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Front Burner
CBC
1914 episodes
21 hours ago

Front Burner is a daily news podcast that takes you deep into the stories shaping Canada and the world. Each morning, from Monday to Friday, host Jayme Poisson talks with the smartest people covering the biggest stories to help you understand what’s going on.

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All content for Front Burner is the property of CBC and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Front Burner is a daily news podcast that takes you deep into the stories shaping Canada and the world. Each morning, from Monday to Friday, host Jayme Poisson talks with the smartest people covering the biggest stories to help you understand what’s going on.

Show more...
News
Episodes (20/1914)
Front Burner
Mark Carney’s high-stakes first budget

On Tuesday, Canada’s Minister of Finance will announce his much anticipated budget.


It’s Mark Carney’s first as Prime Minister, and comes at a time of instability and uncertainty for the country. Trade negotiations with the U.S. are on hiatus, and the pressure’s on to spark economic growth while trimming spending and making life more affordable for Canadians.


Carney’s minority government also needs support from other parties for the budget to pass. And if it doesn’t, we could be looking at another election.


Our guest is Rosemary Barton, CBC’s chief political correspondent.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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21 hours ago
27 minutes 9 seconds

Front Burner
Is Alberta headed for a general strike?

Earlier this week Danielle Smith’s UCP government forced teachers back to work after a a three week strike using the notwithstanding clause. This prevents the Alberta Teachers' Association from challenging the legislation in court.


In response, the Alberta Federation of Labour announced that the wheels are in motion for a possible general strike by the province's unions.


Provincial affairs reporter for CBC Edmonton, Janet French, walks us through how these negotiations got to this point, what’s at stake for teachers, students and the government and where this fight could be headed.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our  listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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3 days ago
27 minutes 9 seconds

Front Burner
What did Reagan really believe about tariffs?

Why has U.S. President Donald Trump suspended trade talks with Canada? Why did the U.S. ambassador to Canada level an expletive-laced tirade at Ontario's trade representative, in front of more than 200 people? Why is Trump's treasury secretary accusing the Ontario government of running a psy-op?


Because of a 60-second ad, featuring clips of former president Ronald Reagan explaining why he thinks tariffs — Trump's self-professed "favourite word" — are bad economic policy.


Rick Perlstein has written extensively about the history of American conservative politics, including the book Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980. He breaks down what Reagan actually believed about tariffs and free trade, and why bringing up the spectre of Reagan — one of the most sacred figures in American conservatism — has caused so much chaos.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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4 days ago
33 minutes 34 seconds

Front Burner
In Asia, Canada hopes to fill a Trump-sized void

As Donald Trump ends trade talks with Canada, Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Asia this week, meeting with leaders, and pitching Canada as a reliable partner in a moment of geopolitical realignment. 


On the trip, Carney has talked about Canada’s search for new reliable partners “who honour their commitments, who are there in tough times, and who engage collaboratively to fix something that isn’t working.” 


So, with Carney in Asia in search of new partners, where does this leave Canada? 


Our guest is Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President of Research and Strategy with the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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5 days ago
29 minutes 38 seconds

Front Burner
How Canadian charities fund illegal West Bank settlements

Since the 1960s, Israel has been building settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory of the West Bank — settlements deemed illegal under international law, and condemned by the Canadian government. With the settlements has also come many documented cases of violence from Israeli settlers against the Palestinians whose homes are being bulldozed to build those settlements.


Now, a new investigation by CBC's the fifth estate has found that Canadian charities have been indirectly funding organizations, including the Israeli military, that support the ever-expanding settlements. That includes issuing tax receipts on those donations — despite them running afoul of the rules governing registered Canadian charities.


Cohost Ioanna Roumeliotis breaks down her team's reporting, and why critics say these donations are perpetuating violence that threatens the possibility of peace and a Palestinian state.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts.

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6 days ago
32 minutes 6 seconds

Front Burner
Can Canada’s auto industry survive Trump?

After an anti-tariff ad commissioned by the Ontario government ran during the World Series, U.S. President Donald Trump pulled the plug on negotiations between his office and the federal government. 


It comes as Stellantis and General Motors announced they were moving some production to the U.S., affecting thousands of jobs on this side of the border. 


So we’re talking to historian Dimitry Anastakis about the importance of the Canadian auto industry, how it became so intertwined with America and what options the government has.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit:  https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts.

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1 week ago
24 minutes 28 seconds

Front Burner
Blue Jays bandwagon 101

In the years since their consecutive World Series wins in the early ‘90s, the Toronto Blue Jays have had their ups, downs and bat flips. And heading into this season, the team wasn’t exactly slated for a deep playoff run.


