The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/24 at 22:00 EDT
Episode Date: April 25, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/04/24 at 22:00 EDT...
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When they predict we'll fall, we rise to the challenge.
When they say we're not a country, we stand on guard.
This land taught us to be brave and caring, to protect our values, to leave no one behind.
Canada is on the line and it's time to vote as though our country depends on it.
Because like never before, it does.
I'm Jonathan Pedneau, co-leader of the Green Party of Canada.
This election, each vote makes a difference. Authorized by the Registeredleader of the Green Party of Canada. This election, each vote, makes a difference.
Authorized by the Registered Agent of the Green Party of Canada.
From CBC News, the world is sour.
I'm Neil Kumar.
There have been more than a thousand detected cases of measles in Ontario since the year began.
Public health officials say that's a thousand too many. They're concerned the highly preventable disease may once again become
common in Canada. Jennifer Yoon has the details.
Ontario has smashed a grim record. More than a thousand measles cases have been reported this year.
Six children have been hospitalized. That's more people sick with measles than in over a quarter
century. And that's not even the whole story. Alberta is also struggling with its own measles
outbreak, 129 cases reported so far.
The more measles there is, the harder it is to control.
Dawn Bowditch, an immunologist at McMaster University, is aghast. Measles is vaccine
preventable. That's how Canada
eliminated the spread of the virus back in 1998.
I'm really worried that we're entering a situation where we're going to lose our status
where we can't say that measles is no longer endemic in Canada.
There is no cure for measles. The best prevention is two doses of vaccination,
which provides nearly 100% protection.
Jennifer Yoon, CBC News, Toronto. of vaccination which provides nearly 100% protection.
Jennifer Yoon, CBC News, Toronto.
Yesterday was more proof, as if any were needed,
that the old relationship with the United States is over.
Liberal leader Mark Carney, along with other federal leaders,
has denounced US President Donald Trump for repeating his idea
that Canada should become part of the US.
Carney says it's crucial that Canada faces what he calls the new reality and restructures
its economy.
This is a time for serious leadership.
We can control our economic destiny with the right plan because in a crisis, plan beats
no plan.
Carney's plan includes using revenues from counter tariffs to support workers and businesses
to build supply chains that no longer rely on the U.S. and open new markets for Canadian
goods.
Newfoundland and Labrador and New Brunswick have signed a memorandum of understanding
to explore how to bring down interprovincial trade barriers.
It includes pending legislation to recognize trade credentials granted in each other's
provinces. Here's New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt.
Susan Holt, New Brunswick Premier, New Brunswick
Any credential that you hold in Newfoundland, you can bring to New Brunswick and get to work
on day one of landing in our province. That's legislation that Premier Fury was the first to
pass and now we have it in our house going through.
Reporter Andrew Fury says they're not stopping there.
Andrew Fury, New Brunswick Premier, New Brunswick
And the Premier and I have been talking for quite some time about how we can extend that similar philosophy,
that similar strategy to other professional designations.
Holt says that provinces and territories are re-evaluating all regulations that make it difficult to trade within Canada.
Halifax Police Chief Don McLean says officers arrested a teenage boy who threatened
to bring weapons to school. I can confirm that the youth was held overnight to appear in court
this morning and we do not believe there was an ongoing threat to the school community but we do
have officers on site today provide a sense of safety and security. In court the teen's lawyer
revealed he called a suicide hotline on Wednesday night. The teen threatened to shoot up his school, then take his own life.
The operators called the police, who arrested the 16-year-old in his home.
There the investigators found a number of legally obtained weapons.
He is now facing multiple charges.
A Quebec Superior Court judge has struck down the province's university tuition hike for
out-of-province students.
Justice Eric Defour ruled that charging out-of-province students. Justice Eric de Four ruled that charging out-of-province students at 33 percent higher tuition was unreasonable.
The tuition hike was part of the province's measures to protect the
French language. Habs fans have another reason to be disappointed after the
hockey team lost to the Washington Capitals on Wednesday. Quebec has
instructed Montreal's transit agency to de-anglify its iconic Go Habs Go banners. Go Habs Go! Go Habs Go!
The decade's old slogan was a staple on electronic bus displays on game days, but the province's
language watchdog says it received a complaint that Go is an English word. The agency has
ordered the transit service to translate the fan-favorite chant to Allez Canadien Allez.
And that is your World is Sour.
For CBC News, I'm Neal Kumar.