Ezra Levant examines Donald Trump’s tweets about Canada becoming the "51st state," revealing a $100B trade surplus misrepresentation and historical U.S.-Canada tensions, like LBJ vs. Pearson over Vietnam. He critiques Trudeau’s leadership—symbolic changes, divisive rhetoric, and emigration spikes—while praising Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s pragmatic approach. A live report from Alexa Lavois details a firebombed Montreal synagogue amid rising anti-Semitism, linked to mass immigration from high-hate countries, with police failing to act decisively. The episode underscores Canada’s sovereignty crisis and law enforcement weaknesses, questioning whether Trudeau’s policies are eroding national stability. [Automatically generated summary]
What do you make of this whole 51st state thing that Trump keeps tweeting at Canada?
Why is he saying it so often?
And what's the best way to reply to it?
I'm going to do a deep dive in it.
I think I've got some ideas that you might like and maybe you haven't heard before.
So I hope you'll watch.
Not just listen, but watch.
I want to show you some things too, including some video clips.
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It's the video version.
Just go to rebelnewsplus.com, click subscribe, it's eight bucks a month, which I know might not sound like a lot of money to you, but boy, it sure adds up for us.
That's how we pay our bills.
That's rebelnewsplus.com.
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All right, here's the podcast.
Trump's Push for Greenland00:11:25
Tonight, Donald Trump keeps poking Canada in unusual ways.
He's really pushing the 51st state idea.
Why is he doing that?
And what should Canadians say in reply?
It's December 18th, and this is the Esther Levant show.
Shame on you, you censorious bug.
It started out with a tweet, as many things do when it comes to Donald Trump.
He said he wanted both Canada and Mexico to tighten up their borders with the United States to stop two things: illegal drugs and illegal immigrants.
Now, if he had just ended things there, I'm not sure anything would have happened.
I mean, do you?
I mean, Trump has been saying that for years during his whole campaign, during the four years he was out of office, and during the four years he was president the first time.
So I think politicians and diplomats and bureaucrats and the permanent state would say, sure, yeah, blah, blah, blah.
That's just Trump being Trump.
What's new, right?
So he added a bit of jet fuel to it.
He demanded that these countries fix the borders by January 20th, the day he takes office.
That's quite some demand to make.
It gave both Canada and Mexico enough time, though, if they were truly interested in cooperating, to at least agree in principle and to come up with a bit of a plan.
I mean, aren't we supposed to be enforcing the laws now, anyways?
We already have police and border police.
Why not, you know, just enforce the laws of our own country?
You'd think we'd enforce our own laws for our own sake, or else what's the point of us having a law?
But it was that final flourish, the or else part of his tweet.
Do this or be slapped with a 25% tariff on anything you export to the United States.
Of course, that really has nothing to do with fixing the border.
Other than I suppose the irony of taxing legal imports with a tariff while illegal imports of drugs continue.
I don't think you have to be a master negotiator, though, to know that that's just Trump's way of adding an exclamation point.
He's got our attention.
Just do the right thing, and the threat goes away.
I don't think he wants to do the threat part.
He wants you to look at that and be motivated to do the real thing he wants, seal the border, which we should want to do anyways, especially if Trump is about to engage in a mass deportation.
We don't want those folks just traipsing across into Canada.
It's in our interest, too.
Now, Mexico complied pretty much immediately.
Trudeau did not.
Now, he flew down to Mar-a-Lago for dinner and he was welcomed.
That's quite a powerful table that had gathered there, including the incoming Commerce Secretary.
But obviously, things didn't go as well as Trump wanted because the next day, Trump's side leaked to the media that Trump had been joking about the 51st state thing.
Obviously, a joke, but a joke that would resonate.
It touches on Canadian insecurities, I think.
It touches on the historical battles that we've had with America going back centuries, War of 1812.
And more recently, what happens when Canadian prime ministers get offside with U.S. presidents?
Here's an old film I found.
The White House lawn is fast becoming an international heliport.
President Johnson comes out to greet a welcome visitor, Canada's Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, who with his wife arrives for a two-day visit.
A visit Mr. Pearson had promised upon his election last fall.
Mr. Pearson has recently returned from conferences with French President Charles de Gaulle.
And though he thinks U.S.-French differences are not unbridgeable, he is not here as a go-between.
