Saturday, November 04, 2023

Healthcare minimum wage expected to cost $4 billion in first year as California budget deficit looms


Gov. Gavin Newsom unveils his state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento in 2022.
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)
LA TIMES
STAFF WRITER 
NOV. 4, 2023 

SACRAMENTO —

When Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law that set a first-in-the-nation minimum wage for healthcare workers, three words in a bill analysis foretold potential concerns about its cost: “Fiscal impact unknown.”

Now, three weeks after Newsom signed SB 525 into law — giving medical employees at least $25 an hour, including support staff such as cleaners and security guards — his administration has an estimated price tag: $4 billion in the 2024-25 fiscal year alone.

Half of that will come directly from the state’s general fund, while the other half will be paid for by federal funds designated for providers of Medi-Cal, California’s Medicaid program, according to Newsom’s Department of Finance.

SB 525 is one of the most expensive laws California has seen in years and comes as the state faces a $14-billion budget deficit that could grow larger if revenue projections continue to fall short. It was one of several labor-backed measures the Democrat-controlled Legislature passed this year in what amounted to an unusually successful run for organized labor. What lawmakers didn’t fully account for, as they scrambled in the final days of the session to broker a deal between unions and hospitals to support the bill, was how much it would cost the state — or what might have to be cut to pay for it.

The costly legislation — promoted by unions as a way to curb the healthcare worker shortage and in turn improve patient care — was signed into law even as Newsom has warned about the state’s shaky financial future, vetoing dozens of bills last month in the name of cost savings. He wrote numerous veto messages saying lawmakers sent him bills that would cost a total of $19 billion that had not been accounted for in the budget.

“With our state facing continuing economic risk and revenue uncertainty, it is important to remain disciplined when considering bills with significant fiscal implications, such as this measure,” Newsom said repeatedly in those messages, rejecting some bills that had far lower cost projections than SB 525.

Among the many proposals that Newsom vetoed citing financial concerns was a bill that would have required that colleges pay for diagnostic assessments for students with disabilities, which would have cost the state $5 million annually, and a bill that would have expanded cash assistance for aged, blind and disabled immigrants, which would have cost the state at least $100 million.

Unknowns remain about implementation of the new wide-reaching minimum wage law, including the exact long-term costs, in part because of significant amendments made to the bill in the final days of the legislation session — a result of a rare truce between union and health-industry leaders deemed necessary to its passage.

Newsom officials declined to give The Times a cost estimate reflecting those amendments when the governor signed the bill last month. But the amendments were expected to significantly soften the immediate financial impact to the state and hospitals, since gradual wage schedules were introduced in lieu of an instantaneous increase for all.

Despite the unknowns, Democrats in the state Legislature — including some who were first hesitant about potential costs — were quick to pass the legislation after a deal was made between powerful interest groups.

The bill originally aimed to increase the minimum wage to $25 per hour for all healthcare employees starting Jan. 1. The opposition estimated that would have cost up to $8 billion annually.

While leaders of appropriations committees killed bills based on cost in September, rejecting measures that cost millions less than SB 525, the healthcare minimum wage bill cleared that key fiscal hurdle even as the Department of Finance opposed it, citing “significant economic impacts.”

It’s unclear whether other state programs will be cut to make room for the wage hikes, but expect state lawmakers to rush to write bills when the Legislature returns in January to try to address some financial concerns.

Unlike a law passed in 2016 that mandated a $15-per-hour minimum wage statewide, the healthcare worker bill does not currently include any mechanism that allows the state to delay wage hikes during economic downturns.

“This is an important law to ensure California has a robust healthcare workforce. We’re working with legislative leadership and stakeholders on accompanying legislation to account for state budget conditions and revenues,” Newsom spokesperson Alex Stack said on Friday when asked about cost concerns surrounding the bill.

The $4-billion estimate could change when the Legislative Analyst’s Office releases its annual fiscal outlook expected later this month. The cost is only expected to grow in the future, as more groups of workers become eligible for raises.

The latest estimated cost to the state reflects pay raises expected to go to half a million healthcare workers who provide services to Medi-Cal patients, plus 26,000 employees at state-owned facilities.

