The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/05 at 17:00 EST
Episode Date: November 5, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/05 at 17:00 EST...
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Hey, I'm Sarah Marshall, and there's one story from the past that I've been circling around for years now.
This eight-part series traces the hidden history of the satanic panic in North America.
We'll connect the dots from Victoria, BC, to the backroads of Kentucky.
Satan was having a moment, the sensationalist heartthrob of our time.
The Devil You Know, available now wherever you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Kate McGilfrey.
Newly minted Liberal MP, Chris Dantraman, says he hasn't felt aligned with the conservative leader for months.
Dantreman crossed the floor to join the Liberal caucus yesterday.
Karina Roman has more.
Liberal MPs cheer Chris Dantreman at his first Liberal caucus.
At an earlier news conference, Prime Minister Mark Carney introduced him.
As the newest member of our...
government caucus.
Carney says he appreciates Don Tramont joining the government caucus at what
Carney says is a crucial time for the country.
Don Tramon framed his decision as something he is doing for his riding and constituents.
To solve the issues that are important to our communities, and I didn't see it by sitting in
the opposition.
Don Tramont says he was at odds with the leadership style of Pierre Paulyev, and he did not
deny that there are perhaps other conservative MPs considering the
the same thing. But I will let them tell their stories if that time goes.
The Liberals now need only two MPs from other parties to either vote for or abstain to pass
the budget. Karina Roman, CBC News, Ottawa.
BC Premier David Eby and a group of First Nations are calling on the federal government
to maintain the ban on oil tanker traffic along the province's north coast.
This declaration comes after months of lobbying by Alberta Premier Danielle Smith
to resurrect plans for an oil pipeline between Alberta and the B.C. Coast.
Here's Eby earlier today.
This is not, in my opinion, a partisan issue.
Conservative leaders like Brian Maruni, Ronald Reagan,
they recognized that some places were too precious to put at risk,
and that includes our North Coast.
Gagwe's Jason Alsop is president of the Council of the Hyde Nation.
He says arguments to axe the ban on tankers are short-sighted.
We've experienced the impacts of short-term thinking in our territories,
and they center around this discussion around putting food on our table.
Well, with our land and our ocean, it's what literally is the food on our table.
La Qualam's mayor, Gary Rees, says the impact of past oil spills
continues to affect First Nations up and down the north coast.
Investigators are on scene in Louisville, Kentucky,
and have begun their investigation of yesterday's deadly crash of a UPS cargo plane.
At least 11 people died, more than a dozen, were injured.
Todd Inman is with the National Transportation Safety Board.
He says the plane's left wing caught fire after takeoff.
We have viewed airport CCTV security coverage, which shows the left engine detaching from the wing during the takeoff role.
Investigators have now recovered the flight data and cockpit voice recorders from the inside of the plane.
In the U.S., Democrats picked up several major election wins yesterday.
Their candidates won the governor's races in New Jersey and Virginia.
But it's the party's mayoral win in New York City that's getting the most attention.
Chris Reyes has more.
History was made in New York City.
Mamdani is the youngest mayor of this city in a century.
There's a lot of talk about what it means that the biggest city in the country,
its financial center and a symbol of capitalism,
just elected a self-declared democratic socialist.
His trajectory is also a big narrative.
This was a guy who was holding up signs on a street corner after Trump won the election last year.
No one knew him.
Mamdani's long list of promises is ambitious.
He is promising rent freezes, no-cost child care, free buses, government-run grocery stores, a Department of Community Safety.
Some of these promises, he can't deliver alone as a city mayor.
Some of this is state level.
Still, he challenges those who voted for him to now hold him accountable as he.
tries to deliver on those promises. Chris Reyes, CBC News, New York. And a French man drove his
car into pedestrians and cyclists on the French island of Oleron. Five people were injured. Two of
them seriously. Witnesses say he was shouting al-Hu Akbar while police were arresting him, and there
are French media reports that the suspect might be mentally ill. And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Kate McGoferry.
Thank you.
