Carney’s conflict? Ethics screen covers 100+ companies
Carney’s ethics screen bars him from decisions on over 100 companies — including Brookfield, Stripe, and major oil and green energy firms — as he pledges record spending cuts.
The new Prime Minister is now barred from participating in decisions involving over 100 companies — including Brookfield Asset Management and Stripe — due to potential conflicts of interest tied to his vast investment portfolio.
On today’s episode of The Candice Malcolm Show, guest host Kris Sims dives into the explosive revelations from Mark Carney’s official ethics disclosure.
Carney has long preached green energy, yet he’s profited from oil giants like Chevron, Occidental, and Valero, all while promoting himself as a climate leader. Now we learn he’s personally invested in both fossil fuels and green energy firms — and is recusing himself from files involving them, even as his government plots major new pipelines and net-zero mandates.
Meanwhile, Carney is promising to slash public spending by $25 billion a year, which the left says would “rival” the 1990s’ deepest cuts. Yet even after these so-called reductions, Ottawa will still be spending more than ever.
Kris is joined by Canadian Taxpayers Federation federal director Franco Terrazzano to break down what this all means: Can Carney be trusted to act in the public’s interest when so much of the economy — and his own money — is riding on the decisions he’s making?
A condescending hypocrite...like most so-called eco-justice warriors.
Carney should have never been allowed to run. He has to many projects that are in conflict with our government.