The evidence
The pattern of conflict
Brookfield acquires assets. Government policy subsidizes and fast-tracks those exact sectors. Former colleagues fill newly created government roles. Budget accounting obscures the spending. Each item below is sourced to official records, company filings, or established reporting. Last reviewed: February 2026.
The portfolio
What Brookfield owns — and what government policy subsidizes
To understand why the conflicts matter, you need to see what Brookfield has been buying. These aren't abstract financial instruments — they are infrastructure, energy, housing, and pipeline assets directly affected by the policies Carney's government is making.
Colonial Pipeline — $9 billion (April 2025)
One month after Carney became PM, Brookfield Infrastructure Partners announced the acquisition of 100% of Colonial Enterprises — the largest fuel transportation system in the United States. With Canada exporting over 90% of its oil via pipelines to American refineries, Brookfield now controls critical cross-border energy infrastructure.
Source: Brookfield Infrastructure Partners press release, April 3, 2025
Westinghouse Nuclear / U.S. Government Deal — $80 billion (October 2025)
The U.S. government announced a partnership with Cameco and Brookfield — co-owners of Westinghouse Electric — to facilitate approvals and financing for new Westinghouse reactors. Brookfield acquired Westinghouse in 2018. Carney's government is simultaneously fast-tracking nuclear through the MPO.
Source: Cameco Corporation press release / CBC News, October 28, 2025
Modulaire Group — $5 billion (2021)
Brookfield acquired Modulaire Group, a market leader in modular workspace across Europe and Asia. Budget 2025's "Build Canada Homes" allocates $13 billion over five years for factory-built and modular construction. Brookfield owns one of the world's largest modular building companies. The government is subsidizing modular housing.
Source: Brookfield Business Partners press release, June 27, 2021 · Budget 2025 / FCM statements, September 2025
Yes! Communities — $10 billion (in advanced talks, 2025)
Brookfield is in advanced talks to acquire Yes! Communities — a major U.S. manufactured home operator — valuing the portfolio at over $10 billion, further expanding its housing footprint as Canada subsidizes modular and manufactured housing.
Source: Bloomberg / Elite Agent reporting, September 16–18, 2025
NorthRiver Midstream — $4.31 billion (2018–2019)
Brookfield acquired Enbridge's Canadian natural gas gathering and processing business, renamed NorthRiver Midstream Inc. Brookfield owns key midstream pipeline infrastructure that benefits from the absence of new pipeline competition. The MPO's fast-track list notably excludes new crude oil pipelines.
Source: Enbridge Inc. and Brookfield joint press releases, October 1, 2018 and December 31, 2019
China Xintiandi / Shui On Land — $750 million (2013)
Brookfield Property Partners invested up to $750 million for a 22% stake in China Xintiandi, the Shanghai commercial property subsidiary of Hong Kong-listed developer Shui On Land. Brookfield described China as "a key market in Brookfield's long term growth strategy." This was the firm's first major direct foray into Chinese real estate.
Source: Brookfield Property Partners press release, October 31, 2013
TerraForm Global — $750 million (2017)
Brookfield acquired TerraForm Global, a renewable power company with 952 megawatts of solar and wind assets in emerging markets including China, India, and Brazil. Brookfield stated the deal "expands our presence in Brazil and provides a platform for further growth in India and China's attractive, high-growth renewables markets."
Source: Brookfield Renewable Partners press releases, 2017
Add it up: Brookfield owns the Colonial Pipeline, co-owns Westinghouse Nuclear, owns one of the world's largest modular housing companies, controls Canadian midstream infrastructure, holds $750 million in Shanghai commercial property, and operates renewable energy assets across China, India, and Brazil. Government policy is subsidizing clean energy, fast-tracking nuclear, pouring $13 billion into modular housing, and excluding new oil pipelines from the fast lane. The PM who oversees all of this has undisclosed personal financial exposure to these funds.
Policy–sector overlap
Government policy that benefits Brookfield's portfolio
Budget 2025 introduced or expanded multiple clean-economy measures in sectors where Brookfield reports major investment exposure:
Clean Electricity Investment Tax Credit
Including retroactive treatment — directly relevant to renewable energy assets in the BGTF portfolio.
CCUS Investment Tax Credit extensions
Carbon capture — a core Brookfield sector. The Canada Growth Fund committed $300 million to carbon capture via Entropy Inc., initially backed by a $300M Brookfield Renewable commitment.
Source: Canada Growth Fund presentations / Entropy Inc. press release, March 28, 2022
Carbon pricing: $80/tonne → $170/tonne by 2030
The official schedule raises the minimum from $80/tonne (2025) to $170 by 2030 — a 113% increase. Every dollar of increase inflates BGTF clean energy portfolio returns.
Source: Government of Canada — "Update to the Pan-Canadian Approach to Carbon Pollution Pricing 2023–2030"
"Build Canada Homes" — $13 billion for modular housing
$13 billion over five years for factory-built and modular construction. Brookfield owns Modulaire Group ($5B) and is in $10B talks for Yes! Communities.
