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Judge orders release of Columbia protester Mahmoud Khalil from detention

Mahmoud Khalil's arrest was the first under the Trump administration's crackdown on students protesting the war in Gaza.

A federal judge on Friday ordered the U.S. government to free former Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil from the immigration detention centre where he has been held since early March while the Trump administration sought to deport him over his role in pro-Palestinian protests.

U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz announced the decision from the bench in New Jersey, responding to a request from Khalil’s lawyers to free him on bail or, at the very least, move him from a Louisiana jail to New Jersey so he can be closer to his wife and newborn son.

Second body recovered after Banff National Park rock slide, three people in stable condition

The rock slide occurred around 1 p.m. Thursday leaving two dead and three injured.

The death toll from Thursday’s fatal rock slide in the Canadian Rocky Mountains has climbed to two and the three people transported to hospital are in stable condition, authorities said Friday morning.

The RCMP and Parks Canada, in a joint statement, said rescuers recovered one person’s body Friday morning at the site of the slide in Banff National Park. Authorities are notifying next of kin, but provided no further details. The statement also confirmed that the individual recovered Thursday was a 70-year-old woman who lived in Calgary.

Algoma CEO says Ottawa’s new foreign steel import quotas fall far short of what is needed during trade war

Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.-based Algoma Steel has been trying to win more business at home, but years of cheap foreign steel imports have made it harder for the company. 

Algoma Steel Group Inc. ASTL-T chief executive Michael Garcia says the federal government’s quotas around foreign imports of the metal fall far short of what is needed during a vicious trade war with the United States.

Mr. Trump in early June doubled tariffs on almost all the U.S’s foreign steel imports to 50 per cent, a level that makes it virtually impossible for Canadian producers to compete in the U.S.

Canadian retail sales up 0.3% in April, but expected to fall in May

Statistics Canada said retail sales were up in April, boosted by increases at new and used car dealers.

Canada’s retail sales were up in April on a monthly basis but were below estimates, data showed on Friday, as the momentum seen in the previous months when customers advanced purchases to beat the impact of tariffs continued.

Retail sales in April grew by 0.3 per cent to $70.11 billion from 0.8 per cent observed in the month earlier, Statistics Canada said, adding sales grew in six of the nine subsectors.

Morning Update: A guide to a fun summer

Good morning. After a heavy week of news, we offer some ideas to lighten up your summer. More on that below, plus how Ottawa is causing a stir about the digital sales tax and why Canada’s national housing agency is moving a benchmark. But first:

Today’s headlines

  • Canada to limit some foreign steel imports to help producers hit by U.S. tariffs
  • Prime Minister Mark Carney responded to Indigenous criticism of Bill C-5, saying consultation is “at the heart” of legislation
  • Missing Nova Scotia children were assessed by child welfare agency months before disappearance

© Chantelle Dorafshani

Ontario pivots to European defence market with car industry under threat

Victor Fedeli speaks at a press conference in Brampton, Ont., in 2023. Mr. Fedeli has been visiting companies in Europe to try to tap into increased defence spending.

Victor Fedeli, Ontario’s Minister of Economic Development, is following the money, and the money is gushing into defence.

Defence spending in the Western world is set to climb fast. Even Canada, a perennial laggard on the weapons front, is getting into the game. At the NATO summit in The Hague, which starts Tuesday, the 32 member states will be asked to commit 5 per cent of their GDP to defence, up from the alliance’s decade-old spending target of 2 per cent – a target Canada and seven other countries have never met.

Mike Pemberton will be next Yukon Premier after winning Liberal leadership race

No date has been set for when Mike Pemberton will be sworn in as Premier but a territorial election must take place by early November.

Mike Pemberton has been named the new leader of the Yukon Liberal Party and will be the territory’s 11th Premier.

A local businessman and longtime party insider, Pemberton won the leadership race by 13 votes over former Kwanlin Dun First Nation Chief Doris Bill.

© HO

Yukon Liberal Party Leader and premier-designate Mike Pemberton poses in this undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Yukon Liberal Party (Mandatory Credit)

Hockey Canada sex-assault trial spotlights roadblocks and missed opportunities in first London police probe

Eight months after receiving a complaint that a group of former world junior hockey players sexually assaulted a woman in a downtown hotel, London police detective Stephen Newton had reached the end of his investigation.

