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For people in Detroit and Windsor, Gordie Howe bridge delay fits a familiar – and frustrating – pattern

Friday was supposed to be a big day for the Canadians and Americans who live on either side of the Detroit River.
A ribbon-cutting ceremony had been scheduled to mark the opening of the Gordie Howe International Bridge – a $6.4-billion crossing that was first announced by former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2012.
The new span will be the only public bridge directly connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ont. The existing century-old Ambassador Bridge is privately owned by the billionaire Michigan-based Moroun family, who charge vehicles at least double the rate paid at publicly owned crossings in other parts of Ontario.
But the bridge opening was abruptly cancelled on Thursday at the demand of the Trump administration. The Moroun family was behind the delay, The Globe and Mail reported this week.
United States Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra are trying to negotiate a deal that would save the Moroun family from losing too much money once they have to compete with the publicly owned Gordie Howe bridge, The Globe reported.
Tony Keller: Donald Trump can’t open the Strait of Hormuz, so instead he’s blocking the Strait of Detroit
The news comes as no surprise to those who live in the shadow of the Ambassador Bridge.
The Moroun family, which also owns a trucking empire, has fought for years to shut down any competition to the Ambassador, pouring tens of millions of dollars into federal and state politics along the way. That includes donating more than US$1-million to a campaign group supporting U.S. President Donald Trump. The family had also employed a lobbying firm – Ballard Partners – well-connected within the Trump administration, counting Mr. Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, and his ex-attorney-general, Pam Bondi, among its former employees.
“Yes. The delay might just be a few days, a few weeks,” said Frazier Fathers, a Windsor city councillor. “But it fits into a pattern that has happened over 25 years. And it impacts people’s lives on a daily basis.”
The Gordie Howe bridge is meant to speed traffic – including international goods trade – by clearing up the congestion that currently marks the Ambassador.
The new bridge connects directly to Ontario’s highway network, avoiding the use of local roads in Windsor and Detroit that lead to the existing bridge, such as Vernor Highway.
The road cuts through the Mexicantown neighbourhood of Detroit, where at lunch time on Friday, a gathering of baseball enthusiasts descended on a 24-hour diner called Duly’s Place Coney Island.
Chris Beto is one of them, and he sits down at a table in the diner. He is the director of a program that offers free sports clubs for kids in the summer. Throughout the program’s 48-year existence, children have played sports at Clark Park, a square sandwiched between two roads that feed the Ambassador Bridge.
The trucks are loud, pollute the air and are dangerous for the children, said Mr. Beto. His friend Steve Boyle agrees.
“The truck traffic coming through this neighbourhood is ridiculous,” Mr. Boyle said.
Every summer, Mr. Boyle donates sports equipment to the organization. He has lived in Mexicantown his whole life, and he remembers being able to walk across the bridge (which is no longer permitted). He’d have Sunday lunch in Windsor, then visit the racetrack and Chinatown. But he doesn’t go as much any more. It is time-consuming to cross the bridge by car, he said, especially if there are backups.
A five-minute walk down Vernor Highway, Manna Noyes, owner of Guero’s Barber Shop, says she has felt the impact of a drop in cross-border traffic.
Ms. Noyes says she has lost around 40 per cent of her customers since Mr. Trump took office. It would be packed on Friday nights. Canadians would cross to have dinner in Mexicantown, and then get a haircut. But now, “they’re scared to be here,” she said.
The opening of a new crossing would cut down on the truck traffic outside her shop, she says, and she hopes it would bring more people back over the border.
“I was hoping the bridge would make things better.”
Mr. Beto says he’s tired of the constant lobbying of the Moroun family. It has been a mainstay of his community since he can remember.
After extensive Moroun lobbying and campaign contributions to Michigan legislators, the state legislature in 2011 and 2012 failed to advance legislation to help pay for the Gordie Howe bridge. Canada agreed to pay the full cost.
In 2012, the Morouns spent US$33-million to back a referendum question that would have amended the state constitution to require a statewide referendum before any new international bridge could be built. Michigan voters rejected the measure.
Across the river, another group gathers at Rock Bottom Bar and Grill, a restaurant and bar located in Windsor’s Sandwich neighbourhood.
The restaurant’s owner, Nicole Sekela, is deeply disappointed by the delay. It demonstrates the unfair influence of the Moroun family, she says.
The Moroun family purchased upward of 180 homes in Windsor from the mid-90s to mid-2010s, according to an investigation by the Toronto Star. It bought out many properties on Indian Road and Bloomfield Road next to the Ambassador. The company had plans to expand the bridge, a failed attempt to thwart the construction of a public crossing.
“We had families and students living in every one of those houses,” said Ms. Sekela, who is hoping a new bridge will bring more life back to the area.
Michigan State Senators Stephanie Chang and Erika Geiss gathered at a table in Ms. Sekela’s restaurant. They’d crossed the border to meet with community leaders on the other side.
The Moroun family needs to “back down,” said Ms. Geiss. The new bridge “is good for both our countries. It makes economic sense. It makes common sense.”

