May's Green Party stuck in reverse
Toronto Star|July 13, 2024
It should be the Green Party's moment.
ALTHIA RAJ
May's Green Party stuck in reverse

Abnormal extreme heat waves are affecting large parts of the country, sparking wildfire and health and safety concerns.

Globally, the past 12 months have been the hottest on record since, well, ever, according to the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service. Over the past year, global surface temperature increased 1.5 C above average preindustrial levels.

Politically, the Liberals are unpopular. The NDP hasn't been able to capitalize on the public's desire for change. There is opportunity, especially with a Conservative leader who is moving his party further to the right and appears to believe climate change can be addressed solely through technology.

And yet public support for the Green Party of Canada hasn't budged beyond five per cent in the past two years, according to Abacus Data. The party's potential voter pool has shrunk in the last five years, with only 28 per cent of those surveyed now saying they would even consider voting Green. And concern with the Greens' top-line issue climate change - has dropped, replaced by concerns about immigration, health care, housing and economic issues, such as affordability.

If that's not bad enough, this month 53 per cent of Abacus survey respondents didn't recognize Elizabeth May when shown a picture of the longtime Green Party leader. And last year, the Greens had their worst fundraising result since 2012, raising less than $2 million.

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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One man is now poised to control every major men’s pro sports team in Toronto. Edward Rogers will have achieved his long-desired goal of total power over Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE), if a $4.7-billion deal to snap up Bell Canada’s 37.5 per cent stake is completed, making Rogers Communications the majority owner of the Maple Leafs, Raptors, Argonauts and Toronto FC.For a decade, MLSE’s board had been split between Rogers, Bell and MLSE chair Larry Tanenbaum’s Kilmer Sports.

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Toronto Star

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The GO Transit platform where a woman was struck by an express train on Tuesday has been partially closed for several months due to construction at the station, causing crowding during rush hour.Toronto police said the 46-year-old woman was walking near the edge of the platform at Long Branch GO Station when she was hit by an express train bypassing the station at around 8:15 a.m. She was rushed to hospital in life-threatening condition. No update on her condition was available Wednesday.

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Sports needs characters we can root for, and characters we can blame, writes Edward Keenan. Rogers buying Bell's MLSE stake will supply more of the latter, starting with chairman Edward Rogers.For a sports fan, there’s something satisfying about that. For years with the Leafs in particular, the owner was a pension plan, and it was hard to tell if its controlling executives (never mind the teachers whose money they were spending) cared about hockey one way or the other. And whether they did or not, how could you figure out who was responsible for what they did as a result?

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

Feds Impose New Limits on International Students - Immigration Minister Marc Miller has announced new limits on international students Wednesday, saying Canada is facing an untenable number of people wishing to come here.

Enrolment cuts, work permit restrictions will further slow population growth. Immigration Minister Marc Miller has announced new limits on international students Wednesday, saying Canada is facing an untenable number of people wishing to come here.Canada will reduce the annual cap on study permits by another 10 per cent in 2025 and restrict eligibility for international graduates' work permits to better meet labour market needs, amid continuing public pressure to tame runaway population growth.

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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