MBP Ep 5: MBP Intelligence Roundtable - National Projects, Trade Wars, and Labour Power
Manage episode 516984900 series 3696426
In this episode, Ben Woodfinden, Tyler Meredith and Shannon Phillips discuss:
Projects of national interest and how new polling reveals what Canadians really think about building faster while maintaining environmental and Indigenous safeguards
Why Bill C-5 could reshape how Canada approves major infrastructure projects
The shifting dynamics between Carney’s government, Conservative premiers, and public expectations around trade-offs, consultation, and speed
Trump’s latest trade war escalation, what it means for Canada, the provinces, and global leverage
Section 107 and the Notwithstanding Clause: how back-to-work powers are reshaping Canada’s labour relations landscape
“Around the Horn” the key political, economic, and social developments to watch across Canada
Key Takeaways
PHILLIPS: Canadians want it all; environmental safeguards, Indigenous consultation, and faster approvals. “They want all of the things. That is a distinctly Canadian approach.”
MEREDITH: The public is open to conditions, unionized labour, Indigenous participation, environmental offsets, not to bypassing them.
WOODFINDEN: “If something extraordinary continues long enough, it becomes ordinary.” Carney’s mandate to move fast risks fading if delivery lags.
PHILLIPS: “Politics are not fixed.” The ‘don’t know’ responses in polling reveal opportunity, or danger, for both sides of the national projects debate.
MEREDITH: C-5 gives Cabinet power to act as “traffic cop” coordinating approvals, Indigenous engagement, and environmental conditions, a new form of transactional nation-building.
PHILLIPS: The bill could accelerate transmission lines, renewable energy projects, and AI infrastructure, “That’s where you’ll get Canadians at 70% support.”
WOODFINDEN: Conservatives and Liberals may share short-term goals but differ fundamentally on regulatory reform, “A branding and messaging divide.”
MEREDITH: Canada’s leverage works when used strategically, not bombastically, “Pain may need to be felt on the U.S. side first.”
PHILLIPS: “No deal is better than a bad deal.” A strong, united Canada is better positioned to face Trump’s negotiating style.
WOODFINDEN: “The united front is fading.” Provincial freelancing is eroding national coordination, a gift to Trump’s divide-and-conquer tactics.
MEREDITH: Lack of communication between Ottawa, provinces, and business is fueling anxiety “We cannot manage our own agenda if we do not have a coordinated response.”
PHILLIPS: Alberta’s pre-emptive use of the Notwithstanding Clause to end the teachers’ strike “opens a five-alarm fire” for labour rights across Canada.
MEREDITH: Section 107 was never designed as a permanent tool, “It’s become a relief valve governments now reach for too easily.”
WOODFINDEN: Conservatives’ outreach to labour complicates future debates, “The dynamic in Parliament has changed more than people realize.”
PHILLIPS: Expect deeper divides between approaches to public- and private-sector unions in conservative politics.
MEREDITH: EI reform is overdue, “If a recession hits, the system isn’t ready.”
PHILLIPS: Alberta plans to invoke the Notwithstanding Clause again, this time to shield transgender legislation. “If the state can insert itself in your individual decisions, it will not stop there.”
WOODFINDEN: Budget brinkmanship in a minority parliament is not chaos, it’s normal. “This is what minority governments look like.”
MBP Intelligence Roundtable is produced by Metamorphosis Media Group for Meredith, Boessenkool & Phillips (MBP) Intelligence.Learn more or join the MBP membership for exclusive access to policy briefings and private roundtables at mbpintelligence.com.
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