OK! Story filed. Let’s go do another protest walk through.
Missed it? Here’s my story on Trudeau kicking off the Emergencies Act debate: tj.news/telegraph-jour…#NB
Oh boy, immediately greeted by this guy on Bank Street. “They call my Mr. Freedom,” he says. He says he’s from Niagara.
Definitely a larger police presence today. But they’re largely just doing that, being a presence, walking here and there, stopping, milling about. This Bank and Wellington Streets.
This is Kent and Queen where a few other #NB’ers have been for 21 days. Not much of a police presence here compared to other locations.
Fences now going up around the Supreme Court of Canada.
And now fences around the Confederation Building where most #NB MPs have their offices.
Convoy daycare remains open. There is a significant number of children at this protest. In walking for the last 10 min I counted seven strollers.
“It's time we stop
Hey, what's that sound?
Everybody look, what's going down?”
Karaoke.
Sign cleaned off!
The Parliamentary cafeteria is still going, so the tour will stop here and I’ll go back to writing.
These two have jackets that says #NB on them, but declined to talk. If I had to estimate it, I would say there is about 25 NBers remaining here give or take during weekdays. But I’m always asking around to find more.
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OK! Let’s update things. I just went for a walk around. The red arrows are police advancements. The have taken the intersection of Rideau and Sussex, but little else. The black scribbles are fronts put up by protesters. Thread…
Quebec riot police are the front line. The trucks behind them have been taken by police.
But you can also see there’s a big line of protesters, with trucks, and some more barriers they have in place.
For those watching at home, I’ve made a map. The red arrows are current police advancements. The black line is where some protesters have now fallen back to to build a barricade. That black rectangle is where the two #NB’ers from Grand Manan were parked, but have now gone home.
First, I don’t live in the core, so it took a long time to get to ground zero. Road blocks everywhere. One police check even turning back a guy with Parliamentary Press Gallery credentials. So you just go to the next perimeter point and hope for a friendlier cop.
Several large paddy wagons are positioned on secondary streets. Police on every corner.
Peter Doull, a retired trucker from Grand Manan who spent 37 years on the highway and the last 21 days parked in front of Parliament Hill, and his son, James Doull, a diesel mechanic and fisherman, say they're leaving today.
They say it's due to a “family emergency."
“It’s critical, I’ve got to go,” Doull said, declining to elaborate. “It is what it is.
“I think we accomplished what we wanted to. But I think there still will be people who will try to stay here weeks on end.”