In a phone call with E.M., as the complainant is known because of a publication ban on her name, he told her he didn’t have enough evidence to continue his probe.

Judge points to ‘tainted’ process in Toronto’s St. Michael’s Hospital bidding process at Bondfield trial

John Aquino, former president of Bondfield Construction, walks into the Superior Court of Justice Courthouse, in Toronto, Nov. 12, 2024.

The judge presiding over the trial of two men facing criminal fraud charges stemming from the $300-million redevelopment of Toronto’s St. Michael’s Hospital says the bidding process was “tainted.”

Vas Georgiou, former chief administrative officer of St. Michael’s, and John Aquino, the former president of Bondfield Construction Co. Ltd., are each charged with two counts of fraud over $5,000. Both men have pleaded not guilty.

Victoria city council endorses plan to address homelessness, addiction and mental illness

Pandora Avenue in Victoria, B.C., in May 2024. The street is the epicentre of the city’s fentanyl crisis.

The City of Victoria has endorsed a community safety and well-being plan aimed at tackling the complex and “entangled challenges” of homelessness, addiction and mental illness playing out on city streets.

The report contains dozens of recommendations aimed at all levels of government across eight sectors, including housing, health care, service delivery, and policing and justice.

One dead, three injured in Banff National Park rock slide, officials say

A rock slide, centre, near Bow Glacier Falls north of Lake Louise, Alta. in Banff National Park on Thursday. The RCMP and Parks Canada said one person was found dead at the scene of the slide.

A rock slide killed at least one person and injured others on a popular hiking trail in the Canadian Rocky Mountains on Thursday, according to authorities.

The RCMP and Parks Canada, in a joint statement Thursday evening, confirmed one person was found dead at the scene of the slide, near Bow Glacier Falls in Banff National Park. Two people were airlifted to hospital and another was transported by ground ambulance, the statement said.

B.C. coroner won’t call inquest into death of Lisa Rauch, who was hit by police anti-riot rounds

Lisa Rauch died in December, 2019, after being hit by two plastic bullets fired by a Victoria police officer.

British Columbia’s chief coroner is taking the unusual step of not calling an inquest into the death of Lisa Rauch, who died after being hit by two plastic bullets fired by a Victoria police officer.

While an inquest is mandatory after deaths in police custody, Coroner Dr. Jatinder Baidwan said in a statement that Rauch wasn’t considered in custody at the time of her death.

B.C. downgrades status of two major wildfires in northeast

The Kiskatinaw River wildfire burns south of Dawson Creek, B.C. on June 5. There are currently about 85 wildfires actively burning in B.C. The Canadian Press/HO-B.C. Wildfire Service

Two of the three most significant wildfires in British Columbia have been downgraded and are no longer considered fires of note.

They include the 263-square-kilometre Kiskatinaw River wildfire in northeastern B.C., which was deemed on Wednesday to be no longer out of control.

© HO

The Kiskatinaw River wildfire burns south of Dawson Creek, B.C. in this Thursday, June 5, 2025, handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, B.C. Wildfire Service *MANDATORY CREDIT*

Outdated forestry rules increase wildfire risk, B.C. Forest Practices Board says

More than a million B.C. residents live in areas with high or extreme wildfire risk, board chair Keith Atkinson says.

British Columbia’s Forest Practices Board says a two-year investigation has found outdated rules and unclear responsibility are stopping forestry from becoming a wildfire prevention tool.

The independent body says it examined forestry operations between 2019 and 2022 in areas where communities and forests meet, including the Sea to Sky, Cariboo-Chilcotin and Peace districts.

Missing Nova Scotia children were assessed by child welfare agency months before disappearance

Four-year-old Jack Sullivan, left, and six-year-old Lilly Sullivan were reported missing seven weeks ago.

Nova Scotia’s child protection agency investigated the living conditions of Jack and Lilly Sullivan months before their mysterious disappearance from a rural part of the province in early May – a case file that has been reviewed by the minister responsible for child welfare.

Scott Armstrong, Nova Scotia’s Minister of Opportunities and Social Development, confirmed in an interview that the agency had a file on the children prior to their disappearance, but said it would be inappropriate for him to discuss the agency’s findings.

