The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/23 at 01:00 EDT
Episode Date: October 23, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/10/23 at 01:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Hurland.
Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered a live address in Ottawa tonight.
The speech was meant to get buy-in from Canadians
before his government unveils its first federal budget on Tuesday, November 4th.
Rain Yvonne Stackleberg has more.
It's our country. It's your future.
And we are going to give it back to you.
Addressing students at the University of Ottawa,
Prime Minister Mark Carney tries to prime Canadians for his first budget.
One he's pitched will be generational.
We will do what it takes.
Carney has signaled where his government plans to spend.
Billions of dollars on the military infrastructure projects
and support for businesses and workers hit hard by Trump's tariffs.
Now announcing his goal to double Canada's exports
outside of the U.S. in a decade.
All of this, while promising to streamline the government.
It will take some sacrifices, and it will take some time.
Carney says the budget will also include new plans for immigration and climate change.
Marina von Stackleberg, CBC News, Ottawa.
For Day's conservative leader, Pierre Pollyav, has been under fire from other parties
for suggesting the Mounties covered up liberal scandals,
but now comes news that members of his own.
caucus are also upset with his comments. Kay McKenna reports.
Five conservative caucus members told Radio Canada that they're getting frustrated. They say he
isn't appearing prime ministerial and his implication that former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
should be imprisoned is irresponsible. The leadership of the RCMP is frankly just despicable
when it comes to enforcing laws against the liberal government. The anger stems from these
comments made by Pollyev on the podcast, Northern Perspective. The conservative leader said Trudeau
broke the law when he took a free vacation in 2016 to the Aga Khan's private island.
He also said the former prime minister probably broke the law during the SNC Lavalin affair.
Many of the scandals of the Trudeau era should have been involved in jail time if the
RCMP had been doing its job.
Some Harper-era conservatives have chafed at Polyev's implication of political interference,
writing in editorials he is hurting his party's own credibility.
Pollyette faces a leadership review in January.
Kate McKenna, CBC News, Ottawa.
The U.S. is slapping sanctions on Russia's two biggest oil companies.
It accuses Moscow of furthering what it calls a senseless war.
There's been a wave of fresh attacks since a planned meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin was canceled.
As Breyer Stewart reports, it comes as the chief of NATO visits Washington.
Mark Ruta was meeting with U.S. senators and he was also going to be meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump
to really help any way he can when it comes to brokering some kind of peace between U.
Ukraine and Russia. Neruta was very complimentary of Trump's role that he played in helping to
cement a ceasefire in Gaza. And I think likely Trump was hoping that some of that peacemaker
momentum could carry on to the war in Ukraine, which she once vowed to end in 24 hours. But
these Washington-led negotiations appear to be at a standstill. The White House has decided to shelve
plans for a summit between Trump and Putin in Budapest, Hungary. And it was shelved after
it appears that Russia was unwilling to compromise at all
and willing to agree to that ceasefire which the U.S. has proposed,
which would freeze the current lines in the war for at least 30 days.
Will negotiations continue?
Breyer Stewart, CBC News, London.
The director of the Louvre Museum has acknowledged a terrible failure
that led to the weekend jewel heist.
Lawrence Descartes told the French says,
Senate, she offered to resign, but her offer was refused by the government. She says the
theft exposed a number of weaknesses, including a shortage of security cameras. The museum
reopened on Wednesday after being closed since Sunday morning. And that is your world this
hour. For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurland.
Thank you.
