Monday, December 8, 2025

News roundup, 8 Dec 2025

- John Rustad has resigned as leader of the BC Conservative Party. He had initially intended to fight the decision of the party's board to remove him, but when more than 50% of his party's caucus called for his resignation, he saw the writing on the wall.

- Over the summer, the separatist Alberta Prosperity Project proposed a referendum on secession from Canada. The province's chief electoral officer asked the courts to rule on the constitutionality of such a referendum; the case is still before the courts. Now the Smith government has introduced legislation that strips the chief electoral officer of the power to do this and brings an end to the court case; under the legislation only the Minister of Justice could make such a request of the courts.

- The US Supreme Court will be hearing a case that could end the independence of previously independent federal agencies. This is related to the firing of a member of the Federal Trade Commission, who was herself selected by Donald Trump to fill a vacancy in an appointment that was supposed to last until 2029.

- China's carbon emissions plateaued in 2025 and could start declining ahead of schedule. This is obviously good news, though probably not good enough to matter for places like Tuvalu or the Maldives - or the places along the Persian Gulf where conditions could become too hot for humans to survive in the open by the end of the century.

- Marjorie Taylor Greene has revealed what many of us long suspected - that Republicans in Congress privately ridiculed Trump while publicly continuing to show support for him

- The death of a Chinese dissident who drowned in BC in 2022 may not have been an accident, according to a man who says he is a former Chinese spy who was assigned to keep tabs on him.

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