The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/08 at 03:00 EST
Episode Date: November 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/08 at 03:00 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.
from cbic news the world this hour i'm mike miles saskatchewan's governing party is hoping to regain
support in the province's major cities a convention this weekend will focus on winning back urban voters
who largely backed the nDP as alexander silberman reports the party could face an uphill battle
the saskatchewan party's election victory last fall clouded by a steep loss in urban support
Premier Scott Moe addressing the shift in his victory speech.
We must do better.
Doing better and regaining support in Regina and Saskatoon,
the focus of the party's convention.
Ken Shevoldeoff is the only MLA to win a seat in the two cities.
Political analysts say Moe's leadership has turned to a focus on socially conservative issues.
He aligns himself much more vocally with the right of his party.
Tom McIntosh is a political scientist at the University of Regina.
He says the party needs to focus on issues like housing, urban poverty, and addiction.
They need to solidify that support.
The Saskatchewan Party says it's demonstrating working for the cities
with plans for new schools and urgent care centers.
But whether or not that approach resonates will have to be tested at the ballot box.
Alexander Silberman, CBC News, Regina.
Three people have been expelled from Canada in a probe being carried out by the BC Extortion Task Force.
which includes members of the Canada Border Services Agency,
the RCMP, and several police departments, including gang squad officers.
Some of the eight other foreign nationals are being investigated
in connection to several shootings and extortions that have terrorized BC communities,
in some cases, targeting South Asian businesses.
In Ukraine, officials say a Russian drone strike killed at least one person
in an apartment building in Nipro.
At least 11 others were reportedly injured, six of them taken to hospital.
The blast started ablaze and destroyed several apartments.
More casualties are expected.
Two couriers are grounding their fleets of MH-11 cargo planes after this week's deadly crash in Louisville, Kentucky.
UPS and FedEx are calling it a precautionary move recommended by the manufacturer.
A UPS MH-11 went down in flames Tuesday less than a minute after takeoff.
At least 14 people are reported killed.
The plane had recently undergone several weeks of maintenance.
Investigators are going through its data and voice recorders.
Today is Indigenous Veterans Day, first officially recognized in Manitoba back in 1994,
but just this week, the province passed legislation enshrining it into the law.
As Karen Paul's reports, some veterans see it as a son.
of reconciliation.
Indigenous Veterans Day started after an incident on Remembrance Day in 1991.
A group of Mohawk veterans were told they couldn't place a wreath during official ceremonies in Ottawa.
It was another four years before indigenous veterans were allowed to participate.
That's a big part of the day for me as to honoring that unique history.
Justin Woodcock served in the Army and Navy for eight years.
He's now the Veterans Program Coordinator for the Southern Chiefs Organization.
in Manitoba. A lot of First Nation veterans signed up at a higher rate to fight for the idea
of democracy overseas and freedom without being able to enjoy those same privileges when they
returned home to Canada. Last month, the Canadian Armed Forces apologized for racial discrimination
and harassment faced by past and current members. We failed you. Woodcock says that, and
Manitoba's move to enshrine Indigenous Veterans Day in law, is a big step forward. Karen Paul's
CBC News, Winnipeg.
Alberta wants to know if residents want speed limits
increased from 110 to 120 kilometers an hour
on some divided highways.
Transportation Minister Devin Duretian says several highways
are designed for the higher speeds
that Albertans are already traveling at.
So we want to make sure that we can increase the speed limits
to the actual engineered design that they are
because we're seeing a lot of Albertans
are naturally driving these speeds
because that's the way they were designed
and intended. And that is The World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Mike Miles.