He is here to promote U.S.-Canadian cooperation as his Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Paul Martin, then U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, signed the treaty for a multi-million dollar power and flood control development for the Columbia River basin in the Pacific Northwest.
Later, the two presidents sign a treaty of a more sentimental nature.
This agreement makes an international park of the summer home of President Franklin D. Roosevelt at Campobello Island.
Thus, in the realms of the future and the past, the United States and the Dominion of Canada draw closer together.
That was the happy propaganda version.
Everything's fine.
It wasn't really between those leaders in particular.
Here's a snippet that wasn't in the news until much later.
Things even got physical in 1965 when Pearson made a speech at Temple University proposing a pause for peace.
Later at Camp David, an infuriated Johnson grabbed the Nobel Peace Prize winning prime minister by the lapels and screamed, Don't you come into my house and piss on my rug.
You can sort of get it.
I mean, imagine a foreign leader coming into your country and denouncing your war.
So things aren't always friendly between U.S. presidents and Canadian prime ministers.
It's a real art being the smaller party in that partnership, and Trudeau doesn't have it.
Anyways, you know all of this, but my point is Trump has not stopped poking at Canada and at Trudeau.
In fact, he's done it again and again.
He put out social media posts pretty much taunting Trudeau or Canada as a whole, even like this one implying a U.S. invasion, maybe, I don't know.
Or this one just deliberately calling Canada a state and Trudeau a governor.
He's done that again and again, actually.
And when Christy Freeland detonated Trudeau the other day, Trump tweeted his sympathy to Trudeau and said Freeland herself was toxic.
And the latest one was this one.
He said, no one can answer why we subsidize Canada to the tune of over $100 million a year.
Makes no sense.
Many Canadians want Canada to become the 51st state.
They would save massively on taxes and military protection.
I think it is a great idea.
51st state.
Now, I'm not exactly sure how Trump believes they subsidize Canada each year, unless that's a typo.
He's saying $100 million, and you may know two-way trade between our countries is about $1 trillion or 10,000 times that.
I think he probably meant to say $100 billion.
And I'm guessing he means a trade surplus.
It's not a subsidy.
It just means they're buying $100 billion a year more than we buy from them.
And I'll give you an explanation of how that happens a little bit later.
But my main point is to show you that tweet that Trump is still poking at Canada, still pushing the 51st state thing.
And he's now adding a commercial grievance to his border grievance.
He's saying, we subsidize you.
You know, I just reordered the book, Art of the Deal.
That was Trump's best-selling book from way back on how to negotiate.
I read it when he was elected in 2016, and I did a little monologue about it.
I can't find my old copy, so I want to read it again.
I'm 100% certain, going from memory, that this kind of badgering and these dramatic statements are part of his negotiating style.
I know they are.
I mean, have you ever seen this weird thing he did to put Larry King, the old TV interviewer, on the back foot?
Do you mind if I sit back a little bit?
Because your breath is very bad.
It really is.
Has this ever been told to you before?
No.
Huh?
Okay, then I won't go on.
Actually, that's how you get the edge.
Trump later said Larry King didn't have bad breath at all, but Trump said he did to put King on the defensive.
Trump does that sort of thing, doesn't he?
At least to people he's in a tussle with.
It's like his really grippy handshake, you know, the one.
There's perhaps no better way to express a sense of control in business and in politics than a firm handshake.
For Trump, it's a full contact sport, and he's got a few power moves.
Anyway, so we're in a pickle.
That first tweet by Trump started a chain reaction.
And now Christia Freeland is out of cabinet, and it looks like that scuppered Mark Carney's planned accession to cabinet, and Trudeau couldn't be weaker at home or abroad.
So Trump keeps pumping this 51st state thing.
Why not?
I mean, here's Jean Charret, the former conservative MP and liberal premier of Quebec.
Let me read it carefully because he has some advice for all of us.
Every Canadian, regardless of their opinion of the prime minister or political affiliation, should feel deeply offended by President Trump's remarks.
We might one day be grateful for this wake-up call.
For too long, we have been complacent in our relationship with the United States and the rest of the world.
We need to unite and rise to this historic occasion to shape the future of Canada.
So Shere is really revved up.
He used capital letters and all.
He says it's a wake-up call.
We need to unite and rise to the occasion, yada, yada, yada.
