NB Media Co-Op: The F-35 aircraft and resistance to Canadian militarism

Another form of pressure on the F-35 supply chain has been at a national level. In March 2024, after months of organizing and pressure, Canada’s House of Commons passed a non-binding motion that officially called on the Government of Canada to “cease the further authorization and transfer of arms exports to Israel.” Following this motion, then foreign affairs minister Mélanie Joly confirmed that the government would halt future arms sales to Israel.

Though that assertion was a positive step, there are still many loopholes, as detailed by Project Ploughshares. In particular, as with the parts of the F-35 aircraft, Canada continues to indirectly arm Israel by exporting to the United States.

This is one of the loopholes that NDP MP Jenny Kwan (Vancouver East) has been targeting through a Private Member’s Bill in the House of Commons. The reaction from the Liberal party has been unsurprisingly negative, and the NDP lacks the seats in Parliament to force the government to comply. Yet, this Bill represents one way people around the country can exert some influence, by calling upon their Members of Parliament to support this effort.

The F-35 is a force for destruction. It is responsible not just for the devastating situation in Palestine but also, most recently, the attack on Venezuela that led to the abduction of President Nicolas Madura also featured F-35 aircraft. Canadians should try to do what they can to obstruct the production of this destructive weapon.

Click image or link to read the news story - https://nbmediacoop.org/2026/01/11/the-f-35-aircraft-and-resistance-to-canadian-militarism/

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OTTAWA — Housing Minister Gregor Robertson tabled legislation on Thursday to establish the federal government’s new affordable housing agency, but acknowledged Build Canada Homes has no set targets on how many homes it will build.

In December, the Parliamentary Budget Officer released a report that estimated the agency’s efforts would result in 26,000 directly funded units over the next five years. The federal government has said the report does not take into account the units that will result from Build Canada Homes’ partnerships with private developers and its $51-billion infrastructure fund.

Still, the PBO estimates federal spending on housing programs is set to decline by 56 per cent, from $9.8 billion in 2025-26 to $4.3 billion in 2028-29, due to expiration of funding for existing programs and cuts set out in Budget 2025.

“Canada’s non-profit housing stock has dwindled to only about four and a half percent of its total housing stock, well below the G7 average,” said NDP housing critic Jenny Kwan, in an interview with the National Post. “Countries that are doing well in addressing the housing situation is sitting at about 20 per cent.”

Click image or link to read the news story - https://nationalpost.com/news/minister-says-new-housing-agency-has-no-targets-on-number-of-homes-it-will-build

 

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