The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/10 at 04:00 EDT

Episode Date: May 10, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/05/10 at 04:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 How did the internet go from this? You could actually find what you were looking for right away, bound to this. I feel like I'm in hell. Spoiler alert, it was not an accident. I'm Cory Doctorow, host of Who Broke the Internet from CBC's Understood. In this four-part series, I'm going to tell you
Starting point is 00:00:20 why the internet sucks now, whose fault it is, and my plan to fix it. Find Who Broke the Internet on whatever terrible app you get your podcasts. From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Claude Fague. To Ukraine. Some EU leaders have arrived in the country in a show of support to help secure a ceasefire with Russia. The leaders of the UK, France, Germany and Poland arrived by train in Kiev and are expected to hold talks with President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Starting point is 00:00:57 The European leaders, along with US President Donald Trump, are pushing Russia to agree to a 30-day ceasefire in hopes of allowing further talks to end the three-plus-year war. Officials from India and Pakistan have held talks for the first time since the escalation between the two countries began. Reports suggest the contact was made via a phone call today. India has said it is committed to de-escalate hostilities if Pakistan reciprocates. Pakistan's foreign minister said today his country would consider the same if India
Starting point is 00:01:31 quote, does not carry out further attacks. The escalation was triggered last month when a massacre at a tourist spot in the Kashmir region of India left 26 civilians dead. Several countries have urged the two nations to de-escalate the conflict. After the Prime Minister's high-stakes meetings with Donald Trump this week, is Canada any closer to ending the trade war with the United States? CBC Radio's The House is taking a closer look at that question. Host Catherine Cullen has more. We're probably looking at what some would describe as a grand bargain.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Former Quebec Premier Jean Charest is optimistic a deal can be reached. Charest is on the Prime Minister's Canada-US Council. He says a new agreement with the United States would go beyond the Kuzma trade deal, including issues like security, specifically the Arctic, something Charest says that would allow Trump to say he won and got something new for the U.S. Canada's ambassador to the U.S., Kirsten Hillman, says in the wake of the Carney-Trump meeting, there is work being done to strike a deal.
Starting point is 00:02:35 The early focus right now seems to be primarily on tariffs. The U.S. is interested in having a bilateral conversation with Canada. They're having a bilateral conversation with Mexico and many other countries. Charest says big picture, there's room for Canada to wind up better off. You know maybe in 20 years from now we will thank Donald Trump for having forced us to have a hard look at our economy or federation. Catherine Cullen, CBC News, Ottawa. And you can hear the entire interview with Jean Charest on the House after the 9 o'clock
Starting point is 00:03:06 edition of World Report 930 in Newfoundland. Mark Carney's decision to invite King Charles to read the government's throne speech isn't going over well with all Canadians. The Prime Minister says the move is meant to highlight Canada's sovereignty in the face of U.S. annexation threats. But as Thomas Daglet reports, critics say the plan casts this country as anything but independent. Shouldn't a qualified, distinguished Canadian be doing that?
Starting point is 00:03:34 Canada's anti-monarchy advocates consider the invitation extended to King Charles an embarrassing contradiction, hosting a British-based monarch to open this country's sovereign Parliament. Ashok Charles leads the not for profit group Republic Now, which campaigns for Canada to cut ties with the crown. Mr Carney is sending message that a
Starting point is 00:03:56 British King can perform this act of nationhood with more authority than any Canadian could. It's the first time in half a century the monarch will deliver the throne speech, filling a role usually reserved for the Governor General. If past royal tours are any indication, that upcoming two day visit by the King and Queen could cost Canadian taxpayers a million dollars or more. Thomas Daigle, CBC News, Toronto.
Starting point is 00:04:25 PWHL playoffs last night, the defending Walter Cup champion Minnesota Frost, even their semifinal series with the Toronto Scepters. They scored three times in the second period and added two more in the third, and a 5-3 win in Toronto, tying their best of five series at once. The other semifinal between the Montreal Victoire and the Ottawa Charge resumes tomorrow. And that is your World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.

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