
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Prime Minister Mark Carney have made another stride in their important MOU: A new carbon pricing agreement that is far less than the targets set by Justin Trudeau. Is the deal enough to calm down separatists? Could it anger environmentalists within Carney's team? Ottawa bureau chiefs Tonda MacCharles of the Toronto Star and Stuart Thomson of the National Post lay out the stakes.Plus, the House takes an in-depth look at whether the government should ban social media accounts for kids. We visit a high school to hear how teenagers feel about a ban; Anxious Generation research partner Ravi Iyer lays out what’s at stake if restrictions are not put in place; Meta’s Rachel Curran defends the company’s practices; tech company CEO Steve Borza describes how age verification technology works (or doesn’t); then Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew explains how his province’s social media and AI Chatbot ban for kids could work. This episode features the voices of:Stuart Thomson, parliamentary bureau chief for the National PostTonda MacCharles, Ottawa bureau chief for the Toronto StarRavi Iyer, managing director of the University of Southern California Marshall School’s Neely Center and research partner with the Anxious Generation MovementRachel Curran, head of public policy for Meta CanadaSteve Borza, CEO of Bluink LtdWab Kinew, premier of Manitoba
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What the heck is going on in Alberta?

What Ottawa's economic update means for your wallet

Bonus: How is Canada weathering economic uncertainty?

What exactly is Canada's U.S. trade strategy?
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