But the cost to the state could decrease if hospitals pay a bigger share of labor costs, said Tia Orr, executive director of SEIU California, who was involved in shaping the policy. She pointed to billions already set aside for Medi-Cal providers through revenue from a tax on managed healthcare organizations as one way to “help manage the impact of increased labor costs.”

“SEIU California has committed to working with the administration and the Legislature to ensure safeguards are in place to guarantee that this critical measure is taken in a way that preserves California’s fiscal health, just as we did when negotiating the last statewide minimum wage increase,” Orr said. “This is how you make progress — through flexibility and compromise in achieving shared goals.”

In a statement, David Simon, spokesperson for the California Hospital Assn., which ultimately supported the bill, called the plan that Newsom signed a “better, more measured” approach to raising wages than past efforts, which the organization worried would hurt rural hospitals already struggling financially and potentially pass costs onto patients.

Like Orr, Simon signaled more work to come.

“As far as any future work related to this issue, we are committed to working with the Legislature and the governor to advance the joint goals of SB 525: investing in our state’s healthcare workforce and preserving access to healthcare,” Simon said.

Under the law, workers at large healthcare facilities will earn $23 an hour starting in June, $24 an hour in 2025 and $25 in 2026. That applies to all staff, including launderers and hospital gift shop workers.

Employees at independent rural hospitals and facilities that serve high rates of Medicare and Medi-Cal patients will see $18 an hour next year and won’t reach $25 an hour until 2033. Other smaller workplaces are required to pay employees $21 an hour next year, reaching $25 an hour in 2028.

Newsom supporters see the legislation as bold national leadership amid labor unrest and worker strikes across industries, and as a more organized way to address local demands for $25 per hour already moving ahead in cities across California. His critics question if he approved it too soon without a concrete plan in order to gain political favor.

Labor unions have long held outsize power in the California Legislature, but their wins this year were remarkable. Their influence in state politics is undeniable: the Service Employees International Union pumped nearly $4 million into eight independent expenditures alone to get its Democrats of choice elected to the Legislature this year.

Michael Genest, founder of Capitol Matrix Consulting who served as a budget director for former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, pointed to union power — and pressure — as one reason why Newsom may have moved too soon.

“This is no time to start adding really major costs to the state budget when it’s very possible we could go deeply in the wrong direction,” he said, noting the state’s economic uncertainty. “There’s always a reason to spend money, but some people care more about the reason than they do about what’s in the bank account.”

H.D. Palmer, Newsom’s Department of Finance spokesperson, has also acknowledged the state’s financial unknowns but was confident in the governor’s budgeting.

“The governor is required under the state Constitution to present a balanced budget by Jan. 10 of next year, which he will do,” he said. “There are any number of actions that can be done to balance a budget. Obviously the major thing right now is: Where are revenues going to go?”

Homeless tent ban proposed by UK interior minister

Suella Braverman. Photo: AFP / Adrian Dennis

Britain's interior minister Suella Braverman said on Saturday she would propose new laws to limit the use of tents by homeless people, saying many of them see it as "a lifestyle choice".

In a post on X, Braverman, who is seen as a possible future leader of the governing Conservative Party, said the state would always support those who are genuinely homeless.

"But we cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice," she said.

Braverman argued that unless the government acted, British cities would "go the way of places in the US like San Francisco and Los Angeles, where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor."

She said there were options for people who did not want to be sleeping rough, and the government was working with local government to increase support.

"What I want to stop, and what the law-abiding majority wants us to stop, is those who cause nuisance and distress to other people by pitching tents in public spaces, aggressively begging, stealing, taking drugs, littering, and blighting our communities," Braverman added.

She was criticised by Angela Rayner, the opposition Labour Party's deputy leader, who said on X: "Rough sleeping is not 'a lifestyle choice'," and blamed increased homelessness on 13 years of Conservative government.

Homelessness charity Shelter was also critical of Braverman.

"Let's make it clear: living on the streets is not a -lifestyle choice- - it is a sign of failed government policy," it said on X.

The government's new legislative programme will be outlined in the King's Speech on Tuesday.

In September, Braverman called for a global overhaul of the approach towards immigration, which is likely to be a key issue at Britain's general election expected next year.

