The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/03/25 at 01:00 EDT

Episode Date: March 25, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/03/25 at 01:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In Scarborough, there's this fire behind our eyes. A passion in our bellies. It's in the hearts of our neighbors. The eyes of our nurses. And the hands of our doctors. It's what makes Scarborough, Scarborough. In our hospitals, we do more than anyone thought possible. We've less than anyone could imagine.
Starting point is 00:00:19 But it's time to imagine what we can do with more. Join Scarborough Health Network and together, we can turn grit into greatness. Donate at lovescarborough.ca. From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Neil Herland. On day two of the federal election campaign, both the conservatives and liberals
Starting point is 00:00:44 promised income tax cuts. Conservative leader Pierre Polyev says he will find government efficiencies to fund them. He made the announcement in Brampton, Ontario. JP Tasker has more. This is a tax cut that will put Canada first. The Conservative leader is pitching a new tax cut and a bid to win over voters. Pierre Poliev wants to slash the lowest tax bracket from 15 percent to 12.75. It would save nearly everybody who pays income tax some money. A worker earning $55,000 a year would keep an extra $900 if this goes ahead.
Starting point is 00:01:20 This is a tax cut for everybody who has ever got up early in the morning and worked hard to build our country. It would cost the federal treasury some $14 billion a year. Poly of says he'll slash spending elsewhere to pay for it. We will cut back on foreign aid to bring our money home to this country. Liberal leader Mark Carney has also announced what he's calling a middle class tax cut, but it's smaller. JP TaskP. Tasker, CBC News, Brampton, Ontario. Prime Minister Mark Carney says he hasn't spoken with Donald Trump, but he says the president's likely waiting for the outcome of Canada's federal election before calling the winner.
Starting point is 00:01:57 I'm available for a call, but, you know, we're going to talk on our terms as a sovereign country, not as what he pretends we are, and on a comprehensive deal. The Liberal leader spoke during a campaign stop in Gander, Newfoundland, a symbolic location in Canada-U.S. relations. As you heard, he's also promising a tax cut for people in the lowest bracket. At 1% his proposal is lower than the one promised by the Conservatives. Carney says his cut is designed to offset the lost carbon tax rebate payments. In this election the question is who's gonna build homes you can actually afford. The New Democrats are promising they will build affordable housing only on federal land. Jagmeet
Starting point is 00:02:44 Singh made the announcement on an empty plot of federal land in Montreal. He's promising 100,000 new rent-controlled homes by 2035. Singh also pledges to fast-track approvals of those projects and train more construction workers. While the U.S. president calls it a friendly visit, Greenland's Prime Minister says it's a provocation. An American delegation is headed to the island this week. Paul Hunter reports on Donald Trump's desire to take control of the Danish territory. This is a friendliness and provocation. As U.S. President Donald Trump would have it,
Starting point is 00:03:22 the visit is just that, a visit. They're calling us, we're not calling them. And we were invited over there. Speaking before a cabinet meeting outside the Oval Office, Trump highlighted a trip this week to Greenland by a delegation of senior US officials, including Trump's National Security Advisor. I think Greenland's going to be something that maybe is in our future. I think it's important.
Starting point is 00:03:48 It's important from the standpoint of international security. Trump, who's been strongly suggesting the U.S. may well annex Greenland, now faces strong pushback from Greenland, including its outgoing prime minister, who's calling the visit a highly aggressive provocation and is refusing to meet with the visiting Americans. The trip begins Thursday. Paul Hunter, CBC News, Washington. Now to Turkey. Tens of thousands of people are protesting, many of them clashing with police outside the city of Istanbul building. Fireworks and objects were thrown at Tens of thousands of people are protesting, many of them clashing with police outside
Starting point is 00:04:25 the city of Istanbul building. Fireworks and objects were thrown at riot squad members. They responded with rubber bullets and pepper spray. It's night six of these demonstrations which broke out after Istanbul's popular mayor was arrested and later jailed on corruption charges. Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu is seen as the biggest challenger to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. And that is your World This Hour. I'm Neal Herland.

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