The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/25 at 10:00 EDT

Episode Date: April 25, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/04/25 at 10:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 What's because news, eh? What's because news, bros? It's Canada's funniest news quiz. It's on every week. You can get it on Spotify. Yes, we need them. Follow us! If they're not chickenses. Wow, you're really putting threats in there. Stupid news quiz. Okay, thanks. That was all me. Ha ha ha! Just kidding, it was real Gollum. From CBC News, it's the World This Hour.
Starting point is 00:00:33 I'm Joe Cummings. As we head into the final weekend of the federal election campaign, the main party leaders are putting together one last sprint to the finish line. And for Canadian voters, this means one last look at each candidate's well-honed and calculated campaign message. Ali Shiasan has more. Every granular detail is planned out. Navigator PR strategist Patricia Fave says, think of it like an aesthetic political war
Starting point is 00:01:01 room. Everything from their clothes to how they do their hair to their movements and posture. Candidates and campaigns are kind of like brands. And those political brands are showcased on social media where authenticity is key. You can't force anything. You want your candidate to lean into social trends, you have to find the right ones.
Starting point is 00:01:18 Another Get Ready With Me, this time on the campaign. Jagmeet Singh's Get Ready With Me videos where he ties his hair are always a hit. Take it from his former social media lead, Nader Mohammed. Posted one of those on his TikTok. It got over five million views. That works for his brand, whereas Mark Carney's social media team loves a podium, loves a suit.
Starting point is 00:01:38 Liberals want to show that the adults are in the room. Pierre Poliev's team paints a family portrait. With the inclusion of his partner that I think they're doing a great job at. This election has given us a lot of material to consider before heading to the polls. Ali Chasson, CBC News, Toronto. Two Atlantic provinces are now a step closer to establishing closer economic ties. The premiers of New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador have signed a commitment to begin work on eliminating labour and trade barriers.
Starting point is 00:02:04 The premiers say the goal is to allow workers and goods certified in one province to automatically be certified in the other. New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt says she's now hoping to strike a similar agreement with Quebec Premier Francois Legault. A Halifax teenager has been charged with weapons offenses after police were informed of what they're calling a credible threat to a city high school. Kayla Hounsell has the details. Halifax Regional Police say they have charged a 16 year old boy with weapons offenses and uttering threats. They say they arrested him at his Halifax home at 3 a.m. Wednesday and seized multiple weapons. I can say that we believe the threat to be credible. Chief Don McLean won't say whether the teen police have charged was a student at the school.
Starting point is 00:02:50 His identity is protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Youth who consider violence as their last resort have been facing their own struggles. Police also refused to say how they learned about the threat. But when the accused appeared in court, the Crown Attorney said the teen had phoned the suicide prevention hotline and said he wanted to open fire at the school, then take his own life. The Crown said hotline operators call police. The teen is being held in custody until a bail hearing next week. Police say their investigation is complex, but they
Starting point is 00:03:23 don't believe there is any ongoing threat. Kayla Hounsell, CBC News, Halifax. There was a brief exchange of gunfire today between Indian and Pakistani troops. It follows this week's attack on a tourist destination in Kashmir that killed 26 people. It's an attack New Delhi is blaming on Islamabad. Neha Punia has the latest. Calls for justice ring out in New Delhi as right-wing groups ask the Indian government to use military force against Pakistan.
Starting point is 00:03:54 We need to urgently avenge the deaths of 26 innocent lives. India's army chief is in Kashmir reviewing security arrangements as a manhunt for the four gunmen, continues. On Thursday, the Indian government reportedly told opposition leaders the area where 26 people were gunned down had been opened to tourists and that there were no security teams present at the time of the attack. Opposition leader KC Venugopal, after Pakistan threatened to suspend the Shimla agreement It is imperative that a comprehensive analysis is conducted into the security lapses. After Pakistan threatened to suspend the Shimla agreement that upholds the de facto border
Starting point is 00:04:30 between the two countries, India and Pakistan traded fire briefly today. The United Nations is calling for restraint as the nuclear-armed neighbours approach the brink of a wider conflict. Neha Punia for CBC News, New Delhi. And that is the World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.

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