Should protesters be denied access to Parliament Hill if they’re not part of the protest that got there first?
MPs this week are seeking an inquiry into an incident caught on video where a constable denied access to someone because ““he is not a supporter of Palestine.” Read more on Blacklock’s.
And read up on some of the other stories the CCF staff have been watching this week:
- Supreme Court to hear Quebec’s challenge to daycare access for asylum seekers
- B.C. Election: Rustad says ‘paper straws suck,’ pledges to reverse ban
- Daniel Zekveld: Quebec is ignoring the Criminal Code prohibition for ‘advance’ MAID death requests
- 2 First Nations civil servants in Sask. ‘shamed,’ sent home for wearing orange on Sept. 30: chiefs
- Taxpayers group urges premiers to join legal battle against carbon tax
- Michael Geist: Canadians are starting to pay for the government’s war on Big Tech
- Conservative, Liberal online harms bills both miss the mark: experts
- Hamilton to get harm-reduction vending machine that dispenses safe injection kits, other supplies
- Hogan’s news quotes can’t be used as evidence against his gender-identity policy, judge rules
- John Ivison: We have strayed from freedom of expression into terrain where rape and murder are lionized
- Two arrested for waving Hezbollah flags at Toronto protest, despite police warning
- The Supreme Court of Canada is wrong to refuse to translate its pre-1970 decision
- Court reserves decision on Sask. government plea to get climate inaction case thrown out
- Quebec language watchdog orders café to make Instagram posts in French