| Ottawa mulls buying
Windsor-Detroit Ambassador Bridge |
Stephen
Harper has instructed his ministers to explore
the prospect of buying the Windsor-Detroit
bridge -- the busiest international border
crossing in North America -- from its American
owner. MORE... |
- Charlie
Sheen charged with assaulting wife
Actor Charlie Sheen was
charged Monday with three crimes including
felony menacing stemming from an assault
on his wife Brooke Mueller in a heated Christmas
Day argument.
|
FEATURED INK
| Our banking rules
are smarter, not tighter |
Coyne: For
all their growing closeness on other matters,
such as global warming, Barack Obama and Stephen
Harper could not be further apart on the issue
of how to reform banking regulations, in the
wake of the worst financial crisis in 75 years. MORE... |
| New Alberta party
a game changer |
Hebert: The
hottest provincial scene in Canada these days
is Alberta where the populist wave that has
lifted the Wildrose Alliance Party to the top
of the polls is demonstrating that still waters
can truly be deceiving. MORE... |
| Iggy’s on fire — along
with our wallets |
|
Solberg: Shakespeare wrote
about “the winter of our discontent”some
400 years ago, which I’m pretty sure
is how long we’ve been putting up with
this winter. Long, dark winters are not only
a leading cause of crabbiness; they are also
responsible.. MORE...
|
| Is Ignatieff a PM
in waiting? |
| Arif: It didn't
turn out quite as Prime Minister Stephen Harper
planned. Canadians were not supposed to care
about parliamentary procedure. Harper should
have been able to bask in the feel-good sentiments
of the 2010 Olympics and solidify.. MORE... |
| McParland: There's
more to being an MP than Question Period. But
you wouldn't know it from whining MPs. Freed
from the need to present themselves on a daily
basis in the House of Commons, Canada's Members
of Parliament have been.. MORE... |
| Time for Grits, New
Dems, Greens to Make Electoral Deal |
| Resnick and Whitaker: An
open letter to Michael Ignatieff, Jack Layton
and Elizabeth May for an arrangement amongst
the three opposition parties. The three most
recent federal elections have resulted in minority
Parliaments. There are a.. MORE... |
| Suffering in our
own backyard |
| Layton: Harper
wants to help women and children in the developing
world. So why not here at home, too? Stephen
Harper's recent announcement that Canada will
be making maternal and child health a top priority
at June's G8 meeting makes.. MORE... |
| Williams had options.
He took them. So what? |
|
Leger: IF ANYTHING has
been proven by snowbird Danny Williams’trip
south, it’s that it is hellishly hard
to have a rational discussion about health
care in this country. The news of Williams’illness
was barely out before the entrenched.. MORE...
|
| Give Danny Williams
a break |
| Gagnon: With
all the abuse politicians face, it's amazing
that some people still want to run for office.
Who would want to lose their privacy for a
salary that's mediocre compared with those
in the private sector and for the privilege
of.. MORE... |
| Silence surrounds
health-care problems |
|
Ford: You can tell a government
program is in trouble when politicians don't
want to talk about it. Right now, health
care, once Canada's most popular program,
is enveloped in silence. Health care has
big financial problems. A federal.. MORE...
|
| Rinne: Canadian/American
trade history might seem like dry textbook
fodder for economic rocket scientists, but
the reality is, it's a fascinating soap opera
of twists and turns defining what we have become
as a nation. MORE... |
| Reining in the Canadian
Wheat Board |
| NP: When the
Supreme Court declined recently to consider
the case of Canadian Wheat Board v. Attorney
General of Canada, it brought a welcome end
to a long, rancorous debate over the question
of who, ultimately, has authority over the.. MORE... |
| Taliban must come
to the table |
|
Taylor: IT APPEARS as though
the international alliance has grown weary
of the war in Afghanistan, and the goal now
being pursued is a face-saving exit rather
than a policy committed to long-term nation
building. Following the summit.. MORE...
|
| Consumer rights can't
be clicked away, court says |
| Geist: In
2004, Ian Andrews purchased a Dell laptop computer
for $1,700. About 2 1/2 years later, the computer
began to malfunction, periodically shutting
down unexpectedly. Stuck with a problem computer
that was past the standard warranty.. MORE... |
|
|
- Layton
gives few details on cancer fight
NDP
Leader Jack Layton had little to say
about his battle against prostate cancer
following his surprise announcement on
Friday, instead wanting to focus on his
party's issues.
|
- Ottawa
says housing bubble not a concern
Finance
Minister Jim Flaherty appears to have
no immediate plans to tighten Canadian
mortgage rules despite the advice of
senior bankers concerned about surging
home prices.
|
- Canadian
envoy objected to banning George
Galloway
The
Canadian high commissioner to London
flatly objected to barring British MP
George Galloway from Canada, saying it
would simply provide "a greater
platform" for a vocal politician
who's "not taken seriously" in
his homeland.
.
|
- Is
that Ms. or Mrs. MP?
More
female Conservatives in the House of
Commons prefer Mrs. over the more modern
Ms., but there's no predicting who will
take which title in any party, Glen McGregor
finds.
|
- YVR
closes as fighter jets chase 'target'
Vancouver
International Airport was closed to takeoffs
and landings for 20 minutes while two
CF-18 military fighter jets scrambled
to intercept an unknown "target
of interest," a Transport Canada
incident report shows.
|
- Pay
market rates for parking, PS told
The Harper government could generate millions in savings
by charging public servants market rates to park at
federal buildings and some military bases or it could
simply stop providing parking.
|
- Venezuelan
envoy chides 'ultraright' Canada
The gov't of Hugo Chavez has responded to Canadian
criticism it was "shrinking democratic space" in
Venezuela by saying it will take no lessons from an "ultraright" government
that "closed " Parliament to avoid an investigation
into the handling of Afghan detainees.
|
- Call
for consular reform
When Canadian Michael Kapoustin finally won freedom from a Bulgarian prison
in 2008, after a 12-year legal and diplomatic battle, he faced two choices.
|
- Tree-felling
fuels cost row over Irish Embassy
FELLING
OF trees at the Irish Ambassador to Canada’s
residence in Ottawa, allegedly to make
way for a swimming pool that may never
be built, has caused dismay among residents
of the city’s diplomatic belt in
Rockcliffe Park.
|
- Audit
finds program flaws
A $59-million federal program to train native fisheries
managers lacked key reporting controls to track spending
and results, says an internal audit.
|
- Ontario
Liberals accused of vote grab
The
cash-strapped Liberal government promises
to top up Nortel's underfunded pension
plan –a move affecting many retirees
in an Ottawa riding where a key by-election
is being held March 4.
|
- Asbestos
worries dog Charest
Controversy
over asbestos exports continued to dog
Quebec Premier Jean Charest right up
to the very last day of a trade mission
to India.
|
- Alberta
Tories warn of cuts in budget
The
Stelmach government will deliver a provincial
budget Tuesday with "lots of cuts," potentially
billions of dollars of additional red
ink, and a new fiscal reality for a jurisdiction
that's become comfortable with eye-popping
spending hikes.
|
- Karzai
may institute conscription
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai said Sunday he
is considering instituting conscription
to build an army large enough to provide
security without international help.
|
|