The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/03/22 at 00:00 EDT
Episode Date: March 22, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/03/22 at 00:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Claude Fague.
Provincial and territorial leaders
have wrapped up their meeting in Ottawa
with Prime Minister Mark Carney.
We are in a crisis, not of our own making, but that is the case now.
Carney says today's talks focused on removing inter-provincial trade barriers
and finding new markets for Canadian exports in light of the trade war
launched by the Trump administration in the U.S.
What we can control are the types of issues we talked about today as First Ministers
and what's behind that.
That investment, that building the Canadian economy, that will give us far more than we
could lose from American trade actions.
Carney is expected to ask Governor General Mary Simon to dissolve Parliament on Sunday,
triggering an election at the end of April or in early May.
Conservative leader Pierre Paulyev continued his pre-election campaigning.
Paulyev was in Ottawa on Friday where he made a pitch to workers and tradespeople about
boosting training and employment.
Tom Perry reports.
The only way to get a change is by putting Canada first, by electing a new Conservative
government.
At a union hall in the West End of Ottawa, conservative leader
Pierre Poliev positioning himself and his party as the
true voice of working Canadians.
Mark Carney will never stand up for the working people he will
only stand up for the millionaire and billionaire
global elites.
Poliev unveiling a suite of policies aimed at boosting
apprenticeships with unions taking a lead role,
all while breaking down interprovincial barriers to make it easier for skilled tradespeople to work anywhere in Canada.
It's called Boots Not Suits.
All this before the election campaign has even officially kicked off, the fight for votes about to get even more intense.
Tom Perry, CBC News, Ottawa. Canada's oldest retailer has court permission to
start liquidating the company's assets, although the Hudson's Bay says it hopes
to save six stores. Paula Duhatschek has the latest. The Bay says the news about
its financial troubles has led to a flurry of sales, shoppers
flocking to the retailer to pick up a Bay blanket before stores close.
That means the company has enough financial wiggle room to keep six stores open, all of
them in the Greater Toronto or Greater Montreal areas.
But there's still lots of uncertainty ahead, including for the Bay's roughly 9,000 workers,
many of whom will likely be out of a job.
Kevin Grell works for the Bay.com distribution centre in Toronto.
I will be 62 in May and my plan was to work till 65 and retire.
But it looks like that's not going to happen.
The six stores identified by the Bay could still close if a restructuring solution isn't found soon.
Paula Duhaczek, CBC News, Calgary.
Flights are slowly resuming in and out of one of the world's busiest airports tonight.
London's Heathrow Airport was shuttered for much of the day after a nearby fire knocked out power.
Chris Brown now on the ensuing travel mayhem.
Parked planes and empty skies over London's Heathrow Airport
punctuated a day of chaos for global air travel. Heathrow is Europe's busiest airport and yet it was brought to a
standstill by a fire in a single electrical substation that somehow knocked out the backup supply too.
Air Canada cancelled 16 flights and turned around six planes mid-flight including Dave Pope's.
And when we got back to Toronto, it was a bit chaotic.
Nobody knew really what was going on, where to go.
He was eventually rebooked to fly Saturday.
And so was Steve Masters who after hours on hold, got a flight back to Montreal.
I got through to somebody who sounded like he was having a much worse day than me,
who was able to get me rebooked onto a flight tomorrow. flight back to Montreal. I got through to somebody who sounded like he was having a much worse day than me,
who was able to get me rebooked onto a flight tomorrow.
Authorities say the fire is believed to be non-suspicious.
By Saturday morning, Heathrow says all scheduled flights
should be back in the air.
Chris Brown, CBC News, London.
And that is your World This Hour.
Remember, you can listen to us anywhere you get your podcast
updated every hour seven days a week. For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.