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This week’s Inside Politics delivered one of its most explosive and urgent discussions yet, as host Kevin Klein and his Winnipeg Sun colleagues Lawrence Pinsky, K.C., Royce Koop, and Jeff Currier took on what Klein called “the most divisive issue in Canada right now”—the growing number of Indigenous land-rights claims stretching from British Columbia to Manitoba and Quebec. Klein opened the show by referencing his recent National Post column and a new lawsuit involving the entire city of Kamloops, a case few Canadians had even heard of. The panel listened to a clip from Global BC’s Keith Baldrey, who revealed the land claim had been quietly filed nearly a decade ago—covering municipalities, ski resorts, and private property. “This is bigger than anyone realizes,” Klein warned. “And I haven’t heard a single word from Prime Minister Mark Carney or anyone in Ottawa. Canadians deserve answers.” Lawyer Lawrence Pinsky called the situation “a legal and political disaster in the making,” pointing to the 3,700-paragraph Cowichan decision from August 2025, which upended established land titles. “These cases should never be in court,” Pinsky said. “They’re political problems being handled by judges who are making law instead of interpreting it. The result? Judicial activism that undermines fairness and threatens property rights.” Klein pressed the political dimension, saying fear and cancel culture are silencing leaders. “No one wants to say the wrong thing,” he said. “But homeowners are terrified. What happens when your mortgage isn’t renewed because your land might be part of a claim? What if you’re taxed twice—by a municipality and a First Nation?” Royce Koop, a political science professor, agreed that governments have failed. “This needs to go straight to the Supreme Court in a reference case. Instead, everyone’s dodging responsibility. It’s cowardice.” Jeff Currier warned that “fear and uncertainty” could stall housing and investment, especially in B.C. “Developers are walking away,” he said. “It’s a mess.” Klein closed the fiery segment by demanding leadership. “Reconciliation must go both ways,” he said. “Canada can’t heal if we’re dividing people by fear and silence. We need a Prime Minister who will stand up, bring us together, and lead.” “If no one takes a stand,” Klein warned, “this country will belong to nobody.”