The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/27 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: October 27, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/10/27 at 02:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Hurland.
Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Malaysia at a summit of Southeast Asian leaders,
but U.S. President Donald Trump is also there,
and over the weekend he threatened to raise tariffs on Canada by 10%
in response to an anti-tariff ad from the Ontario government.
Katie Simpson reports.
The White House has so far declared.
to answer specific questions about the threat.
Scott Bessent, the Treasury Secretary, was asked
and he was unsure if Kuzma exemptions will continue,
but that's only because he said he hadn't been briefed
on the situation yet.
Trump has put blanket tariffs on Canada
because he says the northern border is a security problem
for people crossing illegally
and for the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S.
If he hikes those rates by 10%
because he's mad about a commercial,
does that undermine the argument that these tariffs are really about border security?
But again, we don't even know how this will work yet.
If he goes ahead with a hike, it could weaken his arguments that his team plans to make before the U.S. Supreme Court next month.
They will argue that tariffs are a vital tool at the president's disposal to protect national security.
The justices will eventually have to decide whether most of Trump's broad tariffs targeting countries are legal.
Katie Simpson, CBC News, Washington.
in Nunavut will cast ballots Monday in a territorial election.
There are 22 seats in the legislature,
but two of them had candidates acclaimed
because no one else ran against them.
David Joannisi was acclaimed in South Baffin.
We have this privilege entitlement to vote,
and we should certainly take it seriously
because there's other parts of the world that don't have this.
There are no political parties in Nunavut.
The government runs on a consensus,
model. The Alberta government is vowing to force striking teachers back to work with legislation
Monday. 51,000 teachers went on strike October 6th. Now Premier Daniel Smith says she wants to use the
notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Constitution to end the strike. Gil McGowan is president of
the Alberta Federation of Labor. If we have a provincial government that uses the not
withstanding clause to crush the rights of workers, especially the right to strike,
then other governments, especially conservative governments and other provinces,
we'll see that as a precedent.
Residents of Jamaica and Haiti are bracing for the arrival of Hurricane Melissa.
They're boarding up windows and stocking up on supplies.
Avery Woolery lives in Montego Bay.
I'm just here to get some guests, and I was trying to see if I can get a generation.
The look of how things is going right now and how I see the sky and the weather coming in,
I think this one is different.
This one is going to impact us hard.
Hurricane Melissa is listed as a Category 4 storm and it could cause catastrophic flooding.
A Victoria man is telling the story of how he fell victim to one of the biggest ever bank investigation scams in Canada.
He lost his entire life savings.
Erica Johnson has this go public investigation.
Can't think of anything.
else, day in and day out.
89-year-old Ray Anhalt was left penniless after scammers convinced him to hand over his life
savings, almost $1.7 million.
It started with a phone call, someone posing as a bank employee with CIBC.
He said Anhalt's identity had been stolen, his money was at risk, and he needed to pull it
all out of the bank and handed over to a courier who'd collect it for safekeeping.
I assume they were telling me the truth.
As he repeatedly pulled out thousands, C-IBC warned him activity on his account was unusual, but let him keep withdrawing.
Ray's son, Lee Anhold, says it was worse at RBC.
They're not asking for ID. They're not asking any questions.
Meantime, CIBC said its investigation is ongoing.
RBC said it has now resolved the issue with Ray Anhold, but didn't say how.
Erica Johnson, CBC News, Vancouver.
And that's the CBC News.
Bye.
Thank you.