Source: Budget 2025 / Federation of Canadian Municipalities, September 2025
Additional: [Official] Budget 2025 · [Analysis] McCarthy Tétrault · [Analysis] Gowling WLG
We are not claiming these policies were adopted to benefit Brookfield. We are documenting that they do benefit Brookfield's portfolio, and that the PM has personal financial exposure to the funds investing in these sectors. That overlap, without full divestment, is the problem.
Fast-track governance
The Major Projects Office: a fast lane for Brookfield's sectors
On August 29, 2025, the PM launched the MPO under the Building Canada Act, appointing Dawn Farrell as CEO. Farrell's prior roles: CEO of TransAlta and chair of Trans Mountain Pipeline Corporation — both in sectors where Brookfield has significant holdings.
The MPO consolidates regulatory conditions into a single document and reduces approvals to two years, bypassing multi-year reviews.
What gets fast-tracked
Nuclear power, LNG expansion, critical minerals, transmission lines — all sectors with active Brookfield investments.
What gets left behind
The project list excludes new crude oil pipelines despite calls for export diversification. Canada exports 90%+ of oil to the U.S. via existing pipelines. Brookfield owns NorthRiver Midstream and the Colonial Pipeline. No new competition means higher margins for Brookfield's infrastructure.
If regulatory burden justifies a fast-track office for nuclear and LNG, why not reform regulation for everyone? Why does the fast-track list match Brookfield's portfolio while excluding the one infrastructure type that would compete with Brookfield's existing holdings?
Sources: [Official] PMO press releases, Aug. 29 & Nov. 13, 2025 · [Analysis] Bennett Jones analysis · [Official] Building Canada Act / MPO (Canada.ca) · [Analysis] Resilient LLP · [Analysis] McCarthy Tétrault
Connected appointments
The network moves into government
New agencies and senior roles created and filled from Carney's professional network:
Doug Guzman — Defence Investment Agency CEO
Oct. 2, 2025. Brand-new agency. Former RBC Deputy Chair & Goldman Sachs colleague. ~$500K salary.
PMO · Juno News · Global News
Dawn Farrell — Major Projects Office CEO
Aug. 29, 2025. Former TransAlta CEO (Brookfield investor) & Trans Mountain chair.
Source: PMO press release, August 29, 2025
Dominic Barton — Council of Advisors, Canada-U.S. Relations
March 20, 2025. Former McKinsey global managing partner.
Source: iPolitics / PMO, March 20, 2025
Marc-André Blanchard — Chief of Staff & Ethics Screen Administrator
Effective July 2025. Prior: UN Ambassador, McCarthy Tétrault CEO, CDPQ Global. Co-administers the ethics screen. Serves at the PM's pleasure.
Source: PMO / CBC News, June 1, 2025
Michael Sabia — Clerk of the Privy Council & Ethics Screen Co-Administrator
Effective July 7, 2025. Prior: Hydro-Québec CEO, CDPQ CEO, BCE President. Co-administers the ethics screen.
Source: PMO press release, June 11, 2025
The two ethics screen administrators are Carney appointees from global finance and infrastructure. The MPO CEO came from TransAlta and Trans Mountain. The Defence Investment Agency CEO is a Goldman Sachs colleague. These are not arm's-length appointments.
Budget maneuvers
$94 billion in creative accounting — and the PBO caught it
Budget 2025 introduced a new operating/capital split. The PBO found the "capital investment" definition "overly expansive" — including tax credits, subsidies, and corporate welfare that don't qualify under international frameworks.
The numbers
Budget claims $311.5B in capital over five years. PBO finds $217.3B — $94 billion less, a 30% overstatement. The claimed 2028 surplus depends entirely on this reclassification.
The government borrows ~$80B this year. Debt charges: $55.6B now, projected $76.1B by 2029 — more than health care and child care combined.
The reclassification benefits exactly the spending that flows to Brookfield-relevant sectors: clean energy tax credits, infrastructure ITCs, production subsidies. Reclassifying these as "capital investment" makes it easier to increase and harder to track.
Sources: [Reporting] MEI, Nov. 14, 2025 · [Reporting] The Hub · [Reporting] Global News · [Reporting] Juno News
Corporate conduct
$6.5 billion routed through Bermuda
Brookfield routed approximately $6.5 billion through Bermuda-based subsidiaries between 2017 and 2021, reducing Canadian tax obligations. This was cited by MP Rob Moore in Parliamentary Hansard (November 21, 2025), drawn from CICTAR and Canadians for Tax Fairness research.
A company that routes billions offshore to avoid Canadian taxes is now represented at the highest level of government by its former chair — who hasn't fully divested.
Sources: Parliamentary Hansard, Nov. 21, 2025 · CICTAR report, 2023 · Canadians for Tax Fairness
What we don't claim
The line we draw
We do not claim criminal corruption. What we have is a structural conflict so large that the distinction between corruption and its appearance becomes academic — which is why divestment is the remedy, not prosecution.
We do not claim motive. We don't know why the PM refuses to divest. We know that he hasn't.
We do not publish unsourced claims. Viral charts, speculative compensation estimates, and social media inferences don't appear on this site.