The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/25 at 22:00 EDT
Episode Date: May 26, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/05/25 at 22:00 EDT...
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In this acclaimed new production of Anna Karenina,
the National Ballet of Canada asks,
what is fair in love and society?
Renowned choreographer, Christian Spook adapts Tolstoy's epic novel to dance
in a spectacular work complete with lush costumes,
cinematic projections, and a glorious curated score,
featuring the music of Rachmaninoff.
On stage June 13th to 21st, tickets on sale now at national.ballet.ca
sponsored by IG private wealth management.
From CBC News, the world is sour. I'm Neil Kumar. With parliament about to begin a new
session, the liberals and conservatives held caucus meetings on Sunday. Details from Rafi
Boudjah Kanyon.
This government failed to table a budget pretty soon.
Conservative Gérard Deltel ready with criticism
before MPs return to the House of Commons,
a theme for leader Pierre Paulyèvre as well.
We're going to be demanding a spring budget.
But the opposition cannot force the government to do that.
Paulyèvre also won't be in the Commons
until he wins a by-election as he lost his seat.
This is the room that won our party a strong mandate.
Prime Minister Mark Carney was keen to highlight liberal electoral success.
A 169 member caucus that is the conscience of this party.
MPs will also choose a new House speaker.
Seven members have put their names forward.
Rafi Boudjikani on CBC News, Ottawa.
Sunday marked five years since George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer.
Floyd was black, the cop was white.
The incident sparked a racial reckoning.
The CBC's Sarah Levitt is in Minneapolis, where Floyd is being remembered.
People here say they feel raw.
Some have said that they do think there have been some changes.
Others are upset they feel like nothing has changed.
I spoke with one of Floyd's friends.
Let's hear from Maestro King about his relationship and the importance of that relationship with George Floyd.
Strong, positive, and I just know we used to chat for hours.
I don't have much family, so he was somebody to talk to.
He was an elder, somebody older than me that had been around.
I just remember having long conversations with him.
Meanwhile, here in Minneapolis, they're going to continue to commemorate
the anniversary of the death tonight.
There will be a gospel concert as well as a vigil, all to remember George Floyd.
That's Sarah Levitt reporting from Minneapolis.
In Toronto,
thousands of people draped in Israeli and Canadian flags walked below an overpass
for the 56th Walk with Israel rally organized by United Jewish Appeal.
There was a heightened police presence at this year's rally because of planned pro-Palestinian
counter protests.
Here's the UJA's Sarah Leften.
I think this year more than ever our community is feeling increasingly isolated because of
the drastic increase in anti-Semitism.
And I think that more
than ever it's important for us to come together to stand united again with
people inside of our Jewish community but also those outside of the Jewish
community to show us that we're not alone. Toronto police say there have been
43 reported hate crimes against the city's Jewish community so far this year.
On Sunday Israel's National Security Council
raised its travel alert for Canada,
warning of threats against Israelis and Jews.
A new poll suggests Quebecers support lowering
the legal blood alcohol limit for drivers.
It currently has the highest level in the country.
And as Paula Diane Perez reports,
some families who have lost loved ones to drunk drivers
hope the provincial government is listening.
We don't want no family going through what we went through.
Antoine Vittar has been calling for the blood alcohol limit to be lowered since his daughter
died in an accident in 2017.
Jessica Sali Rivera was the passenger in a car with a drunk driver.
We're living every day and it's like a roller coaster.
One day you're smiling, the next minute you're crying. Losing a child is awful. Bittor believes a
lower limit saves lives and a recent poll done by Léger for the Quebec
Association for Public Health is giving him hope. In the survey of just over 1,000
people, 61% agree the legal limit for alcohol should be 0.05 percent. Quebec's current
limit is 0.08, the highest in Canada. The family isn't alone in their calls for change.
Since 2023, two Quebec coroners investigating different fatal accidents have recommended
lowering the limit.
Paula Diane Perez, CBC News, Montreal.
And that is your World is Sour. For CBC News, Montreal. And that is your World is Sour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.