Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland and references Mark Carney (former Bank of Canada Governor and UN Climate Finance
Key Allegations Against Chrystia Freeland
Labor Rights Breaches:
The claim suggests failures in addressing labor disputes or worker protections. For example, recent conflicts include:
Federal worker strikes (e.g., 2023 PSAC strikes over wages and remote work policies).
Criticisms of Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program (exploitation concerns).
Verify: Has Freeland, as Finance Minister and DPM, directly blocked labor reforms or ignored documented abuses?
Misuse of Spyware by CSIS/RCMP:
CSIS and RCMP operate under strict legal frameworks (e.g., Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act). Recent controversies include:
CSIS’s use of datasets containing personal information (ruled unconstitutional in 2023).
RCMP’s use of spyware like Pegasus (CBC reported in 2022 on limited use for criminal investigations).
Freeland oversaw economic policy, not direct security operations. Responsibility for CSIS/RCMP oversight falls to Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc.
Charter Rights Breaches:
Potential links to the Emergencies Act invocation (2022 Freedom Convoy), which faced Charter challenges. The Public Order Emergency Commission later deemed it “reasonable” but highlighted risks. Freeland defended the decision as necessary for economic security
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