The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/05 at 21:00 EST
Episode Date: November 6, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/05 at 21:00 EST...
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This ascent isn't for everyone.
You need grit to climb this high this often.
You've got to be an underdog that always over-delivers.
You've got to be 6,500 hospital staff, 1,000 doctors,
all doing so much with so little.
You've got to be Scarborough.
Defined by our uphill battle and always striving towards new heights.
And you can help us keep climbing.
Donate at lovescarbro.cairbo.
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Hurland.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has been outselling his new budget.
Carney calls it a bold plan to revitalize the economy
and change how government works.
The opposition sees it differently.
But as Tom Perry reports,
the Liberals have managed to secure at least one more vote
to get their budget through Parliament.
Now is not the time to be cautious,
because fortune favors the bold.
On the morning after his government tabled its first budget,
Prime Minister Mark Carney was out selling its merits.
We're changing how government works,
spending less on government operations,
so Canadians can invest more in our future.
The Liberals still need to get their plan
through a minority parliament and did secure one more vote this week
when Nova Scotia Conservative MP Chris Dantremant announced
he was crossing the floor to join the governing liberals.
You know, I would think over the last number of months, I wasn't feeling that I was aligned with the ideals of what the leader of the opposition had been talking about.
The Liberals now just two votes shy of a majority in the House.
Tom Perry, CBC News, Ottawa.
For a more detailed breakdown of what's in Carney's budget, click on our website, cbcnews.ca.
Aid workers say fewer people are getting out of a battleground city in Sudan,
Rebel forces seized Al Fasher last week, but after an early wave of civilians fleeing,
the number has dropped off.
And with communications blacked out, it's hard to know why.
Chris Brown reports.
The town of Tawila is the closest there is to a safe haven for Sudanese trying to flee
executions and retributions by the rapid support forces who've taken over Al Fasher.
It's a four-day walk, much of it across desert.
Once you get to the gates of alfasher, the body start, said Abdelah Hassabala.
Some were killed by thirst, some by exhaustion, and some by their injuries.
Italian doctor Juliet Ciprosis is working for the humanitarian group,
Doctors Without Borders, in Tuila.
And she said she's been treating hundreds of people just like Hasabala for terrible injuries.
It's mostly gunshot plus drone attack, torture like they beat them.
The UN has called the current.
situation in Sudan, the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with more than 150,000 people dead and
up to 30 million relying on humanitarian assistance. Chris Brown, CBC News, London. In France, a man drove
his car into some pedestrians and cyclists on the French island of Oleron. Five people were
injured too seriously. Witnesses say he was shouting al-Hu Akbar while police were arresting him. Authorities
say it's not being treated as a terrorism investigation.
The 35-year-old was a resident of the small island, which is popular with tourists during the summer months.
Crash investigators are on scene in Louisville, Kentucky, and have begun their investigation of yesterday's crash of a UPS cargo plane.
At least 12 people are dead, including one child, and more than a dozen are injured.
Todd in minutes with the U.S. 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 roll.
Investigators have now recovered the flight data and cockpit voice recorders from the plane.
The governor of Kentucky has declared a state of emergency to make it easier to provide resources for recovery efforts.
He also says he expects more bodies to be found.
Parts of Newfoundland remain under weather warnings for strong winds and coastal flooding.
Trees are whipped by the wind on the Avalon Peninsula, where several communities are just beginning to clean up from last night's extreme weather.
Some residents lost power and cell phone service, broken trees and debris covered some roads.
The greatest loss was a fish plant in St. Mary's.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Hurland.