© Ingrid Bulmer

A growing memorial for missing siblings Lilly Sullivan, 6, and her brother, Jack, 4, outside the RCMP detachment in Stellarton, NS.

Canada to limit foreign steel imports to help producers hit by U.S. tariffs

Prime Minister Mark Carney in a press conference in Ottawa on Thursday said the government will attempt to limit steel imports from countries that don’t have a free-trade agreement with Canada to 2024 levels.

Canada is cracking down on the dumping of cheap foreign steel into the country by imposing new trade restrictions aimed at helping domestic producers reeling from U.S. President Donald Trump’s punishing tariffs.

Prime Minister Mark Carney, in a news conference in Ottawa on Thursday, said the government will attempt to limit steel imports from countries that don’t have free-trade agreements with Canada to 2024 levels.

© COLE BURSTON

The Canadian Steel Producers Association, which represents 17 companies, including Stelco, pictured, has repeatedly advocated for antidumping duties to ease the impact of U.S. tariffs.

Oil and gas firms spent billions on Indigenous businesses, CAPP survey finds

Workers stop for lunch at the arena, one of many amenities and infrastructure projects the Indigenous community of 700 in the oilsands region in Fort McKay, Alberta has been able to finance through relationship with industry.

A survey commissioned by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers shows oil and gas companies spent more than $14 billion procuring goods and services from Indigenous-affiliated businesses between 2021 and 2023.

Data science firm iTOTEM Analytics collected numbers from 12 members of the industry advocacy group that together represent half of Alberta’s oil and natural gas production.

Nova Scotia offers $150,000 reward for information on missing children

Six-year-old Lilly Sullivan, left, and four-year-old Jack Sullivan went missing on May 2 in the community of Lansdowne Station, N.S.

The Nova Scotia government is offering a reward of as much as $150,000 for information about the disappearance of siblings Lilly and Jack Sullivan, who have been missing for nearly seven weeks.

The children, aged six and four, were reported missing May 2 from their mobile home in Lansdowne Station, in rural Pictou County. The case prompted one of the largest ground searches in Nova Scotia’s history, with hundreds of volunteers, aided by drones, helicopters and rescue dogs, scouring a densely wooded area marked by old mine shafts and lakes.

Doug Ford apologizes for controversial comments after meeting with First Nations chiefs on Bill 5

Doug Ford apologized Thursday for his comment accusing First Nations of 'coming hat in hand,' which Indigenous leaders have since condemned as 'appalling' and perpetuating 'racist stereotypes.'

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has apologized for warning that First Nations cannot “keep coming hat in hand all the time to the government” if they oppose mining or other resource projects – comments Indigenous leaders condemned as racist.

The Premier met on Thursday with chiefs from the Anishinabek Nation, which represents 39 of Ontario’s 133 First Nations chiefs, to discuss his government’s contentious legislation to speed up resource projects, known as Bill 5.

How are you celebrating Canada Day this year? Share your story with The Globe

Canadians are gearing up to have one of their biggest Canada Day celebrations ever.

Every year, Canadians across the country celebrate Canada Day in a myriad of ways — some blast The Tragically Hip and snack on s’mores at the cottage, others light fireworks and share popsicles at their local park. But this year, it could look a little different.

Angered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to turn Canada into the ‘51st State,’ Canadians are raising the Maple Leaf and getting more patriotic than ever, cancelling American vacations and buying local at the grocery store. Canadians are riding the red-and-white wave, and gearing up to have one of their biggest July 1 celebrations ever.

Budget watchdog Yves Giroux says he can’t evaluate Liberal government’s fiscal targets

Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux Giroux says the federal government’s deficit for the past fiscal year likely came in at $46-billion, about $4.3-billion lower than estimates in March.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer said Thursday he can’t properly assess whether the federal government is on track to meet its fiscal targets because the Liberals’ new budget benchmarks haven’t been defined.

Without a spring budget, that means Ottawa’s budgetary watchdog is in the dark on how recently announced plans to boost Canada’s defence spending and cut income taxes will affect the government’s fiscal position.

Morning Update: Let’s talk about measles

Good morning. Our health team has been on the ground as measles cases surge in Ontario and Alberta – more on that below, along with a name change for Hudson’s Bay and the U.S. Supreme Court’s ban on youth gender-affirming care. But first:

Today’s headlines

Ottawa’s omnibus major-projects and internal-trade bill clears committee

Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc defended Bill C-5 at committee Wednesday, rebuffing criticisms that the bill could lead to government corruption.

