The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/08 at 19:00 EDT
Episode Date: April 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/04/08 at 19:00 EDT...
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You know what I'd like to hear people say more often?
I'm not sure.
Let me think about that.
I'm Nala Ayed, host of Ideas, a podcast that brings you deep thought every day.
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From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Angie Seff.
North American stock markets have finished in the red again on worries about tariff uncertainty. But the U.S.
trade representative insists Trump's sweeping tariff plan is good for the U.S.
economy. Jameson Greer has been speaking at a congressional finance hearing.
Katie Nicholson has more.
I'm kind of offended by your testimony that says we must accept self-inflicted economic pain.
Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto pushing hard on U.S. trade representative Jamison Greer.
Greer also had to answer tough questions from Republicans, like James Lankford, who pressed
him on what American retailers who sell clothing made in Asian countries are expected to do.
The president has been clear that he does not intend to have exclusions and exemptions.
While Democratic Senator Maggie Hassan asked Greer what it might take to call off the plan.
Would the administration reverse course if the president's tariffs led to 10% inflation?
Senator, the president is fixed in his purpose. This trade deficit and the offshore and loss of
manufacturing jobs is something that's persisted for too long. Tomorrow Greer may face more of the
same before the House's chief tax rating committee. Katie Nicholson, CBC News, Washington. Home
ownership took center stage on the campaign trail today.
Build Canada Homes will provide billions of dollars in financing for affordable home builders.
And Delta British Columbia Liberal leader Mark Carney spoke about his plan to speed up
construction of affordable homes across Canada.
Also in B.C., the NDP says it will fight to remove roadblocks to Canadians owning homes.
Leader Jagmeet Singh is making this pledge as his own political future is on the line.
Here's more from Julia Wong.
If you want us to stay in there fighting for you and your family, you got to vote for us.
NDP leader Jagmeet Singh insists his party is the best option to deliver on the issues
that matter most to Canadians.
And he's asking voters to send more New Democrats to Ottawa.
But with polls showing sinking support for the NDP, Singh was asked point blank whether he can hang on to his own seat.
I'm confident that I'll be able to serve the people of Burnaby Central.
And I'm also confident that people in this country need New Democrats.
We saw that we were able to deliver things like health care expansions including dental care and
Medicare. Singh was in Vancouver to announce New Democrats will make
permanent a ban on foreign investors buying Canadian homes. He also says that
NDP will close a loophole allowing investors to flip homes after just one
year. Julia Wong, CBC News, Ottawa. Conservative leader Pierre Poliev is in Edmonton today promising to lower taxes for Canadians
by cracking down on offshore tax havens.
We will be naming a bring-it-home economic and tax task force whose mandate will be to
ensure that we close overseas tax havens and force the very wealthy to pay what they owe.
Pauliev also wants to create a name and shame publication to expose corporations evading taxes.
He says his proposed measures can recover as much as one billion dollars a year in lost revenues.
Ontario schools have started to suspend thousands of unvaccinated students to prevent the spread
of measles. There are hundreds of cases in the province and the majority are children. 173 students were suspended in Toronto
today and 1,600 in Waterloo last week. Toronto Public Health says about 10,000 students aren't
up to date on their vaccinations and Ottawa Public Health says it's handed out about 15,000
immunization notices. The Provincial Health Act requires students to be vaccinated against the disease.
UN Chief Antonio Guterres says more than a month after the Gaza ceasefire was broken,
the territory has become a killing field and a total blockade by Israel
has strangled UN's capacity for delivering life-saving aid.
No food, no fuel, no medicine, no commercial supplies.
As aid has dried up, the floodgates of horror have reopened.
Guterres says the UN will not take part in new Israeli controlled aid plans and he's
demanding an independent investigation into the deaths of humanitarian workers in the
Gaza Strip, including those working for the UN.
And that is Your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Angie Seth.