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Carney announces agreement with France to share sensitive defence, AI information

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada and France will deepen their defence and industrial co-operation through a new general security of information agreement.
Carney says the agreement will facilitate the exchange of classified intelligence related to the defence, space, artificial intelligence and aerospace sectors.
Carney made the comments in a joint statement alongside French President Emmanuel Macron at the Palais de l’Élysée in Paris on Friday.
Macron said he and Carney will discuss trade, defence and security in their closed-door meeting, and he hailed Canada as a friend to Europe and France.
The meeting, which comes ahead of next week’s G7 summit, could be one of the last between the two world leaders, since Macron’s second term in office is set to end next spring.
France, which is hosting the summit this year, says the priorities include settling major geopolitical crises, G7 support for Ukraine and protecting children online.

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‘Our loving family is shattered,’ says mother of slain Toronto police officer

To his mother, Linda, Marc Pinizzotto was “an incredible father, son, husband, coach and friend of many.”
To the people across the country sending condolences and tributes in the wake his death in the line of duty, the Toronto police officer was a hero.
In a tribute to her son posted on social media Friday, Linda Pinizzotto said her family is devastated by his loss, but thankful for the outpouring of grief they have received.
“We are forever sincerely grateful for your heartfelt blessings, wonderful messages of condolence, and kindness,” she wrote. “His passing echoes deep inside us, our loving family is shattered as we search for words.”
Const. Marc Pinizzotto, 43, died after being shot at a fourth-floor apartment building in northwest Toronto Thursday, as officers carried out an investigation into multiple shootings, including one at the U.S. Consulate in March.
Hours after his death, hundreds of officers stood shoulder to shoulder, some wiping their eyes, as a procession carried Pinizzotto’s body from Sunnybrook hospital to the office of the chief coroner. Toronto police Chief Myron Demkiw tearfully called him a “hero in life, not death.”
There have been tributes from a number of officials, including Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Prime Minister Mark Carney.
At the House of Commons Thursday, legislators began question period by grieving the fallen officer, saying Ottawa was supporting the investigation into his killing.
Mayor Chow, who said she’s known Pinizzotto’s mother for years, said she was grateful for the constable’s service, and his family’s grief was shared by the people of Toronto.
Premier Ford extended his condolences to Pinizzotto’s family and colleagues, saying in a post on X that the shooting was “a sobering reminder of the sacrifices and risks faced by police officers across Ontario every day as they work to keep our province safe.”
Several Toronto city councillors and Greater Toronto Area police services also released statements paying tribute to Pinizzotto Thursday. The CN Tower said its bright lights were expected to dim for the first five minutes of every hour on Thursday night.
Pinizzotto’s death came days after Ontario Provincial Police Const. Tarun Bali was struck and killed by a vehicle near the northern Ontario town of Hearst, east of Thunder Bay. A procession transporting Bali to a funeral home in Thornhill was scheduled for Friday morning.
Ontario hockey community feeling loss
Pinizzotto worked relentlessly to protect his community as a dedicated emergency task force officer, and he was just as passionate about hockey, his mother wrote Friday.
The officer was an inspiration to a generation of young Oakville Rangers hockey players, whom he and his brothers helped coach and develop over the better part of a decade, club president John Vedon said.
“That’s about as good a legacy as I think a hockey guy could ever want to have,” he said.
The Ontario Junior Hockey League released a statement Thursday, sending condolences to Pinizotto’s family, colleagues and community, saying his death was also a loss to “the entire hockey world.”
Man facing charges, another still at large: police
Police say 19-year-old Nicholas Bennett faces a first-degree murder charge in connection to Pinizzotto’s death. They say Bennett was shot multiple times in the exchange of gunfire and remains in hospital.
A second suspect, 19-year-old Zara Jabbi, is on the loose. Police say Jabbi is wanted in the consulate shooting and should be considered armed and dangerous.
Police say they expect to provide more information on the investigation in the coming days.
The investigation Toronto police were undertaking Thursday, which looked into multiple shootings, including an incident at the U.S. Consulate in Toronto, has been linked to a recent FBI terrorism arrest.
Last month the FBI arrested Iraqi-Irani Mohammad Al-Saadi, a senior member of a U.S.-designated terrorist organization, Kata’ib Hizballah, and the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
He is allegedly tied to nearly 20 attacks throughout Europe and the U.S., as well as two attacks in Canada, including the consulate shooting this spring.