The Liberal government’s controversial legislation that would let cabinet quickly grant federal approvals for big industrial projects like mines, ports and pipelines sailed through committee in the early hours of Thursday.

A House of Commons panel sat from Wednesday afternoon to after midnight reviewing Bill C-5 in a hurried study, as the Liberal government seeks to pass it through the chamber by week’s end.

Canadians fleeing war in Iran face obstacles in absence of diplomatic ties

After war erupted in Iran, Canadian Dr. Panid Borhanjoo realized he would have to escape the country without support from the federal government.

Canadian physician Panid Borhanjoo woke up on Friday morning in Iran’s cottage country to an onslaught of messages from family and friends asking if he was safe.

He turned on the news in his relatives’ home in Mazandaran, a lush, coastal province on the Caspian Sea. Israeli missiles had destroyed Iranian nuclear facilities and killed high-ranking military personnel in Tehran, about 200 kilometres away. War had erupted.

Doug Ford accuses First Nations of ‘coming hat in hand’ for government money, despite treating them ‘like gold’

Ford wants to declare the mineral-rich Ring of Fire region in northern Ontario a 'special economic zone' using Bill 5.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he is willing to give First Nations what they want for their support in developing mines, but they cannot “keep coming hat in hand all the time to the government” for more money.

Ford is set to meet Thursday with several dozen chiefs who are part of Anishinabek Nation, which represents 39 First Nations in the province.

U.S. to screen social media accounts of student visa applicants under new rules

The U.S. State Department said new applicants who refuse to set their social media accounts to 'public' and allow them to be reviewed may be rejected.

The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it is restarting the suspended process for foreigners applying for student visas but all applicants will now be required to unlock their social media accounts for government review.

The department said consular officers will be on the lookout for posts and messages that could be deemed hostile to the United States, its government, culture, institutions or founding principles.

Report shows that 60% of Canadians see improved perception of women’s sport

General manager Monica Wright Rogers (left) and Teresa Resch, president of the Toronto Tempo, are working toward the team's inaugural WNBA season in 2026.

New data on the explosive growth of women’s sport in Canada underscores its rising popularity, but also reveals that its structural supports still lag behind.

Jessica Doherty, vice-president of strategy and growth at Torque Strategies, presented findings from a new national survey on Wednesday morning at the espnW Summit Canada at Toronto’s Evergreen Brick Works. One of the study’s main findings is that 60 per cent of Canadians believe perceptions of women’s sport have improved over the past three years.

Missing three-year-old Montreal girl found alive in Ontario, mother remains in custody

Crown prosecutor Lili Prévost-Gravel speaks to media following a court hearing on Wednesday for Rachel-Ella Todd, the mother of a three-year-old who was found Wednesday.

A three-year-old Montreal girl reported missing on Sunday by her mother was found alive in Eastern Ontario on Wednesday afternoon, minutes after her mother appeared in court while facing charges of child abandonment.

The Sûreté du Québec and Ontario Provincial Police confirmed in a Wednesday evening press conference that the girl was found around 3 p.m. along Highway 417, near St. Albert, Ont. She was alone but conscious and able to speak with officers, and is now doing “well” after being examined by a medical team in hospital, OPP Staff Sergeant Shaun Cameron said.

Toronto police arrest 20 people linked to group involved in tow truck-related violence

Police say that 15 per cent of Toronto’s shootings in 2025 so far were related to tow truck disputes. 

An investigation into tow truck industry violence across the Greater Toronto Area has resulted in the arrests of 20 people who are facing more than 100 charges combined, police said Wednesday.

Toronto police said they launched a wiretap investigation dubbed Project Yankee last October to gather evidence of a group committing crimes to control the towing industry.

Measles resurgence exposes fault lines over vaccines and faith in Alberta town

The quiet streets of Taber, a small town in Southern Alberta, still hold reminders of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Taped to the windows of the Taber town office and a local bank are posters that encourage physical distancing. Pinned to the fence of a home near the only major highway that runs through the town is an anti-Trudeau tarp expressing support for protestors who opposed vaccine mandates during the 2022 Coutts border blockade.

© Sarah B Groot

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