The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/27 at 18:00 EST
Episode Date: November 27, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/27 at 18:00 EST...
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from cbc news the world this hour i'm kate mcgilfrey well it could be the start of a new relationship for
alberta and ottawa great day for alberta it's a great day for canada that's prime minister mark carney
right before signing a memorandum of understanding with the province earlier today it offers ottawa's
political support for the construction of a pipeline from alberta's oil patch to bc's north coast the
MOU gives Alberta special exemptions from federal environmental laws,
including the suspension of a proposed oil and gas emissions cap.
The blowback has already begun.
Hours after that deal was signed, Canada's former environment minister,
Stephen Gilboe, announced he's resigning from federal cabinet because of it.
He says the new pipeline agreement and the special exemptions that go with it are, quote,
a serious mistake.
David Thurton reports.
Are you going on these pockets over the pipeline?
Stephen Gilbo has announced what has a lot of.
long been rumored. Canada's former environment and climate change minister is resigning from
Cabinet, although he will remain as a Liberal MP. In a statement, Gilbo said he can no longer serve
in Cabinet now that Prime Minister Mark Carney signed in accord with Alberta that could clear
the path for a bitumen pipeline to Asian markets. Gilbo says a pipeline would have a major
environmental impact crossing the Great Bear Rainforest and contributing to a significant increase
in climate pollution, and will move Canada further away from its greenhouse gas reduction targets.
Meanwhile, this reaction from the governing United Conservative Party.
We have a new pipeline coming here to Alberta, and we just learned that Steve Ingebo has resigned from the federal cabinet.
So good news all around, Mr. Speaker.
MLH chaired the news in the Alberta legislature.
David Thornton, CBC News, Ottawa.
A former grade 8 teacher in Ontario has been sentenced to four years in prison
for sex crimes against students.
Kelly Ann Jennings pleaded guilty earlier this month.
Thomas Degle has more.
Officers in Coortho Lakes, Ontario,
immediately took Kelly Ann Jennings into custody
and ushered her out of the courtroom.
Just moments after a judge handed her a four-year sentence,
saying the impact of having a child perform sexual acts
on camera for the gratification of an adult is severe.
Jennings admitted she used Snapchat
to send nude pictures and videos of herself
to three of her former students in
2023 when the boys were
14 or 15 years old.
She then demanded they sent her
explicit images and two of the victims
agreed. The 41-year-old
was suspended at first, then
fired earlier this month from her teaching job
in Port Hope east of Toronto
after pleading guilty to six charges
including invitation to sexual
touching. One victim's mother said
the emotional scars of this abuse
will follow my son for the rest
of his life. Thomas Daagl
CBC News, Toronto.
Russia's president says U.S. officials will be in Moscow next week for talks to end the war in Ukraine.
At a news conference in Kyrgyzstan, Vladimir Putin called the American peace proposal a starting point.
But he then repeated demands for Ukraine to give up territory and claimed Vladimir Zelenskyy is an illegitimate president.
Ukraine has agreed to move forward with this framework with some amendments.
And the suspect accused of critically injuring two National Guard members in Washington, D.C.,
had ties to U.S. intelligence.
Ramanula Lakanwal entered the U.S. in 2021 under a program for Afghans who assisted American
troops in Afghanistan.
Officials say he worked for a partner force of the CIA.
The U.S. attorney for D.C. says Lakanwal drove all the way from Washington State with
the intent to commit this crime.
Janine Piro says the suspect faces charges of assault with the intent to kill.
This was not just an attack.
It was a direct challenge to law and order.
our nation's capital. My message to the individual who committed these acts is you picked the
wrong target, the wrong city, and the wrong country, and you will be sorry.
Immigration officials say they're now reviewing all asylum cases approved under the Biden
administration. That is the world this hour. Get the latest headlines anytime on our website,
cbcnews.ca. For CBC News, I'm Kate McGilfrey.
Thank you.
