Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed...
N.S. votes: Tories to release platform today
The Progressive Conservatives are set to release their party platform today ahead of Nova Scotia鈥檚 Nov. 26 provincial election.
They will be the second of the three major parties to release a platform this week after the Liberals presented a plan containing $2.3 billion in election promises over four years.
Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, meanwhile, has an announcement planned in Halifax where he is expected to discuss improving health care for women.
NDP Leader Claudia Chender is in Cape Breton where she is scheduled to spend much of the day campaigning.
Tory Leader Tim Houston pledged to remove parking fees at all provincial hospitals, while Churchill promised to reduce immigration levels to align them with provincial Labour Department targets he says have been exceeded by the government.
Here's what else we're watching...
StatCan to release October jobs report today
Statistics Canada is set to release its October labour force survey this morning, shedding light on employment trends and wage growth last month.
RBC is forecasting the economy added a modest 15,000 jobs and the unemployment rate to have ticked back up to 6.6 per cent.
The jobless rate declined slightly to 6.5 per cent in September.
The Canadian job market has loosened significantly as high interest rates have restrained economic growth.
The Bank of Canada, which lowered its policy interest rate by 1.25 percentage points since June, now says it wants to see the economy rebound.
RBC says it expects the unemployment rate to reach seven per cent next year, before trending lower again.
What Trump's election could mean for rates
Experts say Donald Trump鈥檚 election victory could shift interest rate policy in the U.S. as his promised policies risk higher inflation, which could ultimately have implications for Canadian rates and the loonie.
Markets rallied Wednesday and into Thursday in the wake of his victory as investors prepared for what his proposals might bring.
Among those promises are large tariffs on imported goods, especially from China, as well as lower tax rates and lighter regulation.
Economist Sheila Block says the large tariffs proposed by Trump would likely put upward pressure on inflation in the U.S.
Higher inflation would mean the U.S. Federal Reserve could be slower to cut interest rates, and markets are already shifting their bets on how low the central bank is likely to go on rates.
B.C. election judicial recounts expected to finish
Judicial recounts in British Columbia's provincial election should wrap up today, confirming whether Premier David Eby's New Democrats hang onto their one-seat majority almost three weeks after the vote.
Most attention will be on the closest race of Surrey-Guildford, where the NDP were ahead by a mere 27 votes, a margin narrow enough to trigger a hand recount of more than 19,000 ballots that's 小蓝视频 overseen by a B.C. Supreme Court judge.
Elections BC spokesman Andrew Watson says the recounts are expected to conclude today, but certification won't happen until next week following an appeal period.
The Election Act says the deadline to appeal the results must be filed with the court within two days after they are declared, but Watson says that due to Remembrance Day on Monday, that period would end at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
When an appeal is filed, it must be heard no later than 10 days after the registrar receives the notice of appeal.
Another full recount is also taking place in Kelowna Centre, narrowly won by the B.C. Conservatives, while a partial recount will take place in Prince George-Mackenzie to tally votes from an uncounted ballot box that contained about 861 votes.
The Prince George-Mackenzie recount won't change the outcome because the B.C. Conservative candidate there won by more than 5,000 votes.
If neither Surrey-Guildford nor Kelowna Centre change hands, the NDP will have 47 seats and the Conservatives 44, while the Greens have two seats in the 93-riding legislature.
Another beluga whale dies at Marineland
Three weeks after the death of another beluga whale at Marineland, the Ontario government is speaking publicly about its ongoing investigation of the park, saying water troubles are under control after a recent investment.
The province's chief animal welfare inspector told The Canadian Press that to her understanding, marine mammal deaths at the tourist destination in Niagara Falls, Ont., have not been related to water quality.
Five belugas have died at the park in the last year and 17 have died since late 2019, government records show. Three other belugas sold to a Connecticut aquarium in 2021 have since died.
Kiska, the country's last remaining killer whale in captivity, died in April 2023. One dolphin, one harbour seal, one grey seal, two sea lions and two Magellanic penguins have also died at the park in the past five years.
Marineland did not answer questions about the animal deaths, and instead twice responded to recent queries with accusations that journalism published by The Canadian Press was driven by its reporter's "personal animal rights beliefs and activism."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 8, 2024
The Canadian Press