That speech was criticised by human rights campaigners, opposition politicians and even some members of her own party.

- This story was first published by Reuters


UK minister plans to restrict use of tents by homeless


Updated November 4 2023 -

UK minister Suella Braverman says sleeping in tents in public areas is often 'a lifestyle choice'. (EPA PHOTO)

Britain's interior minister Suella Braverman will propose new laws to limit the use of tents by homeless people, saying many of them see it as "a lifestyle choice".

In a post on X, Braverman, who is seen as a possible future leader of the governing Conservative Party, said the state would always support those who are genuinely homeless.

"But we cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice," she said.

Braverman argued that unless the government acted, British cities would "go the way of places in the US like San Francisco and Los Angeles, where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor."

She said there were options for people who did not want to be sleeping rough, and the government was working with local government to increase support.

"What I want to stop, and what the law abiding majority wants us to stop, is those who cause nuisance and distress to other people by pitching tents in public spaces, aggressively begging, stealing, taking drugs, littering, and blighting our communities," Braverman added.

She was criticised by Angela Rayner, the opposition Labour Party's deputy leader, who blamed increased homelessness on 13 years of Conservative government.

Homelessness charity Shelter was also critical of the minister.

"Let's make it clear: living on the streets is not a 'lifestyle choice' - it is a sign of failed government policy," it said on X.


The UK government's new legislative programme will be outlined in the King's Speech on Tuesday.

In September, Braverman called for a global overhaul of the approach towards immigration, which is likely to be a key issue at Britain's general election expected next year.

That speech was criticised by human rights campaigners, opposition politicians and even some members of her own party.

 Associated Press


Braverman hits out at ‘nuisance’ homeless tents blighting UK streets

04 Nov 2023
Photo Niall Carson/PA Wire

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said she wants to put a stop to the “nuisance and distress” caused by homeless people pitching tents on public streets.

The Cabinet minister said the UK “cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents” occupied by people who she said were mainly from abroad and “living on the streets as a lifestyle choice”.

She said that unless there was action, then British cities could see an “explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor” that she said San Francisco and Los Angeles in the United States had witnessed.

Mrs Braverman made the comments on X, formerly known as Twitter, as she shared an article from the Financial Times reporting about how she is pushing for restrictions on the use of tents in urban environments.

According to the report, the senior Conservative’s proposals include establishing a civil offence to deter charities from giving tents to homeless people.

It said charities could be fined for handing out tents if they are deemed to have caused a nuisance under plans being pitched to be included in the King’s Speech, which will set out the UK Government’s legislative agenda on Tuesday.

The potential legislation would look to prevent the obstruction of shop doorways by rough sleepers who are using tents, the FT said.

Lifestyle choice

Mrs Braverman, who is currently on a visit to the Greek island of Samos, tweeted on Saturday: “The British people are compassionate. We will always support those who are genuinely homeless.

“But we cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice.

“Unless we step in now to stop this, British cities will go the way of places in the US like San Francisco and Los Angeles, where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor.

“Nobody in Britain should be living in a tent on our streets.

“There are options for people who don’t want to be sleeping rough, and the Government is working with local authorities to strengthen wraparound support including treatment for those with drug and alcohol addiction.

“What I want to stop, and what the law abiding majority wants us to stop, is those who cause nuisance and distress to other people by pitching tents in public spaces, aggressively begging, stealing, taking drugs, littering, and blighting our communities.”

Fresh powers

The Home Office said it could not comment on what might feature in the King’s Speech.

But officials pointed to the Antisocial Behaviour Action Plan announced in March, which included proposals to provide police and councils with fresh powers to “address rough sleeping and other street activity where it is causing a public nuisance”.

The plan said officers should be able to “clear the debris, tents and paraphernalia that can blight an area, while ensuring those genuinely homeless and with complex needs are directed to appropriate support”.

A spokesman for the Home Office said: “We want to ensure our communities feel safe and secure.

“That’s why, through our Anti-Social Behaviour Plan, we introduced a package of new measures to better equip the police and local authorities to respond to nuisance begging and rough sleeping, which can be harmful to individuals themselves and to the wider public.”

