Our Chinese-Installed Government In Ottawa

The Bureau;

A chill is roiling Ottawa’s bureaucracy after the woman who crafted Canada’s policy to defend the North with American allies was fired, she alleges, after criticizing the government’s anti-American rhetoric — and shortly after Mark Carney’s government declared Beijing a strategic partner, The Bureau has been informed.

Raquel Garbers spent 28 years in Canada’s public service and helped write the country’s current defence policy. On October 15, 2025, she published an opinion piece warning that Ottawa’s growing anti-American rhetoric was splitting the Western alliance and handing a gift to the country’s real adversaries, Beijing and Moscow. Two days later, according to the statement of claim in her wrongful-dismissal suit, Canada’s foreign minister stood in Beijing and signaled a shift toward a “strategic partnership” with China — a sharp reversal of Ottawa’s own recent posture toward Beijing. Weeks after that, she was fired.

Garbers, 57, filed her claim this month in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Ottawa, seeking about $2 million from the federal government. She is not a junior official, and her stature, and questions about whether Mark Carney’s government is trying to enforce a silence over the public service as Ottawa pivots closer to Beijing, are topics of conversation in Ottawa, Garbers’s legal team told The Bureau today.

8 Replies to “Our Chinese-Installed Government In Ottawa”

  1. This prime minister is an agent of WEF, the supreme fascist organization.
    The population however is good with that.
    Un-bloody-believable.
    What yer gonna do?

  2. Me thinks there is a grand strategy at work to neuter the investigative press through gov’t subsidy. And before any Americans cast aspirations northward ask yourself why there are so many gov’t ads with your media

  3. I’m pretty okay with her getting canned. She’s supposed to advise the government, not be a spokeperson or public advocate for a position. The deal is that we elect officials to decide policy, and bureucrats do what the politicians tell them. She’s not wrong, it’s a huge error to take the Chinese Communist Party as a partner and reject the USA, but if she wants to run her mouth in public, she can do it as a private citizen. If she had any integrity, she would have resigned from her cushy $200k a year sinecure, and then gone public about what a retarded policy Carney was pursuing. In any private business, if you start publicly criticising the CEO’s decisions, you’re going to get the heave-ho, why should she be any different?

    1. Here’s her opinion piece:

      https://ottawacitizen.com/public-service/defence-watch/dnd-official-u-s-trump-raquel-garbers

      I think your point is well taken. Employees have what is called a “duty of loyalty” to their employer. With some exceptions that don’t seem to apply here, they may not publicly speak out against their employers or policies without permission.

      And it doesn’t matter whether the opinion is well founded or not.

      1. I own my own company. If I fired myself I’d give me a very generous severance.

        I recommend, however, that you can the insults. Of course I know you won’t follow that advice.

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