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Mother of slain Toronto police officer posts moving homage to son, tributes pour in

As the search for a suspect in the fatal shooting of a 43-year-old Toronto police officer continues, the family of Const. Marc Pinizzotto is grappling with the immeasurable loss — his mother trying to channel the breadth of her grief into a moving homage to her son on Instagram.
In a post on Friday morning, Linda Pinizzotto called him one of her “extraordinary sons” and “everyone’s hero.”
“His passing echoes deep inside us, our loving family is shattered as we search for words. We struggle to find sleep and solace in the darkness as our grief lingers, it is impossible,” she wrote, her pain palpable in the heart wrenching words.
She went on to call him an incredible father, son, husband, coach and friend to many.
“His devastating passing, the cruel heartbreak of reality has brought us to our knees,” she continued. “Our family must find peace, somehow accept and stand proud of his decisions and amazing accomplishments.”
“Marc is our beacon of hope, guiding us with his message to bring an end to violence and unite our brotherhood in a quest for peace,” she added, before thanking Mayor Olivia Chow, Chief Myron Demkiw, the staff at Sunnybrook hospital and all members of the police, fire and paramedic services.
Pinizzotto died after being shot at a fourth-floor apartment building Thursday, as officers carried out an investigation into multiple shootings, including one at the U.S. Consulate in March. It is believed he was the first officer through the door.
Police say 19-year-old Nicholas Bennett faces a first-degree murder charge, while a second suspect, 19-year-old Zara Jabbi, is on the loose.
The Special Investigations Unit has invoked its mandate and said one of the suspects discharged his firearm at Pinizzotto. Thereafter a second officer discharged his firearm and struck Bennett, who is now in the hospital.
Tributes poured in from Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Chow posted on X saying the death of the 18-year police force veteran “is heartbreaking news for our city.”
“There are no words that can ease the pain for the officer’s family, loved ones, and colleagues across the service. This grief is shared across the entire city. Police officers go to work every day knowing the risks, putting themselves in harm’s way to protect others, and today is a devastating reminder of that sacrifice,” she said.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford extended his condolences to the family and fellow Toronto police service members on X as well.
“Today is a sobering reminder of the sacrifices and risks faced by police officers across Ontario every day as they work to keep our province safe.”
Pinizzotto’s death came days after Ontario Provincial Police Const. Tarun Bali was struck and killed by a vehicle near the northern Ontario town of Hearst, east of Thunder Bay.
Prime Minister Mark Carney posted a tribute to both fallen officers on X.
“Canada mourns the loss of these brave officers who dedicated their lives to protecting their communities. My prayers are with their loved ones, their fellow officers, and their communities in this time of grief,” he said.
Speaking at a press conference hours after Pinizzotto’s passing in hospital on Thursday, an emotional Chief Demkiw expressed his grief and solidarity with the officer’s family and the larger policing family.
“This loss will have a profound impact on the Toronto police family. Our service, our members, and all members of the larger policing family are deeply saddened,” he said.
“No words can capture the impact on Marc’s family, who expected him to come home today. We, as a service, will support them and each other.”
At a procession Thursday that saw Pinizzotto’s body taken from Sunnybrook hospital to the office of the chief coroner, hundreds of officers stood shoulder to shoulder, some wiping tears from their eyes.
Toronto’s most prominent landmark, the CN Tower, dimmed its bright lights for the first five minutes of every hour on Thursday night in memory of the fallen officer.
With files from The Canadian Press

