The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/13 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: May 13, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/05/13 at 02:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Neil Herland. Mark Carney is expected to swear in his new cabinet Tuesday. The Prime Minister's office says it will be slimmer than Canadians have been used to seeing
under his predecessor Justin Trudeau.
But he's also adding Secretaries of State or junior ministers into the mix.
Rafi Boujikaneen reports.
Are you in cabinet?
Newly minted Liberal MP for Toronto Centre Evan Solomon picking up his luggage at Ottawa
International Airport,
not quite issuing a denial about whether he's getting into cabinet.
Nothing to say, just here to find some place to live.
The Prime Minister's office has said Mark Carney is adding 10 junior roles to the cabinet.
Some of the ministers will be the new faces that got elected along with Carney, such as
former Vancouver Mayor
Gregor Robertson, who will take on housing, and former chair of Hydro One Timothy Hodgson,
who becomes natural resources and energy minister, replacing Jonathan Wilkinson, who is out of
cabinet.
Carney's office says there will be fewer than 30 full-time cabinet ministers, and he's
committing to gender parity.
Carney is keeping some old ministers.
Christia Freeland will stay on.
So will Stephen Gilbo, as well as Sean Fraser, who is moving to justice.
Rafil Bujikan, YonCBC News, Ottawa.
Canadian tobacco companies will start to pay out billions of dollars this year as part
of a class action lawsuit.
In total, 32 billion will be paid out over 20
years, most of that to provinces and territories. But Newfoundland and Labrador has put all
of its money into this year's budget. As Peter Cowan reports, experts are questioning
this approach during an election year.
That's probably one of the lowest in the country.
Newfoundland and Labrador's finance minister has touted just how small the province's $372 million
deficit is this year.
But what Siobhan Cody didn't mention
was the deficit would have been almost double
if it wasn't for the settling of a decades long court
battle with tobacco companies.
There's a large tobacco settlement,
which is about $500 million.
The Deputy Minister of Finance, Michelle Jouer,
says it took the total amount of the settlement
and put it into this year's budget,
even though the actual amount will be paid out over 20 years.
It's the only province to do it this way.
The government's up for reelection.
Ian Lee, who's a professor of business management
at Ottawa's Carleton University,
says politics may have influenced
how Newfoundland and Labrador treated this.
The temptation is, hey, we'll take it all into revenues
and we'll make the situation look much better than it really is.
The province says it's following accounting standards,
but it'll be up to the Auditor General to decide if this follows the rules.
A provincial election is scheduled for October.
Peter Cowen, CBC News, St. John's.
India's Prime Minister warns his country will retaliate
if a delicate ceasefire with Pakistan
is violated.
The pause in fighting appears to be holding for now.
In both countries, airports are back up and running.
Salima Shivji reports.
The latest flare-up lasted four intense days, filled with drone strikes and heavy shelling.
The clashes triggered by a deadly attack on tourists that India blames on terrorists,
it says, are backed by Pakistan, a claim Islamabad denies.
Each side quickly claimed victory over the weekend, fervour and cheers in Pakistan, with
newspaper headlines praising the country's brave, glorious sons. In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to his nation
with strong words for New Delhi's rival.
Terror and talks can't go together.
This is only a pause on military action, Modi says.
We'll wait and see what Islamabad does.
It was US Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
as he helped broker the ceasefire, who also
floated the idea of broad negotiations on the Kashmir dispute sometime soon.
But that's not on India's agenda.
Salima Shivji, CBC News, Mumbai.
Asian stock shares advanced Tuesday after China and the United States announced a 90-day
truce in their trade war.
But the gains were tempered by uncertainties
over the longer term as analysts warned that President Donald Trump's policies could still
change.
And that is your World This Hour.
I'm Neal Herland.