The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/06/06 at 03:00 EDT
Episode Date: June 6, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/06/06 at 03:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Claude Figg. We begin in Vancouver where a man has
been arrested after driving his vehicle into the Pacific Coliseum as a live
show was underway.
Police posted on social media that a 30-year-old Vancouver man drove the vehicle into the front
entrance of the arena during a Cirque du Soleil performance.
No injuries were reported.
Arena security detained the man and police officers took him into custody under the Mental
Health Act.
Police don't believe the incident is terror related.
It has made it through to the U.S. House of Representatives and is headed for the U.S.
Senate.
However, a section of U.S. President Donald Trump's controversial tax reform bill could
hit Canadians hard.
Elizabeth Thompson explains.
Billions, absolutely billions
for sure would be the impact. It's a small obscure clause in a very big bill
but if the US Congress adopts it experts like Kim Moody say it could cost
Canadians and Canadian companies a lot. If Canada and the United States allows
this to take hold the result will be chaos, absolute chaos. The concern
centers on section 899 of US President Donald Trump's one big, beautiful bill.
If adopted, it would create a new withholding tax on things like dividends from US stocks.
It would apply to anyone who lives in a country the US designates as having unfair taxes.
Experts say Canada is likely to be on the list.
David MacDonald is a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. He calls Trump's proposal a nuclear option.
Just like the U.S. is totally willing to blow up the international trade order, they're
totally willing to blow up international tax rules.
As for Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, he's studying Trump's proposal
and waiting to see what the U.S. does next. Elizabeth Thompson, CBC News, Ottawa.
A U.S. judge has temporarily blocked a Trump administration ban on foreign nationals entering
the U.S. to study at Harvard.
Allison Burroughs, a U.S. district judge in Boston, blocked the ban pending further litigation.
Harvard had asked the block, citing an illegal retaliation by Trump, because the school rejected
the demands of the White House. The same judge blocked Trump from implementing a separate order last month
prohibiting Harvard from enrolling international students. Wildfires are
continuing to rage out of control in northern Saskatchewan. The province says
nearly a million hectares have burned so far but amid the damage some communities
have gotten good
news. The CBC's Alexander Silverman reports.
Yeah, but it's good to be home.
Lisa Powder and her great-grandchildren are some of the first residents back in Wayaquin,
Saskatchewan, after an evacuation order forced them to pack up and leave for a week.
There's an actual spot in my brother's backyard where there's a spot that burnt. It was so close. Their northern
community is still eerily empty. The sky hazy orange and thick with smoke.
It's day over there. Sad to come home to see it like this. There's nothing
but black around here. Now. Volunteer firefighter Jordan LaValley helped save
the hamlet from widespread damage, but the
forest around it is charred.
LaValley works at a grocery store in La Ronge, a town still under an evacuation order, and
drove to Wayaquin to help when fire broke out.
Seeing it burning while I was at work, I don't know, just kind of devastating.
More than 15,000 people are still out of their homes in Saskatchewan.
Alexander Silberman, CBC News, Wayaquin, Saskatchewan.
The Indiana Pacers have won the opening game of the NBA Finals.
They beat the Thunder in Oklahoma City last night, 111-110.
The Thunder were led by NBA MVP and Hamilton, Ontario native Shea Gilgis Alexander,
who scored 38 points and says his
team will lean on past playoff experience to try and bounce back.
As much as we can, we just got to treat it like every other game.
Every other situation we've been in, yes we haven't been in this situation, but it doesn't
mean our character has to change or what we did last time.
It's still basketball, still the game of basketball that we grew up playing.
The rules don't change just because we're in the finals. Game two is set for
Sunday night and that is your world this hour. For CBC News, I'm Claude Faye.