Dear John,
It’s been a packed summer for our
movement—supporting candidates, launching a major new policy, speaking
at important conferences, and continuing to push back against
government overreach. We are offering Canadians a principled
alternative that doesn’t cave to establishment
politics.
In August, Jonathan Bridges carried the PPC banner in the Battle River–Crowfoot by-election. While the media fixated on a “longest ballot” sideshow, Jonathan delivered what voters actually needed to hear: a message of provincial autonomy, decentralization, and common sense.
Instead of fixing the ballot issue,
Pierre Poilievre is now pushing reforms that would make it harder for
small parties and independents to even run. The PPC will keep
standing up for fair and open
elections, because
democracy belongs to the people—not the
establishment.
For decades, Ottawa has been grabbing more power, running programs it shouldn’t, and tying provincial hands with strings-attached transfers. That’s not how Confederation was meant to work.
This month we released our new Policy on Federalism—a plan to restore balance by giving back provinces full control over their jurisdictions such as health care, education, housing, and natural resources, while reforming equalization to be fair and limited.
These issues were front and centre in the recent Alberta by-election, where growing frustration with Ottawa is driving calls for separation. The PPC is showing there’s another way: respect the Constitution, give provinces real autonomy, and keep Canada united through freedom, not force.
During COVID, governments locked us in our homes—not based on science, but on control. Maxime Bernier warned climate would be the next excuse.
Now it’s here. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick banned people from even walking in the woods, with sweeping restrictions and huge fines.
PPC candidate Jeff Evely pushed back. He filmed himself walking into the woods on principle—and was slapped with a $28,872 fine. His stand has been covered by Global News, CBC News, the Toronto Sun, the National Post, the BBC, and most recently on Redacted.
While Liberal and Conservative
premiers recycle lockdown-style rules, only the PPC is fighting
back—just as we did during COVID.
In Lindsay, Ontario, a man was recently arrested after defending his family from a midnight intruder.
Now politicians of all stripes are scrambling to call for a Castle Doctrine law. But the PPC has been there all along.
Our policy makes it clear: Canadians have the right to defend themselves, their families, and their property in their own homes—without fear of criminal charges for doing so.
That’s leadership. We don’t wait for a crisis or a poll to do the right thing.
📄 Read our Self-Defence
policy
In August, Maxime Bernier joined a
lineup of international thinkers at the Capitalism
& Morality Conference in
Vancouver. Alongside PPC candidates John
Ede and Peyman
Askari, Max delivered a clear
message: freedom, responsibility, and free markets are the foundation
of prosperity. His speech on the coming monetary reset and the role of
gold will be available soon. Learn
more here
The PPC has been the only party
opposing Canada’s participation in the war in
Ukraine.
Maxime Bernier
gave an interview to Western Standard columnist Linda Slobodian on how
Canada’s $22 billion in aid to Ukraine so far is only helping to prolong the
slaughter. You can read it here.
Join Max & the PPC team at one of our upcoming events:
The PPC is more than a party—it’s a movement built on truth, courage, and freedom.
📬 Have feedback or want to get
involved? Email: [email protected]
The establishment parties are funded by big unions, lobbyists, and corporate insiders. We rely on Canadians like you.
Every donation—big or small—helps us grow, organize, and keep fighting for freedom.
Stay Strong and Free,
Nathan McMillan
Executive Director
People’s
Party of Canada