In September, the UK Government was warned by the Kerslake Commission, a panel of 36 experts, that it was not on target to meet its goal of ending rough sleeping by the next general election, which must take place by January 2025.

It published its Ending Rough Sleeping For Good strategy in September 2022 in which it restated a 2019 manifesto commitment to end rough sleeping by the end of this Parliament.

Monthly breakdown

The Welsh Government publishes a monthly breakdown of the number of rough sleepers by local authority.

Last month it reported that at 31 August 2023, there were an estimated 167 individuals sleeping rough throughout Wales.

This is 7 fewer than the 174 individuals sleeping rough at 31 July 2023. Local authorities are asked to base these estimates on local intelligence, not a one-night count.

Cardiff (43), Newport (31), Pembrokeshire (18), Ceredigion (13), Gwynedd (10) and Swansea (10) were the local authorities reporting the highest numbers of individuals sleeping rough. All other local authorities reported 9, or fewer, individuals sleeping rough, with five local authorities reporting zero.

Figures published earlier this year showed that the number of people estimated to be sleeping rough in England had risen for the first time since 2017.

A snapshot of a single night in autumn last year found 3,069 people sleeping rough, up 626 (26%) on the equivalent total for 2021 and nearly three-quarters (74%) above the level in 2010 when the figures were first recorded.


Protesters call on Suella Braverman to stop ‘stirring up hatred and fear’

Protesters outside the Home Office in central London (Victoria Jones/PA)

By George Lithgow and Kristina Wemyss, PA


Protesters have called on the Home Secretary Suella Braverman to stop “stirring up hatred and fear”.


A group of campaigners gathered outside the Home Office in Westminster on Saturday in opposition to Ms Braverman’s comments on refugees and tents in public spaces.

Weyman Bennett, co-convenor of Stand Up To Racism said the Home Secretary should “put some handcuffs on herself and hand herself in to the nearest police station”.





The group of peaceful protesters called for Ms Braverman to “stop the hate” as they heard speeches, sang songs and chanted outside the Home Office in central London.

The Home Secretary is currently on a visit to the Greek island of Samos, and said on Saturday she wants to put a stop to the “nuisance and distress” caused by homeless people pitching tents on public streets.

Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, she said: “We will always support those who are genuinely homeless. But we cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice.”

She warned Britain is at risk of becoming like “San Francisco and Los Angeles … where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor”.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman during a visit to the Greek border with Turkey in Alexandroupolis (Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire


Speaking at the protest, Mr Bennett told the PA news agency: “If you’re a refugee you have a right to claim asylum, if you’re homeless and you’re freezing to death, a tent is a good idea.”


He added: “She should put some handcuffs on herself and hand herself in to the nearest police station.”

James Cox from the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) said: “It’s really important that the people who are doing the work have their voices heard. We want to run an immigration system that cares for the most vulnerable.




“Our members felt strongly that their job in the Channel was to actually rescue people, not to try and create a dangerous environment.”

The group of peaceful protesters condemn Suella Braverman’s rhetoric (Victoria Jones/PA)


On the Home Secretary’s comments on tents in public spaces, Mr Cox said: “There’s a political aim to dehumanise people and create a scapegoat in society. These people are the most vulnerable, our aim should be to make sure they can integrate into society.”


In a statement, the PCS said the protest was “against the use of scapegoating language by the Government, and in particular Home Secretary Suella Braverman, that is stirring up hatred and fear, creating division and opening the door to racists and the far right”.


‘Homelessness is never a lifestyle choice’: Big Issue’s reaction to Suella Braverman comments

Nothing will be achieved by “punishing people for being homeless” says Big Issue founder Lord Bird


STEVEN MACKENZIE
4 Nov 2023

Rough sleeping is never a “lifestyle choice”. Image: Michael Coghlan / Flickr

Home secretary Suella Braverman sparked controversy (again) by claiming today that rough sleepers were making a “lifestyle choice”.

She posted on X/Twitter earlier today: “We cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice.”

Braverman added: “What I want to stop, and what the law-abiding majority wants us to stop, is those who cause nuisance and distress to other people by pitching tents in public spaces, aggressively begging, stealing, taking drugs, littering, and blighting our communities.”

