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Friday, June 5, 2026

 Another Week of Mark Carney’s Politicospeak

 

The Prime Minister says one thing in Ottawa and another in New York. He prefers scripts and lecterns. Otherwise, he talks in broken sentences, using modifying clauses and ambiguous phraseology. He repeats euphemisms, platitudes, and progressive catch phrases. He tends to speak in first-person when claiming an accomplishment and uses a passive voice when addressing a failure of government. He overuses bromides and likes to slip in nostalgic jargon intended for his Boomers’ audience. It’s PM Mark Carney’s suave politicospeak and Canadians heard an earful of it this past week.

Statistics Canada reported that Canada’s gross domestic product (GDP) declined marginally in the first quarter of 2026, after negative growth in the last quarter of 2025. An economist’s definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters with declining GDP. As a point of fact, the data shows that Canada’s economy has declined in three of the last four quarters, a period coinciding with the spring 2025 re-election of the Liberals in Ottawa.

Jack Mintz, president’s fellow at the University of Calgary School of Public Policy, commented on the country’s economic malaise, “It’s not a great picture. We’ve had this poor growth in investment now for many years, and this is continuing the trend.” Steven Globerman, of the Fraser Institute, echoed this assessment, “Canada’s capital investment and productivity emergency persists. Substantial increases in business investment in asset categories critical to productivity growth are required before Canada will be able to say that the emergency is over.”

The PM, however, did not utter the “R” word when responding to a direct question about the Statistics Canada report and whether Canada is in a recession. Carney answered, “I’ll say this about the economy. You know, we are in the process of laying the foundations for a stronger, more resilient, more independent Canadian economy. That process is settling in.” He described Canada’s latest data as “uneven” and the economy showing “some weakness, in part because of clear decisions by the government.” He then pinned the country’s troubled economy on his government’s “taking back control of immigration” which has resulted in lower population growth, and “reined in government spending.” He later added, “You have these cross-currents as the economy is being fundamentally transformed. We’ll continue to work, we’re making progress but there’s more to be done.”

The questions regarding Canada’s recession carried through numerous news cycles as the PM avoided attending the House of Commons for a couple of days and then, when he did show up, he refused to seriously engage with Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre. For days ministers repeatedly blamed U.S. President Donald Trump for Canada’s shrinking economy. Outside of parliament, the press corps aggressively challenged Poilievre on “his negativity” in raising the Statistics Canada data. In contrast to these deflections form the PM and Liberal mouthpieces, Poilievre was direct in addressing the new economic data (view here and below). 

In one scrum, the Opposition Leader asserted,

“Mr. Trump’s policies are effecting all G7 countries and none of them are in recession. Mexico shares a border with the United States; Mexico is not in recession. Only Canada, under Mark Carney’s Liberal policies is in a recession…. It seems the other countries despite Mr. Trump’s unfair tariffs have been able to craft policies to avoid recession. It is only here under Mark Carney’s policies that we find ourselves in a recession.”

Introducing the new Ministerial Advisory Council on Rights, Equality, and Inclusion

 

This week PM Carney was at the Holy Blossom Temple, a Jewish synagogue in Toronto, to announce his government’s action on the crisis of antisemitism in Canada. Given the subject matter it was remarkable that, while denouncing the rising incidents of antisemitism, the PM failed to mention the source of the problem. Carney made no mention of Israel, Zionism, or October 7th, and he avoided identifying the perpetrators of the vile antisemitic actions in the streets of Toronto, Montreal and across the country. More to the point, Carney delivered a series of platitudes to the Jewish community with no reassurances that the federal government would seek out the purveyors of hate, apply the law, and protect the wronged. Micheal Geist, University of Ottawa professor, assessed Carney’s hollow words, “In delivering a speech lacking in urgency, that prioritizes criticism of Israel over the safety of Canadians, and which comes up empty on new ideas, the Prime Minister failed to meet the moment.”


No words can possibly convey how insulting Carney’s new committee – the Ministerial Advisory Council on Rights, Equality, and Inclusion – is to many in Canada’s Jewish community. Consider that the committee tasked with answering to antisemitism is chaired by minister Marc Miller, who is the former immigration minister responsible for permitting without background checks an increasing number of Muslim activists into the country; includes former Trudeau government minister Omar Alghabra, one-time president of the Canadian Arab Federation who advocated for the legalization of Hamas and Hezbollah; also lawyer Avnish Nanda, who sued the University of Alberta when it attempted to close down the pro-Hamas encampment celebrating the October 7 massacre.

Simon Wolle, CEO of B’nai Brith Canada, summed up the Jewish community’s profound disappointment in the PM’s address and announcement: it has neither “acknowledged the full scope of the systemic failures that have allowed anti-Semitism to flourish, nor identified those responsible for inciting and fomenting anti-Semitism across the country.” Wolle contended,

“Canada is not facing an anti-Semitism awareness problem. Canada has an anti-Semitism problem. The country has been poisoned with Jew hatred and we need a remedy. Our children are no safer today than they were yesterday. Threats to our communities and institutions remain equally unchecked today as they did yesterday.”

There has been strong, biting reactions to the inadequacy of PM Carney’s orchestrated speaking event at Holy Blossom Temple. On Parliament Hill, Poilievre stated Canadian Jews deserve an apology for their open border policies and soft-on-crime laws that have contributed to the antisemitism crisis on Canada’s streets. Conservative MP Melissa Lantsman, a Jewish woman representing a heavily Jewish riding of Thornhill, stated the government should have announced concrete actions and later said in Parliament, “The Prime Minister delivered a speech on anti Semitism so neutered that an anti Semite would have given it a standing ovation.”

Perhaps the Globe and Mail editorial board put it most civilly in their lead editorial, “The missing words in Mark Carney’s antisemitism speech”: “He should have said: ‘If you oppose Israel’s existence, if you demonize Jewish-Canadians, you are wrong, you are hateful and I stand against you.’” (Note to the PM: the G&M editors have effectively expressed the essence of the matter in a single sentence of plain-speak.)

 


 

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