EV Mandate Fails, CBC Cashes In
Guest host Kris Sims is joined by former Liberal MP Dan McTeague to expose Ottawa’s $300B EV disaster — plus a look at how the Online News Act funnelled millions more into the CBC.
On today’s episode of The Candice Malcolm Show, guest host Kris Sims takes on two of the most pressing issues facing Canadians: the Carney Liberals’ unrealistic electric vehicle mandate and Ottawa’s stranglehold on Canada’s media.
A new Leger poll shows Canadians are rejecting the 2035 EV ban. Nearly 70% say it’s unrealistic, while 71% say the mandate should be rolled back. Even among Liberal voters, most oppose it. Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has warned the mandate would cost at least $300 billion in grid upgrades and charging stations, while destroying rural communities and wiping out Canada’s auto sector.
Kris is joined by Dan McTeague, President of Canadians for Affordable Energy and a former Liberal MP, to break down exactly why this policy is unaffordable, unworkable, and damaging to the auto industry. McTeague explains that quotas begin in January 2026 — just four months away — and will hammer car dealers with penalties while driving up prices for consumers.
Kris also exposes to the government’s media agenda, recently criticized by no less than the US State Department. The Online News Act was supposed to “save journalism,” but instead gutted independent outlets as Meta blocked Canadian news. Google cut a $100-million deal, yet most of the money flows to legacy outlets like the CBC, already swimming in $1.4 billion in taxpayer funding despite rock-bottom ratings.
The result: Canadians get less access to news and more government-funded propaganda, while everyday families brace for higher costs under a $300B EV fantasy.
We have become another totalitarian govt. that is corrupt to the core. Canadians need to rise up and say enough... but it may be too late. Writing about it is not enough... what is the answer? We are allowing the east to dominate the narrative and will soon be controlling what we can say and think. Lots of news but nothing becomes of it.
If EVs were a good idea they would thrive without borrowing more money for subsidies. I won't have to pay for this vanity project debt, but my grand and great grandchildren will have to pay for it.