The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/12/13 at 05:00 EST
Episode Date: December 13, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/12/13 at 05:00 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.
borough.ca.
From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Mike Miles.
The Federal Health Minister says she's keeping an eye out
to see if some provinces are going too far
in embracing private health care.
In an interview with CBC Radio's of the House,
Marjorie Michelle says she's also concerned
about the impact U.S. public health deficient decisions
are having here in Canada.
Host of the House, Catherine Cullen, as more.
We are trying to keep everybody under the Canada health tent.
Federal health minister Marjorie Michelle says she doesn't believe there's room for more private health care in Canada,
though she emphasizes her desire to work with provinces.
Last month, Alberta announced plans to let doctors work in the public and private pay for access system simultaneously,
a first in Canada.
Michelle says federal lawyers are still examining Alberta's legislation, which hasn't become law yet.
Another subject on the minister's mind is the U.S. Health Administration's approach to vaccines.
Recently, a U.S. panel recommended rolling back hepatitis B vaccines for all healthy newborns.
Health Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. has regularly contradicted scientific consensus.
Could that also cause damage here in Canada?
I think he will make the damage if we are buying what they are saying.
Do you think Canadians are buying what he's saying?
Some.
Michelle says she's working with organizations on the ground to help get more Canadians
vaccinated. Catherine Cullen, CBC News, Ottawa.
And you can hear more about this on the House right after the 9 o'clock edition of World Report
or wherever you get your podcasts. The governing liberals are suggesting more conservative
floor crossings could be on the way. Toronto area Michael Maup MP defected
Thursday night leaving the Liberals just one seat short of a majority. Government House
leader Steve McKinnon says he and other grits have been hearing from Tories ticked
with the party's leadership.
They realize, like we do, that we're at a turning point.
They realize like we do, that we're in a trade war, and that serious solutions are required.
Ma is the second conservative to join the Liberals in recent weeks,
Tory leader Pierre Polyevs facing a leadership review next month.
We're hearing now about how Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Karina Machado
defied a travel ban and was smuggled out of the country to arrive in Oslo
to meet with the Nobel Peace Prize Committee.
Brian Stern runs a rescue company that specializes in dangerous missions.
There was a land component, a maritime component, and also an air component, a small air component.
I could tell you that we were not detected because if we were, they would have certainly killed us all.
So I feel very confident in saying that we operated undetected.
Stern says he met Machado at sea.
After fleeing Venezuela in disguise, she ported his boat for a 14-hour journey on choppy seas, followed by a flight.
While Machado says she wants to return to Venezuela, Sturm doesn't recommend it.
Machado had been in hiding since August 24.
This is the fifth anniversary of a Newfoundland and Labrador group that's been feeding people struggling with food insecurity.
Sharing the harvest has donated thousands of kilos of locally foraged or hunted food like moose to dozens of organizations in the province.
Mark Quinn reports.
Thank you.
Over the last five years, sharing the harvest has donated.
more than 1,500 kilos of moose meat to food banks.
The group's founder, Barry Fordham, says there's also been fruit, fish, and even seal.
Fordham is part of a movement to make food that's foraged or hunted,
sometimes called country food, more available in restaurants and food banks across the province.
But he fears he's only making a dent in a growing problem.
The food insecurity crisis, as I call it now.
Nick Kelly operates the Single Parents Association's Food Bank in St.
John's. He says country food like Moose is prized by the hundreds of families helped by the
association. The response I get back is really, really good. You know, people are just really happy.
Bortem and Kelly are thankful for the generosity they see at this time of year, and they hope
donors will remember the need doesn't end when the holidays do. Mark Quinn, CBC News, St. John's.
And that is The World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Mike Miles.
Thank you.