But he doesn't actually tell us what to do.
What does rising to the occasion mean?
I don't think he knows what to do.
His only one piece of advice is that we should all feel, quote, deeply offended, which is just an emotional feeling.
It's not really a plan or an activity.
Be offended isn't really practical advice.
I don't think.
It's certainly not constructive advice or how to solve a problem.
Now, I'll come back to that again in a moment, what constructive advice might look like.
But why is this so heavily heard by Canadians?
Is it insulting?
Sure, a little bit, I think.
Although it implies that Canadians would want to do this, it wouldn't be a hostile move.
But why do people, why does this prick people, like Shire?
Why does this work on Canadians?
But I don't think it would really work, say, on the Brits or Australians.
I don't think it would.
I mean, maybe geography is part of it.
I suppose Trump did something like this once before.
I don't know if you remember.
A few years back, he joked about buying Greenland, which is owned by Denmark.
Rebel News actually sent a reporter over there to talk to locals about it.
Greenland is almost completely empty.
The reason Trump was interested in it, besides him being a real estate guy who always thinks about land, is that I think it was China was looking to establish some sort of military presence there, and Trump wanted to scare them away.
Would Denmark really sell the land to America?
It's hard to imagine they would.
Maybe.
But America has indeed grown by buying land before.
Alaska was bought from Russia.
The Secretary of State was called Seward.
They called the deal Seward's folly because it was thought to be a crazy expenditure of money at the time for useless land.
That's what they said.
Before that, there was the Louisiana Purchase, which doubled the size of the USA by buying land from France.
Why Canada Matters00:08:32
So I suppose it's not that crazy.
But mainly the idea shakes things up.
It made Denmark, in the case of Greenland, say, well, do we want Greenland or not?
And if we do, why would we lease some of it to China?
And it's fun, of course, and it shows Denmark that Trump was thinking about them fondly.
And everyone is flattered when people talk about them, especially in an admiring way.
So how does talking about making Canada the 51st state work?
Well, it's a possibility.
Quebec set the legal precedent.
You can separate from Canada.
The Supreme Court had a hearing about it.
It's legal.
Supreme Court, in fact, outlined the process.
And remember, the United States has been eyeing Canada for a long time.
That's what spurred our country to make the Canadian Pacific Railway.
That's why it's called the Canadian Pacific Railway, to fasten the west of Canada to Ontario and Quebec before the Americans could grab it.
But who would and who wouldn't want to be an American?
I bet a lot of people prefer Trump to Trudeau.
Not everyone, but I bet a lot of people do, especially in the West.
But it's not just about an ephemeral politician who could be gone in a moment.
Just in general, the richest Canadian province, though, is poorer than the poorest U.S. state.
Chew on that for a while.
Or how about the freedom of speech down there that we don't have?
Or how about their entrepreneurial spirit?
Or how about their relative ease of doing business?
Or how about their better weather even?
I mean, those are all good reasons for, I don't know, 100,000 Canadians a year to take matters into their own hands right now and just head on down.
I don't know if you saw this story.
I think it was back in May.
Emigration from Canada to the U.S. hits a 10-year high as tens of thousands head south.
Census says 126,340 people left Canada for the U.S. in 2022, a 70% increase over a decade ago.
Tens of thousands of Canadians are emigrating from Canada to the United States.
And the number of people packing up and moving south is hit a level not seen in 10 years or more, according to the data compiled by CBC News.
There's nothing new about Canadians moving south of the 49th parallel for love, work, or warmer weather.
But the latest figures from the American Community Survey, ACS, suggest it's now happening at a much higher rate than the historical average.
We all probably know people who left during the COVID lockdowns, typically wealthy professionals who could afford to move, get a green card, work from remote, people who were sick of living in Teresa Tam's little prison.
Now, COVID is long over, but I think the exodus is actually speeding up, not slowing down.
It's actually a surprising story for the CBC to publish.
They talk about how many people just hate Trudeau.
When do they do that?
They talk about how cheap housing is compared to up here in Canada.
I mean, look at some of these little headlines in the story.
I hate the politics here talking about Trudeau.
Canada is not what it used to be.
And look at this in the Toronto Star.
So first the CBC and now the Red Star says, from oh, Canada to no Canada, national pride has taken a steep decline in recent years, new poll suggests.
