Thank you for listening to Depiction's Media Radio. Welcome to Policy Rights to show about government policy and human rights. Welcome back to Policy and Racia and Depictions Media Radio. I'm your host, Michael Cologgs. In this next episode, we will have Conservative leader Pierre Provier as he delivers remarks about rising costs of living and takes questions from reporters while he's in Vancouver, and he responds to
questions about the end of the province the provincial port strike. Well, the port strike did end, and they came to some sort of a tentative agreement and goods will will move through that port in Vancouver once again, and the flow of goods is good for the economy. As you're going to hear um,
Pierre Provier actually say um. He's also going to make some comments because while he was in Vancouver there was a firefighter, nineteen year old young lady, brave firefighter who did die trying to clear a path so that they could contain the fire. A tree fell on her and she lost her life while in the line of duty. The impact. He's also talking about the impact
of carbon pricing. I don't know about anywhere else, but especially here in British Columbia, we have some of the highest fuel prices because of the carbon pricing that you feel at the pump. And I know in other areas where it gets colder that they also felt it during the wintertime when it came to buying fuel, oil and other things in there will be another thing that mister
Popier will probably address in his discussion. Also, we're going to have two segments with Justin Trudeau as he met with Maramike Savage in Halifax and they're discussing the ongoing North American Indigenous Games and other events that were happening there. And again Justin Trudeau is going to appear as he delivers remarks at a canoeing event with athletes from the again the North American Indigenous Games in Darmouth, Nova Scotia.
So why don't we listen to segments and then I'll come back with some final comments. I'm glad to be here with my beautiful wife Anna, and come on over, Bob. Bob Zimmer, member of Parliament for Northern British Columbia, former school teacher, and I'll start with a question, how is it possible for a single mother to pay thirty seven hundred dollars a month in rent for a two bedroom apartment. Well, that is what's necessary here in
Vancouver. Today we got news from rent dot Ca that the cost of rent across Canada has doubled, has increased faster than at any time in Canadian history. Housing costs under Justin Trudeau have doubled, brandt has doubled, The average mortgage payment has doubled. The needed down payment for the average home has doubled. It now takes twenty five years in Canada's big as city to save up for a down payment. It used to be before Trudeau, twenty five years
is what it took to pay off a mortgage. Now it's what it takes just to get a mortgage. Nine and ten of our young people believe they will never afford a home. This is the first generation of youth in Canadian history that has given up on home ownership. Housing used to be cheap in Canada. Used to be you got a job, you graduated, by your mid twenties, you could afford a home. But after eight years of Justin
Trudeau, that dream, like everything else, is broken. And then there's grocery prices which are up more than twenty one percent in the last three years alone. After the Trudeau NDP carbon tax applied on the farmers who make the food and the truckers who ship the food, and therefore applies on all the food itself. After eight years of Justin Trudeau, one in five Canadians are now actually skipping meals because they can't afford the price of food. One point
five million going to food banks. Food banks are now oversubscribed, Our homeless shelters are overflowing, and decent people are flowing. Are now living in the streets. I just came from Penticton, where one community support worker told me there are now seventy year old's middle class people living in their cars because they can no longer afford the rent. They've been renovicted. The landlords come in and make small renovation, kick the tenants out and double the rent. They
have nowhere to go. We saw a story just yesterday of a lady who's a nurse. A nurse living in her van. This is life in Canada after eight years of Justin Trudeau. It's not only unaffordable to eat, heat and house yourself in Trudeau's Canada, it is also a dangerous place crime is soaring right across the country. Just yesterday we saw the horrible story of a
mother stabbed by an offender who had previously violated sixteen probation orders. The catch and release criminal justice system that Justin Trudeau legislated and the NDP supported, allows the same repeat violent offenders to commit one offense after another and be released onto the streets without consequences. Here in Vancouver, the same forty offenders were arrested six thousand times six thousand arrests for forty offenders. That's one hundred and fifty
arrests per offender per year. No wonder crime is rocketing after eight years of Justin Trudeau. The good news is that Canada was not like this before Trudeau, and it won't be like this after he's gone. We're going to turn the hurt that he and the NDP have caused into the hope that Canadians need. We know how to do it. We know the common sense solutions to
all of these problems. We're going to bring home lower prices by axing the liberal carbon tax and by ending the inflationary deficits that have driven inflation to record highs by capping spending and balancing the budget. We can bring down inflation, which will allow the Bank of Canada to reduce interest rates on struggling mortgage holders.
