| China swaying politicians
with gifts, sex: MP |
A
Calgary Conservative MP is accusing Chinese
authorities of attempting to buy the influence
of Canadian politicians and government officials
with financial incentives and prostitutes,
suggesting some officials may have been compromised. MORE... |
FEATURED INK
| Summer turns unexpectedly
hot for PM |
|
Yaffe: From
the G20 to the census to high-level internal
strife at the RCMP, controversies are hurting
the Conservatives and a silent Harper. The
dead of summer is a relatively undemanding,
but still mighty dangerous time for a Canadian
political leader. MORE...
|
| The Conservatives'
stand on census is an eye-opener |
| Legault: Despite
reason and science, Harper refuses to budge.
Watching the Conservative government defend
its decision to replace the mandatory long-form
census with a voluntary one must have been
an eye-opening experience for many Canadians. MORE... |
| Census plan continues
to dog Harper |
|
Den Tandt: The Liberals
say they want Stephen Harperto rescind his
plan to scrap the mandatory long-form census.
Not true. A reversal is the last thing the
Grits would like. That’s because this
move, and the government’s obduracy
in the face.. MORE...
|
| The global dunce
cap award |
|
Harris: The flap over the
census has turned into a handbook on the
care and feeding of sacred cows. You know
what a sacred cow is: It never yields a steak
or even a fatty burger, but is permitted
to leave chocolate pies on the lawn. MORE...
|
| I give Canadians
more credit than Harper does |
|
Lethbridge: Ah summer.
Weather’s warm, beer’s cold,
you’re on vacation. Why would anyone
give two hoots about something as mundane
as —cough! —a census form? I
mean, life’s good. Barbecue’s
on. You’re cracking another cold one. MORE...
|
| 'K1A' -- the insider
epicentre |
|
Robson: Ottawa is still
buzzing over the government's decision to
make the long-form census voluntary. At least
some of Ottawa's more, uh, introverted insiders
are. I just can't convince myself it's an
important issue, compared to billions of.. MORE...
|
| Yes, the silly season
really is here |
|
Stackhouse: The Harper
government is accident-prone. Even when it
does good things, it can’t stay out
of trouble. In June, the Prime Minister not
only played host to the G8 and G20 summits
but also helped to shape them. Despite Canadians.. MORE...
|
|
Riley: Is it too late for
Prime Minister Stephen Harper to make an
emergency booking at that Arizona company
that provided troubled RCMP commissioner
William Elliott with leadership coaching
a couple of years ago? Canadian.. MORE...
|
| British coalitions
and Canadian lessons |
| Spector: In
Britain, MPs broke for their annual summer
recess Tuesday, nine weeks after the Queen
presented the program of the first coalition
government since the Second World War. With
all the talk of coalitions in Canada –and
the.. MORE... |
| Outgoing Canada Post
CEO delivered |
| L. Ian MacDonald: When
Moya Greene took her new job as head of the
Royal Mail in London, she went down to her
neighbourhood post office in Ottawa and filled
out a change of address. “The service
was very friendly,”says Greene, whose.. MORE... |
| Semrau verdict exposes
tragically flawed law |
|
Gardner: The situation
Captain Robert Semrau encountered was a philosopher's
dream and a soldier's nightmare. In hostile
territory, what was left of an enemy combatant
lay on the ground. His body had been dismembered,
mangled, and.. MORE...
|
| New pool of cheap
labour — seniors |
| Goar: The
change crept up on us. Ten years ago, it was
unusual to see a senior serving coffee at Tim
Hortons or working as a grocery cashier. Now
it’s commonplace. People over 65 are
moving into low-paying jobs in the retail.. MORE... |
|
|
- Jack
Layton on why Canadians want a fall
election
The
Canadian political arena is locked in
a state of stasis -- wherein no party
is close to having majority support from
Canadians -- and yet election murmurs
have been heating up across the country.
|
- Jay
Hill leaves Parliament on his own
terms
Taber: Jay
Hill left Ottawa this week for Calgary,
driving his Jeep Cherokee with a little
U-Haul trailer attached full of the prized
possessions he didn’t want to put
on the moving van.
|
- Violence
against women: an international epidemic
Caplan: Twelve girls
and women have been murdered by family
members in Canada since 2002; these grisly
deaths, perversely known as honour killings,
have all taken place in certain minority
communities.
|
- Quebec
seeking offshore deal
Talks
underway with Ottawa on drilling in area
contested by N.L. Negotiations
have been launched between the federal
government and Quebec in an attempt to
strike an offshore drilling deal similar
to those that have enriched Atlantic
provinces.
|
- Poll
says Black where he belongs
An
overwhelming number of Canadians —71
per cent of those polled —say the
federal government should not give Conrad
Black special dispensation to return
to Canada.
|
- Lack
of RCMP reforms at issue, observers
say
Frustration
over a lack of promised reforms three
years after a civilian was appointed
to revive the troubled RCMP is at the
heart of complaints about Comissioner
William Elliott, say those familiar with
the conflict.
|
- Iggy
gets jiggy on Queen St.
Federal
Liberal Party leader Michael Ignatieff
staged a conga line with several local
MPs and a Caribana calypso queen and
danced several feet onto his tour bus
Thursday afternoon in front of the landmark
CTV building at Queen and John Sts.
|
- Feds
will examine added cost of refit:
PM
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says federal officials
will examine the extra costs New Brunswick faces due
to refurbishment delays at the Point Lepreau nuclear
generating station, but cautions that the province
was "fully aware that there were uncertainties
involved" when it launched the project.
|
- Boutilier
uses loophole to keep political funding
Fort McMurray MLA Guy Boutilier announced his plans
to join the Wildrose Alliance last month, but on paper
the former Tory cabinet minister is still an Independent
and receiving thousands of dollars for research and
office funding he won't receive as part of the Alliance's
caucus.
|
- Army
looks for company to train bomb specialists
Call them super-CSI, but in a flak vest and helmet.
The Canadian army is dramatically upping the ante in
training expert soldiers to fight networks that plant
roadside bombs and booby traps in Afghanistan.
|
- Former
Canada Post auditor vows to put stamp
on UN
Canadian Carman Lapointe is walking into the world’s
toughest auditing job: cleaning up the sprawling United
Nations after massive fraud scandals and allegations
that her new boss, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon,
obstructed her predecessor’s watchdog efforts.
|
- Tax
collector may have used confidential
files for business leads
A tax collector in B.C. used the Canada Revenue Agency's
computers to look up the private tax files of hundreds
of high-income individuals, apparently in the hopes
of hitting them up for a business she ran on the side,
according to internal government documents.
|
- Police
deny muzzling protesters
Two G20 protesters out on bail were warned by police
this week they face re-arrest because they were close
to violating the conditions of their release. Their
friends claim the tactic is an attempt by police to
muzzle freedom of speech.
|
- WestJet
told to pay more for lost luggage
WestJet Canada’s lost luggage policy is “unreasonable”and
must quickly be increased beyond its current $250 limit
per passenger, the Canadian Transport Agency has ruled.
|
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