The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/26 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: April 26, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/04/26 at 02:00 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.
In just a few hours from now, Pope Francis will be laid to rest in Italy.
Chris Brown tells us more from Rome.
In St. Peter's Basilica, on the final day for viewing Pope Francis' open coffin, there was unmistakable emotion, with sadness, but also appreciation for the many he helped in his life.
Among those was Metis leader David Chartrand from Manitoba.
He met the Pope in 2022 when Francis made a historic apology to
Canadian residential school survivors.
Nothing was going to stop me from praying so I had a chance to look at him and
and bow to him and thank him for everything he's done for us.
Francis's funeral will be unique for Popes. Not only will it be held outside, it will
involve a procession out of St. Peter's Square and through the streets of Rome.
With the crowds gone, the Pope's face was covered with a white silk veil
and his coffin sealed, ready for the final goodbye.
Chris Brown, CBC News, Rome.
Liberal leader Mark Carney spent the last Friday of the campaign in Ontario,
where his party thinks it can take seats from conservatives and new Democrats.
Carney is arguing that he's the best to deal with Donald Trump's tariffs and threats.
Tom Perry reports.
I'm going to talk a lot about steel.
I'm going to talk a lot about building and a lot about the future.
Mark Carney at the Algoma Steel Plant in Sault Ste.
Marie, Ontario, ground zero in Donald Trump's trade war.
We will stand with every single Canadian worker targeted
by President Trump's attacks on our country.
Carney has positioned himself as a calm, experienced leader
with a plan to defend Canada against Trump's tariffs
and threats to Canadian sovereignty,
dismissing Conservative leader Pierre Paliève
as the wrong person at the wrong time.
He's ignoring the investments we need to build the strongest economy that works for everyone.
The liberal leader leaning into that message in the final days of the campaign as voters
begin taking one last look at the parties, the leaders, and the choices on offer.
Tom Perry, CBC News, Vaughan, Ontario.
The new Democrat leader is spending the last weekend of the campaign in two vote-rich territories, Southern Ontario and BC's
Lower Mainland. He's repeating the message that sending NDP MPs to Ottawa
will hold the Liberals to account. David Thurton is covering the NDP campaign.
NDP leader Jagmeet Singh says he has no regrets about not toppling the Liberal
government to force an election sooner. when the Liberals were polling at their lowest levels under former
leader Justin Trudeau.
First, he said he wanted Canadians to benefit from the programs his party pushed for under
its supply and confidence agreement with the Liberals, for people to actually get dental
care and for Ottawa to sign a couple of pharmacare deals.
And finally, at the time time I could not stomach the idea
of Pierre-Paul Yavre and the Conservatives forming a majority government.
Singh got a bit emotional when asked why he was still dancing on the campaign trail
despite where the polls show his party is at.
Singh said life has taught him that when you face struggles
you can either laugh or cry and that you have to have joy in all things.
David Thurton, CBC News, Hamilton. face struggles, you can either laugh or cry, and that you have to have joy in all things.
David Thurton, CBC News, Hamilton.
The Bloc Québécois is fighting hard to hang onto as many seats as it can.
The CBC's Arafi-Boucher Canyon is on the Bloc's campaign bus.
J'espère qu'il y aura du bloc estime.
Leader Yves-François Blanchet says he hopes to get Bloc MPs elected in this area.
The writing itself is a rarity in Quebec, won by a conservative
in the last election who then left the party and is not running again. Blanchet also got
some last-minute assistance from the popular provincial Parti Québécois leader, who endorsed
the Bloc in an open letter calling Marc Carney an existential threat to Quebec. But Blanchet
is still predicting a Carney win.
Canada will pick Mark Carney as its prime minister.
I can change nothing in that, even if there were 45 MPs from the bloc.
So we have to collaborate.
Up next for Blanchet, a trip north to Val d'Or,
where, like in many places, he's fighting to save a seat from the liberals.
Rafi Boudjikani on CBC News, Victoriaville, Quebec.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.