It seems Canadians have been sentenced to a lifetime of their political leaders rattling on about bail reform.
Earlier this month, Mark Carney’s government announced plans for a new public safety bill that would introduce reverse-onus bail for major crimes, as well as tougher sentences for multiple offences and new RCMP funding to fight organized crime. The federal Conservatives advanced even stronger “jail-not-bail” proposals.
We have been here before. After police officer killings and high-profile offences by people on bail in 2023, premiers pushed Ottawa to tighten the rules, prompting Bill C-48. The fixation on bail still misses the point.
Parts of the new federal plan are sound. Extra resources for policing and organized-crime enforcement are long overdue. But bail is not the core problem ...
CLICK HERE for the full story
Earlier this month, Mark Carney’s government announced plans for a new public safety bill that would introduce reverse-onus bail for major crimes, as well as tougher sentences for multiple offences and new RCMP funding to fight organized crime. The federal Conservatives advanced even stronger “jail-not-bail” proposals.
We have been here before. After police officer killings and high-profile offences by people on bail in 2023, premiers pushed Ottawa to tighten the rules, prompting Bill C-48. The fixation on bail still misses the point.
Parts of the new federal plan are sound. Extra resources for policing and organized-crime enforcement are long overdue. But bail is not the core problem ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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