Big Issue has this response:

Homelessness is never a lifestyle choice. We should be empowering people to get off the streets and into safe and stable housing, with the right health and wellbeing support and earning and employment opportunities.

We won’t achieve this by punishing people for being homeless.

The Big Issue creates opportunities for people experiencing homelessness and people affected by poverty in multiple ways, we provide vendors with an opportunity to earn through selling the Big Issue magazine, we provide people facing barriers to work access to employment opportunities through Big Issue Recruit and through Big Issue Invest we invest in organisations providing core solutions to end poverty.

We support the individuals we work through our frontline service team to access basic services such as housing, health and wellbeing and financial and digital skills training.

Sign our petition
We're calling on the Prime Minister to take urgent action to keep the 9 million UK renters living in poverty from falling into homelessness. Will you join the fight?

Appearing on BBC Radio 4 to speak about the comments, Big Issue founder Lord Bird said: “What really struck me, when I was walking around the West End the other night about 11 o’clock, is that I didn’t see Suella going around with her clipboard talking to people. So the Home Office must have an enormous bank of data where they’ve gone around and talked to people about their lifestyle choices.

“This spurious form of statement, I don’t know where she’s getting it from. I don’t think it makes the government look good when they’re allowed to say this kind of thing.

“I’ve heard this all before. It comes up when elections come up, unfortunately.”

Lord Bird continued: “Here is a social problem, people ending up on the streets. And if you don’t solve it as a social problem, it often becomes a law and order problem. Then all they do is exacerbate the problems rather than try to address the social problems in the first instance.”

Recently Big Issue reported on the Labour and Conservative party conferences. One of our vendors, Will Payne was invited to speak at both. He shared his experiences with us, and passed on the sentiments of many Tory delegates he spoke to, which suggests the comments of the home secretary might not be shared by all members of the party.

“There’s a message they give me to pass on to Big Issue readers,” Will wrote. “They are shocked by [Suella Braverman’s] language about migrants. Her inflammatory language is affecting them all. They say, every time she opens her mouth, a Tory seat loses 2,000 votes.”

Moving on to targeting people experiencing homelessness today, demonstrating horrifying levels of ignorance about the issue, the home secretary may have lost her party thousands of more votes.

If you want to find out more about the issue, check out the below:

Striking actors reviewing 'final' offer from Hollywood studios
NO SUCH THING AS A FINAL OFFER
Reuters
November 4, 2023

SAG-AFTRA members walk the picket line during their ongoing strike outside Sony Studios in Culver City, California, U.S. September 29, 2023. 
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights


LOS ANGELES, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Negotiators representing Hollywood actors are considering a new proposal that major studios described as their "last, best and final offer" to end a four-month-long strike, the SAG-AFTRA union said on Saturday.

SAG-AFTRA members walked off the job in July to demand higher compensation in the streaming TV era plus protections around the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and other gains.

The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), which represents Walt Disney (DIS.N), Netflix (NFLX.O) and other companies, presented its latest offer on Saturday, SAG-AFTRA leadership said in an update to members.

"We are reviewing it and considering our response within the context of the critical issues addressed in our proposals," the union said.

A representative for the AMPTP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Earlier this week, union leaders expressed "cautious optimism" that a deal could be reached soon but also said there were gaps between the two sides on various issues including the use of AI. Actors are seeking assurances that their digital likenesses will not be used without their permission.

The work stoppage, along with a Writers Guild of America strike that ended in September, has cost the California economy at least $6 billion, according to a Milken Institute estimate. Most scripted film and television production remains on hold.

Striking actors are reviewing Hollywood and TV studios’ ‘best and final offer’

By David Goldman, CNN
Sat November 4, 2023

SAG-AFTRA members picket outside of Netflix's building.Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images
New YorkCNN —

A deal to resolve film and television actors’ 113-day strike could be imminent, as the union representing them said it is reviewing Hollywood and TV studios’ final offer.

The negotiating committee for the SAG-AFTRA union on Saturday said it received a “last, best and final offer” from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, whose members include Disney, Netflix, NBCUniversal, and Warner Bros. Discovery. Warner Bros. Discovery in the parent company of CNN.