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PM office canada

Canada’s Carney heads to Ireland, where keeping Trump happy comes first

DUBLIN — Two contrasting ways of dealing with U.S. President Donald Trump are set to politely collide this weekend, when Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney makes his first official visit to Ireland.
Carney has been embroiled in a clash with Trump since taking office last year. The president frequently insults his Canadian counterpart and has even floated the idea of making America’s neighbor to the north its 51st state. In response to the relentless shellacking, the prime minister has taken to promoting the idea of a world in which smaller democracies band together to resist bullying by the big powers.
But that message is unlikely to be embraced fully by Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin, who is set to meet Carney in Dublin before the Canadian leader travels to his ancestral home in County Mayo. Ireland is a country that is dedicated to schmoozing Washington and is reluctant to do anything that could undermine the great pains it has taken to stay on the U.S. president’s good side.
“We will be resolutely and sincerely pro-Canada. We will just as resolutely avoid saying a syllable that might be construed in any way as critical of Donald Trump or his administration,” an Irish government official helping to plan Carney’s visit told POLITICO.
“We’re all about building bridges and staying out of any unnecessary fights,” said the official, who was granted anonymity to speak frankly about Ireland’s diplomatic realpolitik.
“It wouldn’t be in our interests to criticize any ally or any partner — but particularly not America with Canada in town,” the official added. “We are hugely dependent on staying in America’s good graces and I’m sure Mark Carney understands that well.”
The rationale for Irish obsequiousness is grounded in the reality that Ireland today serves as an American corporate satellite off the coast of Europe.
While Canada is keen to transform its economy to be less dependent on U.S. tech giants, Ireland can’t imagine a world without them. The country is home to nearly 1,000 U.S. multinationals — among them, a Who’s Who of top American tech, pharma and medical companies — who have been wooed here, in part, by low taxes.
That concentration of U.S. firms funds nearly a fifth of Irish wages, even more of its tax base, and has transformed tiny Ireland into an export superpower. Much of the goods produced, particularly in pharma, go back to the U.S. market rather than into the EU, producing one of America’s biggest trade imbalances.
And the Irish tax take from U.S. companies based here keeps hitting record highs despite Trump policies designed to reverse the flow.
While the economic ties that bind Dublin and Washington are fundamental, the Irish have forged more humble links with Ottawa, with only 75 Canadian companies operating from Ireland.
And the Irish haven’t done much to change that dynamic. Ireland is among the EU laggards in ratifying the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), the decade-old treaty seeking to boost business between Canada and Europe that has been provisionally in force since 2017.
That status quo may finally change this weekend. After years pledging to complete the CETA’s ratification “soon,” Martin is expected to announce that move during Carney’s visit.
The land of 100,000 welcomes
The Irish are famous for their hospitality, and have used it to their advantage by charming American leaders with Irish roots going back to the ’60s. During past presidential visits to the island, authorities delighted John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and even Barack Obama by highlighting their familial ties to the country. Most recently, County Mayo rolled out the red carpet for Joe Biden, who hails on his mother’s side from Ballina.
The Irish are going much the same distance to dazzle Carney. The prime minister first will be honored at a state dinner in Dublin Castle on Saturday, then attend a series of receptions in Mayo, most crucially in Aghagower, from where his grandparents Robert and Nora Carney emigrated to Quebec in 1925. He’s expected to attend Mass in St. Patrick’s Church in the crossroads village and learn about the Carney clan buried in the adjoining cemetery.
According to the Mayo News, the Canadian leader has a few first cousins and 21 second cousins waiting to meet him; the Irish Times, for its part, puts the count at 22. One of Aghagower’s local business boosters has told Ireland’s national broadcaster, RTÉ, that Carney’s greeting will be “just as huge as JFK and President Biden.”
Underscoring their non-partisan dedication to buttering up foreign leaders, Irish authorities are already at work planning a similarly warm reception for Trump. This September the U.S. president is expected to travel to his golf resort in County Clare, which is hosting the Irish Open.
“This weekend we will give Prime Minister Carney all the admiration and respect we can muster,” the Irish official told POLITICO. “Come September, if he does come for the golf, we’ll do the same for Donald Trump. Protecting our interests means we provide céad míle fáilte [Irish for ‘100,000 welcomes’] to all our guests.”