And as for the carbon tax, we know that British Columbia has its own tax, but Trudeau and the federal NDP are forcing British Columbians to raise that tax by three hundred percent over the next six and a half years. A Polyev government will cancel those tax hikes and make it possible for prices to come down. We're going to bring home powerful paychecks by cutting income taxes so that hard work once again pays off. And we're going to make it possible
for our brilliant immigrants to work in they are chosen and trained professions. Right now, are immigrants come here and they're banned from working as doctors, nurses, engineers because there's no way for them to prove their qualifications quickly or efficiently. A Polyev government will bring the provinces together to push a blue Seal professional standard so that our immigrants can take a task, prove they're qualified, and
get to work serving as doctors and nurses. We have nineteen thousand immigrant doctors, thirty two thousand immigrant nurses prevented from working. If they could take a Blue Seal exam, they could get to work and relieve the congestion in our hospitals. We're going to bring home as people can afford. We know why housing prices are rising. We don't have enough homes. Vancouver is now the third most expensive housing market in the world, worse than New York, Los
Angeles, Chicago, London, England, and even Singapore. Why well, we have the fewest houses per capita on planet Earth. Why is that we all? According to the CMHC in a report that just came out yesterday, Vancouver and Toronto are the slowest to deliver building permits. Slow permits mean higher
prices, and higher prices mean Canadians can't afford to put roof overhead. A POLLI have led government will incentivize our cities to speed up and lower the cost to building permits and free up land so builders can build, build, build. I'll require Vancouver, Toronto and all other big cities boost home building permits
by fifteen percent per year or they'll lose federal grants. Those that beat that fifteen percent target will get a building bonus and will require every federally funded transit station have high density apartments built all around and sometimes even on top of the stations. So our youth and our seniors don't even need to live next don't even need to have a car, They can live right next to the bus and train. We know how these construction projects can move ahead because the Squamish
people have shown the way here in Vancouver. The Squamish have their own reserve land. They don't have to follow the bureaucracy at City Hall. And so the Squamish are building six thousand units of housing on ten acres of land. Six thousand deserving families will have a home. Why because the gatekeepers were whatever the way, and the Squamish used common sense to get a project to prove
and shovels in the ground. That's we're going to replicate. We're gonna sell off six thousand federal buildings and thousands of acres of federal land so that we can build, build, build, and once again the dream of homeownership, which was achievable only eight years ago, we'll be realized once again. We're gonna bring home safe streets. We're gonna end catch and release. A Polly have led government we'll bring in jail, not bail, jail not bail for
repeat violent offenders. We'll ban heroin, crack and other hard drugs, and we'll put the money into recovery and treatment to help bring home our loved ones drug free. This is common sense. It's a common sense of the common people united for our common home. Your home, my home, our home. Let's bring it home. Thank you very much, thank you. Questions Okay, we'll have time for a few questions from the flum thank you.
But you need from like commuted premier example towns. They just personal pre k page, just personneuri a Vancouver saut trois mill c sand just champ done camp, the sabat port and mayor salar um aber dabex Caban the chaufege on Italy round leg and coupon. Example for Permett, they checked the paper round on a Vita Saint Jean de grev Alaven Pascuala factor don't say Prussia, voila shows oquaybeck Passon, doble o Quebec, don't consecutly Travay when the sonorio a da
Vontage. There the accused the settin flac donkey for Devontage de mn Paul Trava, let's really tax lampo aliminally deficit in travas pleas pail factor, Robert Stravai, QUI fon, thank you very much. Listen, I understand why the workers here in Vancouver were so desperate and needed to fight for their better wages and working conditions. The exorbitant inflation has made it impossible for these hard working employees to feed themselves and house themselves. The way to avoid these strikes is
to bring home powerful paychecks and lower costs. And that's why I'll eliminate the carbon tax to bring down the cost of living, balance the budget to lower interest rates and inflation, lower income tax so our workers bring home more of each dollar they are And I will incentivize our municipalities to speed up and lower the cost of building so that working class people can again enjoy the dream that they have earned of homeownership. And I can ask the next question in English,
and you can then swert in French and English. Vcs faced with a white fire season like never before. Uh firefighter lost her life yesterday in a revol store. How do you react to that? In France and English? Place the Premier me efou tra MUCORDNA repounds or for a zot Urgan's um conn