A source familiar with the matter told CNN that the heads of the major studios met virtually with the actors’ guild negotiating committee on Saturday to discuss the latest offer.

“We are reviewing it and considering our response within the context of the critical issues addressed in our proposals,” the union said in a statement.

It’s not clear that a deal will be reached. The union and studio executives have been meeting on and off for months with many promising developments and disappointing setbacks along the way.

SAG-AFTRA actors walked off the set on July 14, joining the striking writers in a historic double walkout against the studios — the first time the writers and actors had simultaneously been on strike in more than 60 years. Both the actors and writers fought for updated deals that better paid them for shows and movies on streaming services. They both demanded better benefits and wanted restrictions on the use of artificial intelligence, a technology that actors and writers alike believe poses an existential threat to their livelihoods.

Even if a deal is reached soon, it would not necessarily end the strike. The deal would still need to be ratified by members of the 160,000 union before it goes into effect, and many unions across multiple industries have been voting down contracts in recent months.

An online petition signed by more than 5,000 members recently urged the union to take a hard line in negotiations toward a final deal, saying they would not agree to a deal that did not meet the demands laid out at the start of the strike.

But some of Hollywood’s most famous stars have been eager to get back on set. George Clooney, Tyler Perry and other A-list actors offered to pay millions more in union dues to help end the strike, a source with knowledge of the proposal previously told CNN.

The SAG-AFTRA union’s demand for an 11% wage increase in the first year of the proposed contract term has been a major impediment to a resolution: The studios had agreed to a 5% pay raise. In recent days, the union suggested the studio and the negotiators were getting closer on some key issues but remained far apart on others.

Disney’s Bob Iger, Warner Bros. Discovery’s David Zaslav, Netflix’s Ted Sarandos, and NBC Universal’s Donna Langley have been directly involved in negotiations.
French senators propose bill to ban criticism of Zionism

November 3, 2023 at 8:37 pm

French right-wing Les Republicains (LR) Senate member Stephane Le Rudulier poses for a photo session in Paris on September 14, 2022. 
(Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP) (Photo by JOEL SAGET/AFP
 via Getty Images)

A group of 16 French senators have introduced a bill to criminalise criticism of Zionism.

Senator Stephane Le Rudulier said ‘anti-Zionism’ is linked to the increase in anti-Semitism.

Zionism, the racist Jewish nationalist movement, has led to the forced displacement of over a million Palestinians, and the arrest of a million more.

According to renowned Israeli historian Ilan Pappe: “Zionism was a colonialist movement that penetrated the Palestinian homeland by force, with the wish to colonise the country and with possible expansionist ambitions to penetrate the heart of the Arab world.”

Last month, France banned pro-Palestine protests “because they are likely to generate disturbances to the public order,” Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said. He added that any organisation of such protests will lead to arrests.

France has long supported Israel’s settler colonial project in Palestine, providing arms and diplomatic cover for its genocidal bombing campaign which is ongoing in Gaza.


Ex-Mossad deputy director proposes resettling Gaza’s entire population globally

100 countries around the world should each take in 20,000 refugees from Gaza, former deputy director of Mossad Ram Ben Bara has said, adding that being a refugee in Canada is better than living in Gaza.




November 4, 2023 

Israeli politician and ex-deputy director of Mossad Ram Ben Barak sparked controversy as he proposed resettling Gaza’s entire population globally. “If each country takes in 20,000 individuals,” he said, “that would involve 100 countries. “Considering they are refugees,” he added, “it is better to be a refugee in Canada than in Gaza.” Palestinians have slammed proposals to resettle Gaza’s population, including Israeli proposals to move them to Egypt’s Sinai Desert, as a policy of ‘ethnic cleansing’.



Canada’s FM called out for Israel support

‘You have blood on your hand’: Canada's foreign minister confronted over support for Israel’s war on Gaza


November 4, 2023 

Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly was confronted in public over her support for Israel in its war on Gaza, which has so far claimed the lives of over 9,000 Palestinians primarily women and children. “You have blood on your hand, Madam Joly,” a man can be heard shouting. “You went to Israel to support…the massacres.”