The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/03/23 at 18:00 EDT
Episode Date: March 23, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/03/23 at 18:00 EDT...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is advertiser content from Audible.
Tune out everyday stresses and noise with best-selling author Susan Cain's
A Quiet Life in 7 Steps and begin your year by learning to live a little more peacefully.
Listen to a sample now.
Should is a word that can take us away from our truest selves,
while the quiet way can lead us back.
Of course, we can't blame ourselves for getting lost in life's shoulds.
Like, I should go to that party.
I should volunteer for that extra shift.
I shouldn't say anything that might rock the boat.
But this type of thinking can take us in the wrong direction.
And it's especially troublesome when it comes to the pressure that so many of us feel to be leaders.
And that's what I want to talk to you about next, the hidden pressures that we're all subject to
in our culture to be in charge of something.
Explore over 890,000 titles on audible.ca by signing up for a free 30-day trial and start listening today. From CBC News, the world is our.
I'm Neel Kumar.
Arguably, the most consequential election in decades is officially underway.
Liberal leader Mark Carney met with the governor general and asked her to dissolve parliament.
The party leaders and their candidates have begun presenting their plans and promises
for a country under threat.
Carina Roman has more. Liberal leader Mark Carney says the amount and pace of the changes
he has implemented will convince Canadians that a vote for the Liberals is not a vote for the same old same old.
We put many of the foundations in place in just nine days.
We're asking for a mandate to finish that job.
But Conservative leader Pierre Poliev says it is he who represents real change.
To all those who wonder what happened to the country that they knew and loved,
change and hope are both on the way.
But what was set to be a change election is now about who is best suited to stand up
to the U.S. president and his tariffs and threats to Canada's sovereignty.
You can be respectful and firm. We're over the shock of the betrayal but we should never
forget the lessons. The polls have shifted dramatically over the past two months.
The Liberals catching up to the Conservatives, partly at the expense of the NDP and Bloc Quebecois,
making this election outcome anything but certain. Carina Roman, CBC News, Ottawa.
NDP leader Jagmeet Singh launched his third election campaign with a pitch to working Canadians,
saying only the New Democrats are prioritizing average Canadians over the rich.
This is like being told you have to pick between a house with a leaky roof or a cracked foundation.
One patched together with empty conservative slogans,
the other rotting from the inside after years of liberals
protecting the most wealthy.
People will tell you in this election
that it's about who can negotiate with Donald Trump.
I'm here to tell you the real question is,
who will make sure you and the things that you care about
are not on the table?
Singh says New Democrats are the only ones putting in protection for workers
affected by Trump's tariffs as their top priority.
For months, the conservative party appeared set to win a majority in an expected election.
But everything seems to have changed when former Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau announced his resignation.
Poll analyst Philippe J. Fournier breaks down the dramatic change.
There has been a dramatic and I would say historic turnaround in the numbers in the past two months.
Since Justin Trudeau announced his resignation on January 6th, the Liberals have completely closed
the gap. They trailed the Conservatives by 25 points on average and the polls that we saw this
week from the Angus Street Institute,
from Léger, and Ipsos, and other polling firms, show not only that the liberals
have closed the gap, but they have taken the lead in voting intentions throughout
the country, and in key areas where the liberals could make seed gains in this
election. Obviously, we are at the starting line of this election, so this
is not a prediction, but right now,
amazingly, the liberals enter this election campaign
as the favorites.
Paul Ellis Philippe Fournier runs the website,
338 Canada.
The leader of the Democrats in the US Senate says,
he's not quitting.
Chuck Schumer cast a ballot in favor of the Republican bill
to continue funding the federal government
receiving outrage from many Democrats. But today he said it was the better of two bad
choices. Look I'm not stepping down. I knew when I cast my vote against the
government shutdown there'd be a lot of controversy. The CR was certainly bad,
the continuing resolution, but a shutdown would be 15 or 20 times worse.
The Democrats have been heavily criticized for failing to effectively push back on the Trump agenda.
A recall has been issued for 10 Habibi's Mediterranean dips.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says the dips contain peanuts not listed on the label
and that several people have suffered allergic reactions.
The nine hummus and one baba ganoush dips were sold in BC and Alberta.
And that is your World is Sour.
For CBC News, I'm Neel Kumar. Music