with afer with problem comes part consulvatorus t met now develope plan. The muc ordname repounds a se Jean, the Durgans pasque infaumu sibly no source port contre problem, consample um a news alone, donal platform, electoral present plan or muc or the names and thank you very much for your question. We offer our condolences to the families of the lost firefighter. We believe that the government in Ottawa, the federal government needs to have a better coordinated approach to responding
to forest fires, floods and other natural disasters. We have resources scattered across the country that need to be coordinated and deployed more quickly so the places that have surplus resources can quickly make them available to places that are in desperate need to respond to a natural disaster. And part of our election platform will be to counter these natural disasters with better centrally coordinated responses in cooperation with local and
provincial authorities. Thank you, Hi, mister Paul. Yes, Rob Brownridge City TV an Omni TV. So I'm looking here at a article from the Journal of the European Economic Association, published just on March sixteenth as a major international study found no significant impact of carbon taxes on inflation in Europe and a slight deflationary impact in Canada attributed to the stimulus to investment and supply in non
carbon intensive industries being provided by the carbon tax. So what's your response to that and what hard data evidence do you have that the carbon tax is a major significant driver of inflation in Canada opposed to the economic rebound in de band following the COVID pandemic health restrictions. So what to data do I have showing that the carbon tax drives up the cost of living? Well? The Bank of Canada. So the Bank of Canada governor has already said that the carbon
tax contributes to inflation. There all kinds of socialist interest groups that want to justify higher taxes with phony studies. But we know very simply, when you raise the cost of the gas and diesel that our farmers use to produce the food and that our truckers use to ship the food, you raise the price of the food itself. Somebody has to pay that price. It is magical thinking to suggest that you can raise energy prices on businesses, farmers and workers
without raising inflation. And we see it right here in British Columbia, where the NDP and Liberals have imposed among the highest carbon taxes. Gas is almost two dollars a leader, significantly higher than in other provinces where they fought back against the carbon tax. The worst is yet to come though under Trudeau in the NDP, they want to force British Columbians, through the power of the federal government, to raise the carbon tax a full sixty one cents a leader.
That'll mean people will go hungry, food banks will be overflowing with people. We'll see more people living intense cities because they won't be able to afford their home heating bills. That's not the Canada that we know and love. We need as affordable energy, and that is what I will deliver. Instead of raising the price of traditional energy that we still need, Let's lower the
cost of carbon free alternatives. Let's incentivize nuclear, hydro carbon capture and storage, and other sources of energy that Canadians can use to power the grid without emissions. Let's green light green projects like a carbon pipeline to pipe the carbon back into the ground, speed up approval for Quebec hydroelectricity dams and get faster and safer to approve small modular nuclear reactors so we can put clean, emissions
free nuclear energy onto our grid. That's the way we bring down emissions and bring down the cost of living at the same time. So let's bring home lower prices. Okay. And the final question, if I can, well, I'd like to ask, are you here by then labeling the year the European Economic Association a phony? As you call the phony socialist body, would you like to say that the European Economic Association and tell them that they are
phony and socialists. I think anybody who suggests that you can raise energy prices without raising inflation is phony. I think there's a lot of these, uh, these groups that interest groups that don't worry about the costs to working class people. They they jet around and attend their seminars and in fancy hotels around the world, and they expect single moms to go hungry. They have no problem forcing jobs out of Canada to more polluting foreign jurisdictions. So I do
think that is a phony socialist approach. My approach is to bring home lower prices by axing the tax, bringing down energy costs so that Canadians can afford to eat, heat and house themselves. Okay, so we'll be the final question about the foreign interference. Why hasn't been an agreements between the bodies in the negotiations to set up in public inquiry and that would appreciate fresh as well. We're waiting. We asked, we've offered the Prime Minister all the information
he's asked for. We've suggested a mandate, a time frame, we have names ready to share with him as soon as he confirms that he's going to go ahead with it. But the ball has been in mister Trudeau's court now for well about ten months, and Canadians are waiting. You know. It was what is it, November of twenty twenty two, and the story broke that Beijing had interfered in multiple federal elections to help mister Trudeau win, that
they continue to open police stations in Canada. Since that time, we've been calling for a public inquiry. We've told the Prime Minister we're prepared to cooperate with him anyway we can to facilitate that inquiry, and we've given him all the information he's asked for. We're sitting next to our phone waiting for him to call with any news on when that inquiry will happen. We continue to call up on Justin Trudeau to stop the delays, call a public inquiry.