But now, the Jays are headed into game one of the World Series as underdogs against the richest team in baseball. And facing off against Shotei Ohtani, who might be the best player in the history of the game.


We’re joined by Blake Murphy, the host of Sportsnet’s Blue Jays podcast Jays Talk Plus to talk about this historic run, the players who are endearing the nation and whether the Jays can win it all.


This episode mistakenly used a fake clip of Vladimir Guerrero Jr. talking about the New York Yankees. It has been removed.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts.

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1 week ago
29 minutes 23 seconds

Front Burner
Is the FBI’s secret war on American activists back?

Through the 1960s, the U.S. government waged a war on Black activism, and activism writ large. It was led by the FBI and its longtime director, J. Edgar Hoover.


It was called COINTELPRO and was the FBI’s counterintelligence program created to “expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize” its targets.

With the Trump administration’s crackdown on the American left through law enforcement campaigns and new directives, it raises the question: is a version of the FBI’s counterintelligence program back today? 

Beverly Gage, an historian and the author of G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century, joins the show to talk about COINTELPRO, the man who made it possible, and the ways the program continues to loom over American life today.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts.

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1 week ago
23 minutes 34 seconds

Front Burner
Politics! Poilievre calls out RCMP, auto woes

Stephen Maher, a longtime federal politics reporter, is here to talk about Pierre Poilievre’s recent comments that the RCMP covered up for Justin Trudeau so he could avoid criminal charges and whether or not this will hurt or help his upcoming leadership review.


Plus, fallout from carmaker Stellantis’s plan to move a plant from Brampton to Illinois and what it says about the state of trade talks with the U.S.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts.

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1 week ago
23 minutes 10 seconds

Front Burner
Trump's campaign of legal revenge

Former FBI James Comey. Former national security advisor John Bolton. New York attorney general Letitia James. What do they have in common? All are now facing legal action from the U.S. government.


Benjamin Wittes, editor-in-chief of the U.S. nonprofit publication Lawfare, breaks down the Trump White House's campaign of legal revenge against the president's rivals and critics, and where it could be headed next.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.

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1 week ago
26 minutes 33 seconds

Front Burner
The precarity of Gaza’s ceasefire

Over the last 10 days Israel and Hamas have observed a ceasefire that saw the return of hostages and prisoners to Israel, Gaza and the West Bank as well as deliveries of much needed aid to famine-struck Gaza since the deal was reached. 


However, the ceasefire has remained shaky and the possibility of a permanent end to the war is still uncertain. Israel carried out airstrikes throughout southern Gaza after it said Hamas militants fired at IDF troops in Rafah. Hamas has denied this. 


To parse through the events that led to those developments, we talked to William Christou, freelance journalist based in Jerusalem for The Guardian. 


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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2 weeks ago
18 minutes 56 seconds

Front Burner
Who gets to win the Nobel Peace Prize?

This year, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Venezuelan opposition leader, María Corina Machado.


In the announcement last week, the chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee said Machado had earned the prize for her “struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy". The award comes at a time when the U.S. has taken an increasingly belligerent stance against Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro.


So today we’re talking about Machado, the legacy of the Nobel Peace Prize, its controversial winners, who wins it and who doesn’t.


Jay Nordlinger, the author of Peace They Say: A History of the Nobel Peace Prize, and a writer with the Next Move, a publication of the Renew Democracy Initiative, joins the show.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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2 weeks ago
26 minutes 44 seconds

Front Burner
CBC President Marie-Philippe Bouchard

Marie-Philippe Bouchard has been in her role as President and CEO of CBC/Radio-Canada for a little under a year.


Since her appointment, we’ve had a federal election that has spared the public broadcaster from defunding threats for now, but certainly not from a broad sentiment that the CBC needs change and evolution. 


This week, Bouchard unveiled her own five-year vision. Today, she joins the show to discuss the relationship Canadians have with the CBC, and what changes she thinks the public broadcaster needs to make.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.

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2 weeks ago
30 minutes 55 seconds

Front Burner
Marineland’s scandalous decline

At its peak, Marineland was the second most popular tourist destination in Ontario’s Niagara region after the falls. Visitors could get up close and personal with beluga whales, dolphins and orcas, and watch them perform in elaborate shows. Throw in a side of rollercoasters and other exhibits and you had a family friendly attraction built to last.


But for years, the park has been mired in controversy and allegations of animal abuse. Business has declined to the point that the park is now closed to the public. However, several animals including 30 beluga whales remain trapped there. Marineland says it needs money or a new home for the whales, or else they might have to kill them.


Liam Casey of the Canadian Press has been covering this story for years. He lays out what could happen to the whales, and what it all means for other parks like Marineland.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.