Canadians' pride and attachment in their country have taken a dive.
A new poll from the Angus Reed Institute suggests, what's going on?
Well, I'll tell you what's going on.
Canada, you know, Trudeau changed the anthem.
He changed even what our money looks like.
He took Sir John MacDonald off the $10 bill.
He changed the passports, taking out anything historic.
He really hates the symbols of the country because he hates the country.
He calls us genociders.
He says we're racist.
We're transphobic.
We're sexist.
He always apologizes for what we did, not for what he does.
He thinks we're not living up to him.
So between Trudeau destroying the country financially, destroying its livability through mass immigration, and telling us we have no value as a society, why wouldn't someone want to move to the US of A?
Of course, not everyone can just pick up and move.
So how many people who can't move, like a local factory worker or a local waitress, would like their city or province or the whole of Canada to become American?
It's probably a minority, even though right now it's just a speculative question, but I think it's a real enough idea that it's a hot button in Canada.
Trump knows it, and he knows how to push buttons.
Will you grant me that?
And he knows that Canadian politicians know it.
Best healthcare system in the world.
No, not really.
No one believes that.
Best nature in the world.
Yeah, sure, if you don't mind homeless encampments in your city parks and national parks crowded with foreigners, many of whom lack basic cultural compatibility.
Let's just use that euphemism.
That's another thing, though.
Last Jew out of Montreal, please turn off the lights.
America will take you and protect you.
I don't think it's going to happen that Canada is going to join the States.
I just don't think that's the likely outcome.
But it's real enough to start a million conversations and to take Canadian political leaders down a peg.
Trudeau has presided over the demoralization and decline of Canada.
Our regime media, the CBC and others, have covered it up.
They've promoted tiny homes and small living and degrowth and you'll own nothing and you'll be happy and the carbon tax is good for you and eat the bugs.
But no one really bought into it.
And faced with the daydream opportunity of being an American, who amongst us wouldn't at least take a moment to take stock of how things are going up here right now.
And most of us say it's not really going well in Canada right now.
So yeah, it's a button to push.
But here's the right way to push back if you like America and love Canada and want this spat to be over and want to improve life up here.
Here's a response from Danielle Smith, the Premier of Alberta.
She quotes Trump's social media post.
Fair question on the trade deficit with Canada, Mr. President.
The reason for this is because Canada, especially Alberta, sends billions of raw materials, oil, gas, minerals, grain, livestock, timber, et cetera, to your U.S. refineries and factories, which your great American companies and workers upgrade and sell around the world, including back to Canada.
We are your biggest customer by a mile.
Literally millions of good-paying American jobs and companies rely on these affordable raw materials from Canada to make trillions of dollars of wealth in your country.
As a Conservative Premier in Canada, I believe we have two of the greatest countries on earth.
We have fought and bled together in many wars and built an incredible alliance and partnership.
I really hope we can strengthen that partnership throughout your presidency by securing our shared border, as you've requested, and partnering to protect our North American workers from unfair Chinese trade practices.
Americans and Canadians will both benefit immensely from this.
We in the province of Alberta, which sends 4.3 million barrels of oil and gas to your country each day, stand ready to work with you.
Looking so forward to attending your inauguration in Washington this January.
That is how you deal with Donald Trump.
Not pouting like Trudeau.
Not making empty threats like Ontario's Doug Ford.
Not indulging in Trump derangement syndrome like the CBC, but making our case and solving the problems.
I love the fact that she's going to his inauguration.
I love the fact that she calls American companies great and Canadian companies too.
And by the way, don't you know that telling Trump that she's going to his inauguration and saying American companies are great, that's pushing his buttons in a good way.
I mean, how can he attack someone who is so friendly, so deal-making-oriented, and frankly, so flattering to him?
Protecting Synagogues: Changing Culture00:11:42
Who is Canada's foreign minister right now?
I mean, de facto, in real life, not just on paper.
It is not Jihad Jolie in Montreal.
It's not Tiny Trudeau or Little Justin, as he's called on Fox News.
It's Danielle Smith, the Premier of Alberta.
That's how you do it.
You don't listen to the former Premier of Quebec telling you to pout and be offended.
stay with us for more.
There's only so many times I want to read a statement by Melanie Jolie or Justin Trudeau responding to some terrorist incident against a Jewish school or Jewish synagogue where they say, this isn't Canada.