Let's bring home control of our democracy and news out the news. News that mister Trudeau said, the pure republic, the la grounds, the Pekin election, liber p news, abonda mande and no public premise and de clanche and tell petetro a p sank some PEP on the Amanda propose. They know they Cannaz non partisan, a professional de guge dat personnel, the Jans Saint man A news premise, may premise to Canada, the de clinch, get Pete Blake, he knew Van's account, kilefast. They met. Now all right,
MELSI, thank you very much. Everyone. Great to be with you. Thanks, thank you, see you too. Yeah, so I started off, Yeah we can sit down first, Yeah, sure, that's good. Comfortable they have to stand, he said, that's awesome. You've got some of my folks before you met Sean Acilcome met John Enough. It's a
pleasure to welcome you here to Halifax. We had a great night last night at the meg and I appreciate the fact that you here and five thousand athletes from around North America, some big teams from Manitoba's is the actual VC, Ontario, other countries, Nova, Scotia, but also the US. It
was it was really awesome. I'm really pleased have to chance, both as the mayor of Halifax and of course as the chair of the big city Mayors to get a few minutes to chat about some of the issues that I know you care about, that we care about that, including the fact that week have tense outside city Hall for people who are homeless of no place to live, which is something that all were We're very conscious off. I think all
orders the government needs to work very hard for that. But there's a lot of different issues you know them, but we'll have a chance to chat about them. So welcome to Halifax, mister Prime Minister. Right do you have me to Halifax? Boy Gelosi, it's awesome to have you. Yes, someone, I mean, thank you, thank you, Mike. It's always great to be here. And starting with last night, I know how instrumental
your leadership was in bringing the North American Indigenous Games here to Halifax. And it was just so great to see five thousand young young athletes from across the country, across the continent actually, but also the thousands of volunteers of close to four thousand volunteers come out to support. I mean, it really shows the spirit of Haligonians and of Nova Scotians in welcoming this incredible group of young people who will who will be shaping our future in this comment in very real
ways. So thank you for your leadership on that. Thank you for your dear leadership here in Halifax. Obviously we're going to be talking about housing, we're going to be talking about about growing the economy and ways that protect the environment at the same time, as I know both matter deeply to you, and creating great jobs not just for now but long into the future as well. Your leadership at the at the FCMS, at Big City Mayor's Caucus has
been tremendous. You've been a real ally to this government, but mostly you've been a real driver in responding to the very real pressures that people are feeling in cities across the country and by extension, for everyone across this country. And working with you always always a pleasure. You push hard on the things that matter. But because the things that matter matter to both of us, it's always always makes for good conversations and constructive discussions. He toos aren't com
pleasing. I think the savage the book love you any evens some leadership would say, and you got his, the madly convince, the lasting at the end, the inspecting always inter seem as good as you're no friend, so
well, yeah, please have you. And you know we agree with a lot of things, including the fact that the fight against the climate change is really important, that it requires effort and investment, and you know we're very pleased here and how effects are a very strong climate action and I know that's a view that you share. So a lot of things to talk about and afford to the opportunity any thank you, I mean that's interment. Thank you.