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2 weeks ago
23 minutes 45 seconds

Front Burner
Canada’s bet on an AI boom

Canada's first ever minister of artificial intelligence, Evan Solomon, is spearheading what he's calling a "30-day sprint" to nail down Canada's AI strategy. The plan? To figure out a government approach to the technology in order to boost the Canadian economy.


Today, we wanted to take stock of the state of the industry in Canada, and a closer look at the Liberal government’s strategy. What could it all mean for our jobs, our economy, society, and environment?


Murad Hemmadi, a reporter with The Logic, joins the show.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.

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2 weeks ago
27 minutes 28 seconds

Front Burner
Front Burner Presents: The Making of Musk, Episode 1

Where did Elon Musk’s epic ambitions begin? In search of clues we return to his sheltered youth in apartheid South Africa, a world engineered for white supremacy. Along the way, we connect the dots between a bizarre White House ambush of South African president Cyril Ramaphosa to teenage Elon’s ego-powered quests in video games. Finally, was his “draft dodge” from military service a moral act or an opportunist’s exit? Know more, now. Understood is an anthology podcast from the CBC that takes you out of the daily news cycle and inside the events, people, and cultural moments you want to know more about. You can find Understood wherever you get your podcasts, and here: https://link.mgln.ai/FBxMoM

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3 weeks ago
39 minutes 48 seconds

Front Burner
Portraits of childhood in Gaza

Today, if all goes well, a ceasefire will begin in Gaza.


In phase one, Hamas has pledged to return all of the hostages, living and dead. For its part Israel will release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, while withdrawing troops to an agreed-upon line in Gaza and maintaining majority control of the territory.


Beyond that, the details of Trump’s promise of a “strong, durable, and everlasting peace” are fuzzy, but for hostage families and people in Gaza, it’s a reason to hope. 


Producer Allie Jaynes brings us a documentary that gives an on-the-ground perspective of what these past two years have been like for Gazans — especially for children. We hear from a 12-year-old with a popular Instagram “cooking show,” a girl living in a crowded displacement camp, and a music teacher giving lessons to kids all over Gaza to help them “escape the weight of war through the freedom of music.”


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.

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3 weeks ago
31 minutes 3 seconds

Front Burner
Inside the shadow war in Ukraine

Beyond the frontlines of the war in Ukraine, a shadow war between the Kremlin and Kyiv is escalating -- with covert assassinations, car bombs, civilian recruitment, and even the involvement of a terrorist group with a history in Canada.

 

Today, national security reporter Ben Makuch examines how it’s transforming the character of the biggest land war since the Second World War -- and who might be winning.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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3 weeks ago
21 minutes 35 seconds

Front Burner
What exactly is Antifa?

The term ‘Antifa’ derives from the German word for Antifascist — and the constellation of resistance movements largely created as a response to Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler. Today, Antifa describes a decentralized anti-fascist movement with local groups and unaffiliated activists all over the world. 


Many became aware of Antifascist organizing following  Antifa’s intervention at the white supremacist ‘Unite The Right’ rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017. For the last decade, Antifa has come to symbolize progressive protest and movement building – engaging in doxxing,, property destruction, and street-level physical confrontations. 


In late September of this year, U.S. President Donald Trump officially designated Antifa a domestic terror organization. 


Mark Bray is an academic, scholar of European history and radicalism, and the author of several books including ‘ANTIFA — the anti fascist handbook.’ He joins the show to discuss the rise of antifascist movements from the 1930s to today, and why Trump’s terror designation recalls authoritarian crackdowns through history, both in the U.S., Canada and abroad. 


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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3 weeks ago
33 minutes 24 seconds

Front Burner
Can Trump’s peace plan help end the war in Gaza?

Indirect talks between Hamas and Israel in Egypt are underway, with the goal of reaching an agreement on the first phase of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza proposed peace plan. It would see the release of all remaining Israeli hostages by Hamas and potentially, over a thousand Palestinians detained by Israel as well as a ceasefire. The overall plan aims to end the war altogether.


But after previous hostage exchanges and ceasefires have failed to bring a permanent end to the war, what’s different this time? Are they any closer to peace?


William Christou, a freelance journalist working for The Guardian currently in Jerusalem, joins Jayme Poisson

to parse through Trump’s plan, the talks so far and how people in Israel and Gaza are reacting to it all.


We'd love to hear from you! Complete our listener survey here.


For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

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3 weeks ago
26 minutes 25 seconds

Front Burner

Front Burner is a daily news podcast that takes you deep into the stories shaping Canada and the world. Each morning, from Monday to Friday, host Jayme Poisson talks with the smartest people covering the biggest stories to help you understand what’s going on.