Well, yeah, actually it is.
After 14 months of the largest anti-Semitic crime wave in Canadian history, I think it's safe to say this is Canada.
I refer, of course, to the firebombing, the arson attack on a Montreal area synagogue called Bethtikva early this morning.
An attack on this synagogue happened the second time this particular synagogue has been targeted.
Joining us now live on location is our friend Alexa Lavois, who has been at this synagogue before for the same reason.
Alexa, thank you for making the journey there.
It looks frightfully cold.
You're standing outside the Bethtikva.
Tell me what you see.
Tell me who's there.
Tell me the kind of damage that's visible and tell me if anything is known yet.
So for now, we don't really know who committed the crime.
I know there is an ongoing investigation by the SPBM behind me.
I don't know if you can see they are currently replacing the window of the facade of the synagogue.
It's not only Bet Tikva who was targeted, but also the Sija building the other side of the street where the window was smashed.
Also, what we know is the incident happened a little bit before 3 a.m.
The SPVM say that it was an incentive.
device that they found with broken glasses and some witnesses say that they saw someone fleeing the scene early after the incident.
So we don't know much yet.
I didn't speak with nobody.
I know that the SPVM is on the scene.
But later on, I'm going to speak with the president of Bet Tikva, Karen Ritter.
She's coming to meet me and we will have a full interview coming up on RebendNews.com.
Well, thank you very much for doing that.
And I'm glad they're speaking with you.
This has happened across the country.
It happens so much that it doesn't even make the news on many occasions.
Let me give you an example.
Here in Toronto, a large Jewish day school had a massive arson attack, and police refused to call it arson.
They said it was an accidental fire in a shed.
There was an arson attack on Jewish school buses, and police again refused to say it was arson as if these school buses suddenly spontaneously combusted.
I'm guessing this is just too big to sweep under the carpet.
I think I saw the Montreal Gazette and CTV cover it.
Has this been covered widely in the Quebec media besides the Gazette and CTV?
I know that CBC is currently on the scene, Radu Canada, for the French viewer.
But also you need to understand that Bet Tikva is not only a synagogue, it's also annexed to a Jewish school.
So it's probably why there is way more coverage for this.
And also because it's the second attack.
In November 2023, Bet Tikva was also the victim of a Molotov cocktail.
And so the fact that this place had been victim twice makes it like a vulnerable area for the Jewish community.
You know, it's tragic.
This is the new normal.
And I see Melanie Jolie putting out a perfunctory statement.
She's not even trying anymore.
I want to tell you, I went to Paris almost 10 years ago, Alexa, after the terrorist attack on the Bata clan, which was a concert venue that terrorists attacked and killed an enormous number of people.
And there had been anti-Semitic attacks around the city.
I went to a Jewish grocery store, and outside the grocery store was a French paramilitary police officer with a very serious semi-automatic weapon.
Like it was more than an ordinary policeman might have.
It was almost something you'd expect a soldier to have.
And at various Jewish locations in Paris, you had permanently stationed heavily armed police, not only as a visual deterrent, but for safety.
I get the feeling we're almost at that point.
I mean, how many times can the same synagogue be attacked before we station a police officer outside them?
I don't know what else to do.
I think I see behind you, I'm not sure if that's a security camera.
I'm sure there's security cameras at this place, but those aren't really a deterrent.
Someone is wearing a mask and at most they record what happened after the fact.
They don't stop it in real time.
What, what do you think can be done?
Do you have any ideas?
Or or maybe we have to wait to to know a little bit more, but I I I think this is to the point of being ridiculous now.
I mean, there's got to have been 50 of these attacks over the last year.
Well, first of all, they have already their private security over here to uh survey the area.
They have already also some SPVM doing some um surveillance.
So what's next?
I think the next step is to enforce the law.
To enforce the law to everybody who are spreading hate speech and hate uh, hate rhetoric in our street.
Make sure that the law is applied.
Make sure that those people, when they got caught, they have a harsh um repercussion, harsh condemnation um, and they go to jail, not just like going to jail and watch Netflix or having like a really weak sentence.
Law needs to be applied and for now they know they get, they will get away with it.
It's why we are seeing those kind of crime being perpetrated against Jewish school, Jewish businesses.
We have a recently death threat being uh made towards a Jewish business uh, downtown.
