive to the issue' and that fighting AI-generated misinformation is an opportunity to partner with the federal government, which launched a new ministry of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation in May 2025. But for now, it appears that councillors like Amyotte and Nagy are left scrambling to warn their colleagues before more municipalities abandon their net-zero commitments to carefully crafted conspiracy theories.

/R E P E A T -- MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike/
/R E P E A T -- MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike/

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

/R E P E A T -- MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike/

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - On Wednesday, June 4, three of Canada's foremost national leaders representing workers, businesses, and municipalities, will hold a joint press conference in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to double tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel. This reckless escalation is a direct attack on Canadian workers, businesses, and local economies. The impact threatens to devastate Canada's steel and aluminum industries, shut Canadian producers out of the U.S. market, and jeopardize thousands of good, unionized jobs across the country. Bea Bruske (Canadian Labour Congress), Candace Laing (Canadian Chamber of Commerce), and Carole Saab (Federation of Canadian Municipalities) will outline the urgent need for a coordinated federal response to defend Canadian jobs, businesses, and communities. WHAT: Joint press conference on U.S. tariffs and their impact on Canada WHEN: Wednesday, June 4, 2025, at 1:00 PM ET WHERE: Press Conference Room 135-B, West Block, Parliament Hill WHO: Bea Bruske, President, Canadian Labour Congress (CLC)Candace Laing, President and CEO, Canadian Chamber of Commerce (CCC)Carole Saab, CEO, Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) SOURCE Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) View original content to download multimedia: 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

Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat Français
Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat Français

Cision Canada

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • Cision Canada

Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat Français

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - The Federation of Canadian Municipalities, the Canadian Labour Congress, and the Canadian Chamber of Commerce will respond to the latest threat of doubling tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel by the U.S. administration. The ongoing trade war and constant threat of tariffs continue to impact everyone, including Americans. At this crucial moment, Canada's municipal, workers and businesses are united in their fight to oppose these harmful tariffs. Amid this economic uncertainty, it's time to modernize how we work together as governments—starting with a new model that matches ambition with capacity. That's why FCM is calling for a National Prosperity Partnership: a coordinated plan to align infrastructure, housing, and investment with Canada's economic goals. Where: Press Conference Room 135-B, West Block, Parliament Hill When: Wednesday, June 4, at 1:00 p.m. ET Participants: Carole Saab, CEO, Federation of Canadian Municipalities Bea Bruske, President, Canadian Labour Congress Candace Laing, CEO and President, Canadian Chamber of Commerce Notes for media: The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is the national voice of municipal governments, with more than 2000 members representing more than 92 percent of the Canadian population. SOURCE Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM)

Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat
Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Media Advisory - Canada's municipal, labour and business leaders respond to latest U.S. tariff hike threat

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - The Federation of Canadian Municipalities, the Canadian Labour Congress, and the Canadian Chamber of Commerce will respond to the latest threat of doubling tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel by the U.S. administration. The ongoing trade war and constant threat of tariffs continue to impact everyone, including Americans. At this crucial moment, Canada's municipal, workers and businesses are united in their fight to oppose these harmful tariffs. Amid this economic uncertainty, it's time to modernize how we work together as governments—starting with a new model that matches ambition with capacity. That's why FCM is calling for a National Prosperity Partnership: a coordinated plan to align infrastructure, housing, and investment with Canada's economic goals. Where: Press Conference Room 135-B, West Block, Parliament Hill When: Wednesday, June 4, at 1:00 p.m. ET Participants: Carole Saab, CEO, Federation of Canadian Municipalities Bea Bruske, President, Canadian Labour Congress Candace Laing, CEO and President, Canadian Chamber of Commerce Notes for media: All times are local Media are encouraged to arrive 15 minutes early to set up Please contact media@ to register The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is the national voice of municipal governments, with more than 2000 members representing more than 92 percent of the Canadian population. SOURCE Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) View original content to download multimedia:

MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike
MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

MEDIA ADVISORY - Canada's Labour, Business, and Municipal Leaders Respond to Trump's Tariff Hike

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - On Wednesday, June 4, three of Canada's foremost national leaders representing workers, businesses, and municipalities, will hold a joint press conference in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to double tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel. This reckless escalation is a direct attack on Canadian workers, businesses, and local economies. The impact threatens to devastate Canada's steel and aluminum industries, shut Canadian producers out of the U.S. market, and jeopardize thousands of good, unionized jobs across the country. Bea Bruske (Canadian Labour Congress), Candace Laing (Canadian Chamber of Commerce), and Carole Saab (Federation of Canadian Municipalities) will outline the urgent need for a coordinated federal response to defend Canadian jobs, businesses, and communities. WHAT: Joint press conference on U.S. tariffs and their impact on Canada WHEN: Wednesday, June 4, 2025, at 1:00 PM ET WHERE: Press Conference Room 135-B, West Block, Parliament Hill WHO: Bea Bruske, President, Canadian Labour Congress (CLC)Candace Laing, President and CEO, Canadian Chamber of Commerce (CCC)Carole Saab, CEO, Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) SOURCE Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) View original content to download multimedia:

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