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Carney in France to meet with Macron ahead of G7 summit

Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Paris, where he is set to meet with French President Emmanuel Macron ahead of the G7 summit next week.
A government official who briefed reporters ahead of the trip framed the meeting as Canada passing the G7 presidency baton to France and said the leaders will likely discuss how to advance a strategic partnership between the two countries.
The prime minister will meet Macron at the Palais de l’Elysée on Friday evening, where the leaders will deliver joint statements.
Carney will also hold a news conference before attending a dinner held by Macron.
Explainer: How close is Carney to achieving his top promises? Here’s a status report
Sen. Peter Boehm, who served as personal representative for prime ministers Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau for six G7 summits, said Carney’s pre-summit visit with Macron offers an opportunity for the two leaders to strategize.
He added that Carney is expected to demonstrate “pragmatic diplomacy” at the international event, given how his recent Davos speech drew widespread international interest.
In his speech at the World Economic Forum in January, Carney said the world has entered a risky new age of great power rivalries and that Canada is working to expand non-U.S. trade in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump’s protectionist policies.
The bilateral meeting could be one of the last between the two leaders, as Macron’s second term in office is set to end in May 2027. Boehm said the G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains will mark Macron’s tenth and final G7 summit as president.
The G7 member hosting the summit is responsible for setting priorities for the year and organizing ministerial meetings.
The government of France says priorities at the summit will include settling major geopolitical crises, including through G7 support to Ukraine, crime and online protection for children.
Opinion: Europe is flailing, so why would Canada hitch its wagon to the EU?
Earlier this year, French lawmakers approved a bill banning social media for children under 15. The idea of setting a minimum age for use of the platforms has gained momentum across Europe.
The Liberal government introduced its own online safety legislation this week. If passed, it would require social media companies to block access for kids under 16, though platforms will be able to obtain an exemption if they put sufficient safeguards in place.
Bill C-34, introduced Wednesday in the House of Commons, would also regulate the companies behind AI chatbots by imposing on them a duty to act responsibly. That includes measures to lower the risk of chatbots communicating harmful content and putting in place crisis intervention protocols for cases involving self-harm, suicide or violence.
Macron applauded the move on social media Thursday, saying “thanks for joining the movement.”
Looking ahead to the summit, Boehm said there’s always some carry-on elements from previous years.
“The discussions at Kananaskis on artificial intelligence, for example, and on the global economy will have an impact on the discussions at Evian as well,” he said.
A Canadian government official said this week there will likely not be a comprehensive final communiqué from leaders at the end of the summit.
They said people can instead expect issue-specific statements from leaders throughout the event.
Boehm said the decision to publish several individual declarations, rather than one, is likely due to Trump.
“I think that’s a very big factor, because what’s the point of trying to get consensus when what you’re doing is watering down what you’ve got and then you’re not credible,” he said, adding that statements could be about online harms, AI or various global issues.
Boehm said the geopolitical scene will also be a discussion at the summit, given the ongoing war in the Middle East while the U.S. Agency for International Development has been “gutted” by the Trump administration.
France is Canada’s third-largest merchandise export market in the European Union and its fifth-largest source of foreign investment.

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