So it doesn't stop.
It's because the inaction of the SPVM by arresting those individual, by condemning, by charging them, prosecuting them properly make them emboldened to commit more crimes.
I think you're right.
And just for our viewers who don't know, SPVM is uh, the acronym for the Montreal Police Service.
It's uh, I think, Service Police, Ville Marie, if i'm not mistaken, or Ville Montral uh you, you correct me if i'm wrong on there, not Ville Marie, Ville Demontréal, um Ville Montreal, Ville Montréal, thank you.
So uh, SPVM is Montreal Police.
I think you're so right.
Let me expand on what you said.
A few weeks ago there were actual riots, a full-out riot in Montreal, and I think only three arrests were made the entire night.
So what message does that send to the rioters?
And you have huge mobs in Montreal blocking the streets, committing all sorts of smaller crimes, from mischief to vandalism, to trespass, to more serious things like uttering threats.
And if there's no consequences to that well, how is it surprising that a few of those people then become emboldened to actually attack a Jewish synagogue at 3 a.m?
So I think you're right.
I think it's not just how do we protect this synagogue from being attacked again it's we have to change the culture of permissibility that Trudeau and Jolie and Valerie Plant, the mayor and others have allowed to grow.
I think they could crack down on this Anti-semitic crime wave in a week if they wanted to.
They don't want to, as Jolie said, it's because of the domestic demographic situation.
In her her writing.
Did you hear about that, what Melanie Jolie said?
I think she said it to Thomas Molcair.
She explained that her foreign policy is in part because there are so many Muslim immigrants in her district.
I mean, I think that she's just admitting the whole thing.
She's admitting that they are opening our door to some people who carry with them anti-Jewish sentiment.
It's all they are.
They need to integrate, but they don't want to integrate.
And now we see our Jewish community being victim of those hate crime.
And what would be next?
Do they are waiting that someone get hurt for real?
Yeah.
Well, that's the thing.
It's like a child testing the boundaries.
We see that in Toronto also.
You know, the pro-Hamas side literally has terrorist reenactments on the street in a Jewish neighborhood, and they haven't found the limits yet.
Like a child testing, testing, seeing what they can get away with.
The answer in Canada so far is you can get away with anything.
Well, Alexa, thank you for making the journal, the journey there.
I know you have the interview with the synagogue president lined up.
I'll be very interested to see that.
And I would be, I mean, I am depressed about the state of affairs in Canada.
To me, this will only get worse until we end mass immigration and until we start to vet immigration for cultural fit.
Without knowing who the suspects are, I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that it's some of the millions of people we have brought to Canada in recent years from countries that are endemically anti-Semitic.
And don't be surprised if you bring over millions of people from countries like Syria or Afghanistan or Somalia, that you're going to have some people who hate Jews.
And then they look to Trudeau and Jolie for moral guidance and they say, oh, it's safe to take a shot at the Jews.
I'm depressed, but I'm glad you're covering it.
Thank you for being there, Alexa.
Thank you.
All right.
There you have it.
Alexa Lavois on location at the Beth Tikva Synagogue.
She'll have her report with the president of the synagogue later.
Hey, welcome back.
Your letters to me.
It's what it is.
Says, if any of these liberals truly wanted Trudeau gone, they can vote no confidence.
They won't.
Well, if they vote no confidence, they're going to bring an election very quickly and they're going to get slaughtered.
So as much as they don't like Trudeau, they like themselves more than they dislike him.
Voting Against Trudeau?00:00:57
Amira Maze says all options are on the table, including my pension.
You're talking about that clip from Jack Meet Singh where he kept saying Trudeau must resign.
And when they say, well, you vote against him, all options are on the table.
He repeated that so that was like watching a child.
It was very embarrassing.
Aquila says, Carnage carbon tax Carney should be arrested too.
Well, I don't know if he's committed a crime.
And I think the whole shenanigans of this past week have spooked him.
According to two different news reports that I've seen, Carney was supposed to swoop in and become the next appointed finance minister.
That was supposed to happen really right after the mini budget was released.
I think he's decided to walk away slowly from this train wreck.
He might take a crack at it later, but he doesn't want to be in it right now.
Well, that's our show for the day.
Until next time, on behalf of all of us here at Rebel World Headquarters, see you at home.