This is super interesting, especially for New Brunswickers, never mind the clients of TD Bank.

by Shaun Newman

April 7, 2025

“Two powerful Canadians secretly shaped our financial future for a decade.

One was caught in a MASSIVE money laundering scandal.

The other just became Prime Minister.

No one’s talking about their connection. Until now…

Frank McKenna was TD Bank’s Deputy Chair while the bank helped drug cartels move dirty money for nearly a decade.

They just paid a $3.1 BILLION fine to settle these charges.

Mark Carney, our new Prime Minister, has deep ties to McKenna through Brookfield Asset Management.

McKenna was Brookfield’s Chairman. He brought Carney on board in 2020.

Think about this timeline:

  • TD Bank laundering money (during McKenna’s watch)
  • McKenna brings Carney to Brookfield
  • Carney becomes Chair of Brookfield
  • Carney suddenly leaves to run for Prime Minister
  • McKenna publicly endorses him

The connections are interesting…

  • McKenna: Controls one of Canada’s largest banks and asset managers
  • Carney: Now runs our government
  • Both push heavily for “green transition” investments
  • Brookfield is perfectly positioned to manage these trillion-dollar shifts

No executives went to jail for TD’s money laundering.

Just a fine that shareholders ultimately pay for.

Meanwhile, McKenna’s protégé now sits in the Prime Minister’s office.

The same office that regulates banks like TD and investment firms like Brookfield.

Convenient, isn’t it?

This isn’t about conspiracy theories.

It’s about an interconnected system where political power, financial influence, and corporate governance blur together.

The next time someone talks about the “green transition” or “sustainable investing,” ask yourself:

Who’s really benefiting? The planet? Or the power players who control the money flows?

I’m not claiming anything improper happened (other than what TD Bank already admitted to and was fined for).

I’m just asking questions most mainstream media won’t touch.

Because sometimes the most important stories are the ones we’re not supposed to notice

 

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