Hi everyone. My name is Aaron Prosper. I'm from the Eskazoni First Nation, but I currently reside here in Dartmouth and I will say our Member of Parliament, Darren Us Dartmouthsonians are quite proud of our town, very proud. So I'm a very proud member of the community here in Dartmouth for the last five years. But my home community. My roots are in Eskazoni First Nation. I'm very honored today to be your MC for these events. And every time I'm called upon or asked to MC any sort of event, I
often like to give a very short and brief teaching or history lesson. One of the things I do is I teach Intromigma studies at Dalhousie University, and this is one of the subjects that we cover quite a bit. It's quite fitting and quite important that these canoe events take place on this particular lake. Lake ba Banuk is a Migma word meaning the first lake. And why this particular waterway and this particular lake is so important is that it was actually central
to our peace and Friendship treaties. This particular waterway, the Shubenacaty Canal, is actually referenced and Claus four of the seventeen fifty two Treaty, and it was an important trade route for Migma people as they would come from their inland communities all the way into the city of Halifax, and it would actually end at the very end where you see where actually lived today at King's Wharf, that is the very mouth of the Schubenacaty canal and our community members would pass
through this many times as they would come into the city of Halifax. They would trade, they would negotiate. This is the route that Migma people would use to come into Halifax and negotiate many of those treaties that we signed here
that are so important to our community members. And so it's fitting that this week and these events for this canoes and our kayaking events are actually taking place on that very lake, and so I wanted to share a little bit of that history and how important this lake is to us as ul no oh no. That word, that's what we call ourselves, the Migmao people. I know what it means is the people. It actually comes from the Magma word
nil nu, meaning my tongue. And so what makes the people well, it's what comes off of your tongue, and that is how you hold yourself, how you embody yourself as an Indigenous person. That's what that word means. And so with that again, a big welcome and thank you to all our dignitaries, our Grand Council or Sante Mauiomi, and our elders are all here today. And I believe the first on the list we have Chief Norman from who First Nation will be our first speaker today, so I would like
to welcome Chief Norman. Good morning to everyone. My name is Norman Bernard that I am the Chief of Warmaker First Nation. I am also the President of MIGMA Sports Council of Nova Scotia. I'm honored to be here with you today and I welcome everyone to our canoe and Kayak Competition of NIG twenty twenty three. The Migma Award for Canoe is Gwidden as you. As you know we already noticed our NIG logo has a canoe on it. We are very
proud of our design. I'm honored to have our previous Minister, Justin Trudea with us here today this morning. At this event, I would like I would like to acknowledge all the paddlers who are competing this week. I asked you to stay positive in your competitors, enjoy the eery here at Lake BANUK. You will have many people cheering on you and the spirit of ancestors will guide you through the whole event. This is one of the finest facilities in
the country and I am sure you will be making great memories. Since time immemorial. My people the Migma have peddled these waters and today we are here. Today again, I am most definite. The spirits of our ancestors are here with us. I welcomed them, and of course I welcome all indigenous nations. I and many others encourage you to do your best, no matter what the outcomes of your race. Let your competitive spirits hime bright, remember
your moments and take them home with pride. I'd BEHAMGMA chiefs and all mgmagi. I thank you for coming and best of lack two as Ulio Balali Ig Norman. The next guests I would like to invite, and I should premise this by saying, I believe about two years ago we had a historic event where a number of our MIGMAO communities here in Atlantic Canada acquired fifty percent of the largest seafood company within I believe Canada, or one of the largest seafood
companies in Canada, that being Clearwater Seafoods. And so with that, I would like to invite the Vice President of Human Global Affairs, Deeter Gauchi of Clearwater. Good morning. I'm here on behalf of Clearwater to welcome you to this event today. Clearwater has been founded about fifty years ago here locally and today Clearwater is proudly indeach and is owned and one of the world's biggest sea food company. To the athletes embrace today, you will remember it forever.
Good luck, Thank you, Thank you, Dieter, and I forgot to mention that Clearwater is actually one of our sponsors for this particular venue in in our event today, and so we thank Clearwater for all of their support of our communities Ulalio or ullali Egg. Next, I'd like to invite I believe the next speaker is Uh. I should say I premised this with saying my one condition to MC was to get a selfie at some point, So I'm going to throw that out there make sure I get that selfie at some point.
