
Marc Perreault 🇨🇦
36.5K posts

Marc Perreault 🇨🇦
@marcusp11
Husband, dad, follower of Jesus, friend and hockey fan.


DONOVAN: The new Tower of Babel? How mass immigration is transforming Alberta's classrooms westernstandard.news/opinion/donova…

Another great Spencer Pratt ad 😂🔥

Welcome to Wrexham premieres tonight. And the first episode will CRUSH you. Cheers!



🚨 NEW: PETER DOOCY says a judge’s ruling today that Trump’s name has to come off the Trump Kennedy Center is “too much for the President.” “In a post, President Trump concludes: ‘I have instructed the Department of Commerce to make all necessary arrangements with Congress to allow a full and complete transfer of this Institution, giving them the responsibility for its Operation, Maintenance, and Management.’” @pdoocy: “His argument is if they are going to take my name off it and they are not going to let me fix it, it’s not worth my time.” @BretBaier: “That’s big news for Washington on a Friday afternoon.”


Has the #UCP become a full-blown separatist party? Danielle Smith insists it hasn't. But Senator @charlesadler says if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck... UCP members: how do you feel about all this? 👀 FULL: rtrj.info/052926Adler 🎧 FULL: rtrj.info/052926


@PeterEmon1 Of course not. But thanks for asking!


@deAdder Brian Lilley is one of the best political commentators we have in this country. There. I said it.


“I don’t think that’s a very accurate statement… starting a new country isn’t cheap.”—@JasonNixonAB arguing an independent Alberta wouldn’t be more prosperous. He says he’ll be presenting the numbers on why the province should stay in Canada. LISTEN: traffic.megaphone.fm/CORU6238373451…





For the record. Mark Carney’s address to the Economic Club of New York was a disciplined, strategically framed intervention that should resonate with business leaders on both sides of the border. In tone and content, it was exactly the kind of message markets look for from a G7 head of government: pro‑growth, geopolitically literate, and grounded in concrete avenues for investment and partnership. Carney’s central assertion – that a strong Canada can “help make America great again” – recasts the Canada–U.S. relationship in explicitly pragmatic terms. Rather than positioning Canada as a counterweight to U.S. economic nationalism, he presented it as a force multiplier for the United States’ own strategic objectives in energy security, supply chains, AI infrastructure, and re‑industrialization. That framing is shrewd. It acknowledges the realities of a more assertive U.S. trade and industrial policy while offering a collaborative model that can lower costs, reduce risk, and accelerate execution for American firms and investors. The speech was also notable for its business‑ready specificity. By highlighting Canada’s role as a reliable provider of energy, critical minerals, food, advanced manufacturing, and clean power, Carney translated geopolitical themes into investable opportunities. His emphasis on rule‑of‑law institutions, regulatory predictability, and a growing network of trade and investment partnerships positioned Canada as an attractive platform for capital seeking both exposure to North American growth and insulation from global volatility. Equally important was the tone: confident but not complacent, aligned with U.S. strategic priorities without being deferential. Carney managed to speak fluently to Trump’s “America First” agenda while articulating Canada’s own interests with clarity and self‑respect. For corporate leaders, financiers, and policymakers, the result was a reassuring message: Ottawa understands the new landscape, is prepared to work within it, and is focused on building a North American framework that can support durable growth, competitiveness, and security over the coming decade.





