The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/24 at 00:00 EST
Episode Date: February 24, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/24 at 00:00 EST...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Herland.
Former Liberal MP Ruby Dalla says she's not giving up.
Tonight she announced she's appealing a decision by her party to disqualify her from the federal liberal
leadership race and she posted an emotional video on the platform X.
Please do not disqualify me. It will not send the right message for our party to
immigrants and for young people and women in our country. A Liberal Party
committee voted unanimously on Friday to disqualify Dalla from the race
to be the next leader.
The party said she broke 10 rules, some involving the party's expense policies.
The four remaining Liberal candidates will face off in two debates starting Monday night
in Montreal.
Germany is headed for another coalition government but with a
different leader at the top. The center-right Christian Democratic Union is
in first place after Sunday's national election.
Ebi Kuwawassen reports.
Rambo Zambo in Adnan!
A man who's never held public office before will become the next German
Chancellor. Friedrich Merz declared victory
after his conservatives picked up about 29 percent of the vote, but he still has to form a coalition
with other parties in order to govern. Merz has already ruled out negotiating with the far-right
AFD, which came in second with about 20 percent support. Thunian is the deputy director at the
Jacques Delors Center in Berlin. I think what we really need is quick coalition talks and a stable government and that really is
only possible with two parties. Chancellor Olaf Scholz has conceded defeat but his central left
party could still end up in the governing coalition. Meritz has called for speedy talks
saying the world will not wait for the government to be formed as Washington
retreats.
Abby Koelas in CBC News, Berlin.
The Vatican says Pope Francis is still in critical condition at a hospital in Rome,
and the leader of the Catholic Church is showing signs of mild kidney failure.
The 88-year-old Francis was admitted more than a week ago with pneumonia.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to visit
Ukraine Monday, on the third anniversary of Russia's invasion, and across Canada Sunday,
Ukrainians gathered to remember those who died in the war, Gavin Axelrod reports.
Hundreds have gathered at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg.
It's standing room only with people packed shoulder to shoulder on the eve of the third Hundreds have gathered at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg.
It's standing room only with people packed shoulder to shoulder on the eve of the third
anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
People here are draped in blue and yellow Ukrainian flags and holding posters calling
for the end of the war.
There will be speeches from dignitaries and musical performances.
We spoke to one couple who have been living in Winnipeg for the last few years.
They say the war is always on their minds, along with their friends and family who are
still at home in Ukraine and those who have been killed in the fighting.
Nearly 300,000 Ukrainian refugees are living in Canada.
Gavin Axelrod, CBC News, Winnipeg.
Federal workers in the U.S. are bracing for another week of firings. Elon Musk is now
ordering government employees to list their accomplishments by email, and if they don't,
it will be considered a resignation. Katie Simpson has more. I think American voters like the
intensity and Republicans in Congress are cheering on Elon Musk. Ohio's Jim Jordan among the lawmakers
embracing the federal
government purge, Oklahoma Senator Mark Wayne Mullins adding his support to the
majority of the American people want to make sure that their taxpayers are being
used correctly. Musk just days after wielding a chainsaw while on stage at a
political rally, this is the chainsaw for bureaucracy. He announced federal workers will have to send an email with five bullet points justifying
their accomplishments or else quit.
Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat, says he expects this will spark a fresh wave of
legal challenges.
What he's doing is slashing important public services that help every American in order
to finance a tax cut for the super rich.
Katie Simpson, CBC News, Washington.
And that is your World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Neal Herland.