But all that being said, I would like to invite our Minister for Sports, our federal Ministers for Sports, Pascal saint Age, and she will be in reducing our Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Hello and good morning everyone. Thank you so much Aaron for those kind words of introduction. Ricipo Leisure Vntois and I want to start by saying how special and honored I am to be
here for this very special event and games. I'd like to start by acknowledging that we're here today in the traditional territory of Migmahi, the homeland of unse and unseated territory of the Migmak people. I'm so excited for the opportunity to watch so many incredible, talented, hardworking young people come and compete at the highest levels. These games, of course, aren't just about competition and the
celebration of sport. It's also a celebration of Indigenous culture and heritage, a chance for all of you to come together and show k is everything that makes indigenous culture such a vital part of our country. So thank you so much for sharing everything with us. And with that, I would like to welcome someone who really needs no introduction, and I know that as someone who's an
avid canoer himself, he's especially excited to be here with us today. He's always been a huge believer in the power that spurt has to bring communities together, bring nations together, and give us the opportunity for us to be the past that we can. Our gratali our spart Please join me and welcoming our
Prime minister. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Mercy Pascal for thank you all for gathering here this morning, and mostly for giving me an opportunity, not just to say a few words here, that's that's typical for politician, but thank you for giving me the opportunity to start the day with a paddle. There is nothing like starting the day in a canoe. It sets off not just the day, but the entire week in the right way. And that's exactly what
we're celebrating right here. But I was reflecting on it. Why is paddling so important? Why is the canoe so important to me and to so many uh Migma people, to so many indigenous people across this country. It requires a few different things. It requires, first of all, for you to be in balance. If you're not centered in where you are, in who you are, and in how you move, your first step into a canoe might be the first step towards a swim. You need you need to know
where you are, how you position yourselves. You also need to be in balance with the world around you, with the waves, with the wind, with the universe, what a creator is sending at us. If you're not alert to what's going on around you, again, you're going for a swim instead of a canoe, and you have to be imbalanced with your partner, whether it's a team or whether it's you know, one other person in the canoe with you. You have to be in rhythm, you have to be
aware of others. And that strength, that ability in a canoe that forces you if you're going to be any good and if you're going to be able to enjoy it, to be in harmony and connection with the world around you is one of those things that is so it's odd to say grounding when you're talking about something on the water, but it is. It's grounding. It It gets you centered in where you need to be and starts you off on
the day or on the journey in the right way. And the second part of why a canoe is so important to me is because before there were roads and highways, the rivers and waterways of this continent were the roads and highways that indigenous people used for millennia to connect with each other, to learn from each other, to trade, to prosper, to grow, and to be And that idea of the journey in a canoe, of going to meet one another, of learning from each other, of drawing strength from the world around
us in that is hugely important, not just over the past millennia, but today as well. Just think of what a better place the world might be if all of us spend a little bit of time every day in a canoe, you know, it would be a much much better place. So for me to be able to be with you here today starting off that way was
really a privilege. But it's also a privilege to be able to see all these extraordinary young people who are out there in canoes and kayaks, competing with each other, but also growing themselves, developing their capacity to have an impact on the world around them as they travel through it. And yes, the competition's import and I look forward to seeing everyone cheer on the winners on this stage at the end of on this podium, at the end of the day,
at the end of the competitions. But every single moment that we are here together, learning from each other, challenging from each other, we are growing, We're creating a better world. And uh, the what I said last night about young people, these young Indigenous people, carrying the future for all of us into the coming decades, is so important, inspiring and comforting as well, because the incredible young people we see here today, me and
the future is in very good hands. Hello ceturn grand Prie Vila gran puh Porfili still is athlete, zancogivs muz Banco de lap. Thank you all much. That's up very much well in Thank you all. Okay. So it's good to to celebrate and and to have UM sporting events and games that we can actually celebrate UM our culture and the land and and everything that is beautiful
around us. Is really good to be able to do that, and I'm glad that Justin Trudeau did go to UM the North American Indigenous Games to help with that celebration. The question does come up, and we're going to addressing some of the remarks up here Povier had about the economy and about the inflation rates as and that the bank accoun andretor once again had to raise the interest
rates to match inflation so that inflation would become too out of control. But at this point, isn't inflation on the extreme side of outer control, Because, as was discussed by mister Povier, the idea of younger people being able to buy a home that it would take them he this may be an exaggeration on his point, But twenty five years to save up the down payment to buy a home when it used to be it took you about twenty five to
thirty years to pay off your mortgage as after you bought your first home. So something's really wrong with our economy when we are finding a lot of people who are homeless because landlords are deciding to renovate people. In other words, do a few renovations raise the rent so high because those renovations, because it changes the contract on the lease, and raise the rent so high that the person can no longer afford it, that their tenant has to move out and
they get a new tenant and for a much higher price. Isn't inflation already out of control? So it doesn't matter what the interest rates are looking like. If no one can afford to work a single job and pay their bills live comfortably, if that, if that's no longer the norm, then there's something wrong with the economy and it needs a drastic overhaul in fix. So just something to think about with that, and what would that fix look like?
And why is it that some of the other political figures aren't really discussing a quite the same way as Povier, Or is Polvier just out on a limb and trying to make it make it so that he can get the votes that he needs to become the next Prime minister. Also something to think about.
So thank you for listening today. Please find that subscribe button wherever it is and we will see you next time here on Policy and Rights and I've been your host, Michael clocks H. The show has been produced by Depictions Media. Please contact us at depictions dot media for more information. M
