Event today: Is the Carney government delivering on its promises?

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

EVENT TODAY

Panel: Canada at a Crossroads: Evaluating the Carney Government’s First Nine Months

Tues., Dec. 2 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

When Mark Carney won the 2025 Canadian Federal election, he assumed leadership of a nation facing multiple structural problems and widespread discontent. Canadians had united against threats from the United States, but major debates remained over issues such as housing costs, immigration, and Canada’s stagnant economy. During the campaign, Carney distanced the Liberal Party from its Trudeau-era platform and promised to be a steady hand to deliver urgently needed reform. Nine months on, how well is the Carney government delivering on those promises? Join our panel representing Canada’s major political parties as they debate Carney’s performance in tackling the country’s most pressing challenges.

About the Panelists

Parm Kahlon is a founding partner and strategist at Core Firm. She served as Special Assistant to Alberta premier Rachel Notley, and worked with various MLAs with the BC NDP. She has also served as managing director for UFCW 1518, one of British Columbia’s oldest and largest unions.

Jordan O’Brien is the cofounder and partner of the public relations and consulting firm Porter O’Brien. He has advised chief executives, cabinet ministers, and leaders of the opposition. He also worked for the Government of New Brunswick for ten years, including as chief of staff and deputy minister in the Office of the Premier.

Jordan Paquet is the vice-president of Bluesky Strategy Group. Over the course of his nearly 20-year career, he has worked across multiple levels of Canadian government, including the Prime Minister’s Office under Stephen Harper; as Principal Secretary to Conservative Opposition leader Rona Ambrose; and most recently as the Chief of Staff in Prince Edward Island’s Government Members Office.

This event is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Bluma Appel Fund, the Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco, and The Porter O’Brien Agency.

This event will have a remote attendance option via Zoom. Please select the “virtual attendance” in the RSVP form to receive the link.

If you require an accommodation to participate fully in this event, please let us know with as much advance notice as possible by emailing canada@berkeley.edu.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley 213 Philosophy Hall #2308 | Berkeley, CA 94720 US

Canadian Tunnel Art at Vimy Ridge

Vimy Ridge located in northern France near the city of Arras was a strategically significant position on high ground over the Douai Plain in the first world war. It was occupied by German forces in 1914 who fortified the position with trench networks, deep bunkers and overlapping machine gun positions. Attempts by the French and British to capture the ridge resulted in 150,000 deaths over the next several years.

When England declared war on Germany in 1914, as part of the Commonwealth Canada too was at war. In 1917 the Canadian Corps was tasked with taking the ridge and began preparation. On April 9, 1917 the Canadians advanced under a creeping barrage of artillery fire, a tactical innovation they developed and trained for in the months before the attack. By afternoon most of the ridge was captured and by April 12th Canadians controlled the high ground.

The geology from northern France to the south of England is comprised of a thick chalk layer four to six feet below the surface. In medieval times it was mined as a building material, cut into blocks and dried for construction. Many of the oldest buildings in the area are built from chalk. Thousands of chalk mines are scattered across northern France. In 1917 one such mine called Maison Blanche approximately one mile from Vimy Ridge, was occupied by Canadian forces in advance of the attack.

The space below ground offered high ceilings and protection from bombardment. Soldiers ate, slept and waited for the inevitable. Many left marks on the chalk walls which could be scraped smooth and easily carved. Some left simple signatures with a map pen, names, service numbers, battalion or home town. Others created stunning carvings of service badges, regimental icons or personal images.

The battle for Vimy Ridge was an overwhelming success but the cost was great with 10,600 Canadians killed or wounded in the advance. In 1936 a spectacular white limestone monument was erected on the site to honor over 11,285 Canadian soldiers lost on the battlefields of northern France with no known grave. Their names are inscribed on the outer walls.

In 2006 the mine was rediscovered and investigated by the Durand Group from England. They are a volunteer organization that searches out and documents underground tunnels and subterranean features occupied by soldiers during the first world war. What they found and what makes Maison Blanche unique, is the proliferation and quality of Canadian marks left throughout the mine. Most are so well preserved, they appear to have been completed only yesterday.

In cooperation with the Durand Group, The Canadigm Group of London Ontario has documented, photographed and 3D scanned hundreds of carvings and inscriptions in the mine. Scans can be 3D printed, accurate in every detail and shared with fellow Canadians or anyone interested in the history. In October of this year, Canadigm returned to Maison Blanche with new scanner technology and scanned approximately three hundred inscriptions. Below are some of the images captured including one of the stars and stripes left by an American soldier.

Norm Dinner
The Canadigm Group

Submitted by Comrade J.D. Hartnagel

Salute! November 2025

An item from Veterans Affairs Canada that may be of interest to members.


November 2025

The latest issue of Salute! is now available.

Read Salute! online
Let us know what you think about Salute! by emailing us.

Sincerely,

Salute! Team

Veterans Affairs Canada

You’re receiving this email because you subscribe to Veterans Affairs Canada’s consultation and Salute! emails.

Veterans Affairs Canada
PO Box 6000
Matane, QC G4W 0E4

China’s secret war in Canada

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Weekly Feature
Weekly Feature

Dennis Molinaro’s latest book explores Chinese interference in Canada. [Penguin Random House Canada]

China’s secret war in Canada

STORY BY DENNIS MOLINARO

The western world has been focused on the threat of terrorism for the past two decades and for good reason. The post-9/11 “war on terror” sought to combat and end a substantial peril to the West and prevent more large-scale attacks. It succeeded on several fronts, although the threat could never be completely eliminated. But when it came to the West’s interactions with nation-states such as the People’s Republic of China (PRC), they have been governed by a specific delusion for half a century. Canada, like the U.S., believed that if it did business with China, extended a hand of friendship, China would transform itself into a liberal-democratic country. Trade would lead to freedom. But Canada was wrong. Beijing never considered joining a liberal order and instead used Canada as a backdoor to the U.S. and as a means of exploiting resources and technology.

READ MORE

Black Friday Sale!
The Briefing
The Briefing

Private George Lawrence Price. [Canadian Virtual War Memorial]

Historian Teresa Iacobelli on a Canadian tragedy in WW I’s final minutes

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

No one wants to be the last casualty of war.

It’s an inevitable, inescapable, reality of any conflict where blood has been spilled before, a looming eventuality that a final soldier must fall. It may well be days or hours prior to the end. For Canadian Great War Private George Lawrence Price, it was minutes.

In a sense, the Port Williams, N.S., native’s loss was no different than any that had preceded him. Price wore no Victoria Cross on his chest nor boasted a reputation becoming a glorified retelling in the history books. Prominence instead found the 25-year-old for being in the wrong place at the wrong time on Nov. 11, 1918.

READ MORE

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