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Liberal (Minority/Majority) Government 2025 - ???

Here's the team, and its very balanced, O'toole and Raitt and others.

That’s a pretty solid list. CEOs from sectors including steel, aluminum, fertilizer, energy, rail, and banking… He’s putting together a pretty impressive grown ups table here.
 
That’s a pretty solid list. CEOs from sectors including steel, aluminum, fertilizer, energy, rail, and banking… He’s putting together a pretty impressive grown ups table here.
Light on the Tech side - adding a Mike Lazaridis or someone similar would be useful.
 
Is that likely to be a major factor in trade talks? I’m not asking out of skepticism, rather out of my own ignorance.
The concern is the US bitching about our desire to bring as much of 'Data Warehousing' (Digital Sovereignty) into Canada as possible and, I believe, to bring an end of Canadian data being subject to being sent down the to US if the US Government asks for it. From my understanding, if a US company has a data warehouse based in say Ontario and its used by say RBC for its client data, since the owner of the data warehouse is a US parent company, then the US Government can tell the US parent company to send the data to the US for the US Government to have access to it. The US law is called the US Cloud Act.

To me, 'owning' our own Data should be one of the cornerstone of our negotiations with the US.

 
The concern is the US bitching about our desire to bring as much of 'Data Warehousing' (Digital Sovereignty) into Canada as possible and, I believe, to bring an end of Canadian data being subject to being sent down the to US if the US Government asks for it. From my understanding, if a US company has a data warehouse based in say Ontario and its used by say RBC for its client data, since the owner of the data warehouse is a US parent company, then the US Government can tell the US parent company to send the data to the US for the US Government to have access to it. The US law is called the US Cloud Act.

To me, 'owning' our own Data should be one of the cornerstone of our negotiations with the US.


Ah- now this is something I can immediately grasp; not trying to drag this thread into what I do, but as a cop I sometimes have to write production orders for the court to compel production of data, and the question of whether data falls subject to Canadian court orders definitely comes up.

Stepping back away from that, we should absolutely have our own sovereign cloud computing for all needed government applications, and available to Canadian business to ease compliance with data protection laws.

So, that makes sense. If access to Canadian data is a trade irritant to the U.S., too effing bad.
 
Is that likely to be a major factor in trade talks? I’m not asking out of skepticism, rather out of my own ignorance.
Also, as an FYI, by law, when you open any sort of financial account in Canada, every single Canadian financial services company is required to ask if your also a 'US Citizen' AND they are required to look for ANY signs if you maybe a US Citizens - like 'place of birth' saying US if you use your passport to open up an account as one of your pieces of ID. If they find this, then they are legally required to put down your citizenship as both Canadian and US and voila, at the end of each year your name, account numbers and account values are sent by that Canadian financial institute to the CRA where the CRA then bundles them all up and sends them down to the US/IRS.

This law is called FATCA and it came into affect about 10yrs ago.

Supposedly, though I've never met anyone who has 'seen' one, the IRS is legally obligated to do the same thing with for any Canadian citizen that has open US financial accounts as well. Given that the US has hundreds/thousands of financial institutions and how fragmented and under-technology alot of them are, I doubt that this list exists or if its anywhere near complete/accurate.
 
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