After a huge group of trucks rolled through Ottawa with the United We Roll Convoy, to a tour of a smaller scale but just as impactful through smalltown Alberta, to heading out east to Ontario and even a brief stop in Montreal, Rollin' With Pat and Jay have returned home once more. The two friends from Red Deer and right here in Estevan have spent the start of this year travelling the country with live videos on social media and town halls to share the struggles of Canadians in today's economy.

READ MORE: 'Educating, Not Aggravating' Rollin With Pat and Jay Hits Ontario

While heading through Ontario, the two knew they were planning on heading to Montreal for a brief trip as well, but kept it a secret for the time being until they made their way there.

"We wanted to go out there and do our investigations and stuff just to kind of throw it at the rest of the country, we didn't want anyone to know we were going there until last minute because in case we met any resistance, and we have met resistance with the convoy," says Jay Riedel. "There was a few people who tried to stir the pot because they didn't  like what the convoy was about in the first place and this was mainly a younger group of kids that were on a page in Arnprior (Ontario) and they heard we were coming, so they actually tried throwing us under the bus, they reached out to (a local news outlet) and had them come down there. They interviewed them and they told the news and said we were racist."

That same outlet interviewed Pat and Jay afterwards as well and gave them a chance to share their side of the story, but Riedel didn't take any chances and recorded the exchange as well on their social media live feeds to make sure the full interview was available to the public.

While travelling through Ontario, one of the stops they made was at the closing GM Oshawa Car Assembly which is set to close in December of this year. The plant held a total of near 4,000 jobs for the people of Oshawa, and nearly 3/4 of them will be affected by the plant's closure. 

"We talked with some of the union reps and they said that they're going to move that plant to Mexico, so they say there's going to be about 2,400 jobs affected but you talk to the locals that come out to some of our meetings and they think it'll affect closer to 20,000 because it affects all your mom and pop shops and all your local businesses and your parts businesses down the line, and they're getting pretty concerned about their jobs. We're starting to see, it's not just the west, it's the east too."

Throughout their trip, three of the town halls in Ontario were cancelled due to the racist claims they had been given a number of times as they were denied to be hosted, but the message Pat and Jay have been trying to spread is clear: 'Educating, not Aggravating.'

When asked what his opinion on the Court of Appeal's decision that the Federal Government's Carbon Tax is constitutional, Riedel had a simple reply.

"It's not over by a long shot. I think if we get this Liberal government out now and the Conservatives in I think it's going to all be reanalyzed. We've preached it out there too, a lot of people would ask us about the carbon tax in Ontario and Quebec and I said there's better ways to go about this. Start a national tree planting program, get everything switched over to LED lighting and the government buildings should be doing it first. If the government wants to help the environment, they should be leading by example."

The carbon tax is now heading before the Supreme Court for further review.