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Carney says he has no immediate plans to overhaul municipal funding

Carney says he has no immediate plans to overhaul municipal funding

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa probably can't undertake a thorough overhaul of how municipalities are funded in the near future, with the federal government now focused on major projects.

Ottawa tabling bill to skirt impact assessment law for 'national interest' projects

Ottawa tabling bill to skirt impact assessment law for 'national interest' projects

The federal government is developing a "national interest" bill to fast-track nation-building projects with a streamlined regulatory approval process as a substitute for reviews under the Impact Assessment Act. A briefing document obtained by The Canadian Press indicates the legislation would lay out the criteria to decide if a project is in the national interest. Once that's decided, a single...

Good Talk -- Does The Building of The New Canada Start This Weekend?

Good Talk -- Does The Building of The New Canada Start This Weekend?

The royal visit, the throne speech and the first question period are over. Performative arts mostly. Now the real work of building the so-called "new Canada" begins. What's the plan, and how will they get there? It starts with a first minister's conference this weekend. Chantal and Rob have their thoughts on that.

Canada's economy grows faster than expected in first quarter

Canada's economy grows faster than expected in first quarter

The Canadian economy grew at an annual rate of 2.2 per cent in the first quarter of this year, which is a faster pace than economists were expecting.

Toronto band Martha and the Muffins at odds with Conservatives over song use

Toronto band Martha and the Muffins at odds with Conservatives over song use

Toronto new-wave band Martha and the Muffins is trying a relatively novel legal strategy to prevent Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre from using its song Echo Beach at rallies in his upcoming by-election campaign. After learning that he and at least one other Conservative candidate used the Juno Award-winning 1980 song at rallies during the spring election cycle, the band’s...

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Measles Outbreak: Support for mandatory childhood vaccination rebounds, but one-in-five parents hesitant to vax

Measles Outbreak: Support for mandatory childhood vaccination rebounds, but one-in-five parents hesitant to vax

Alberta Health Minister Adriana LaGrange had a message for her province earlier this month, “don’t get measles; get immunized”. This, as outbreaks of the highly contagious disease continue, appearing in nine provinces so far, with the vast majority occurring in that province and in Ontario. The good news for health officials is that the outbreak appears to have increased support...

Trump concern fading as worry about healthcare and housing on the rise – Liberals and Conservatives tied in ballot support

Trump concern fading as worry about healthcare and housing on the rise – Liberals and Conservatives tied in ballot support

The Weekly Nanos Tracking is produced by the Nanos Research Corporation, headquartered in Canada, which operates in Canada and the United States. The data is based on random interviews with 1,000 Canadian consumers (recruited by RDD land- and cell-line sample), using a four-week rolling average of 250 respondents each week, 18 years of age and over. The random sample of...



Opinion

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If Mark Carney has had a less than impressive start, this is the reason why

If Mark Carney has had a less than impressive start, this is the reason why

Delivering his maiden speech in the House of Commons on Monday, Prime Minister Mark Carney wisely tacked towards humility. “I have much to learn from the members of this great House. I will make mistakes,” he said. “I have no doubt that you will call them out, and for good reason.” Carney acknowledged that our parliamentary system may seem arcane...

In Alberta, Premier Danielle Smith kicks Nenshi NDP butt

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Jobs minister meets with Canada Post union reps as overtime ban persists

Jobs minister meets with Canada Post union reps as overtime ban persists

OTTAWA -- Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu is meeting with postal union officials in Ottawa today amid an overtime ban and declining mail volumes at a beleaguered Canada Post.

Federal government posts $43 billion deficit between April '24 and March

Federal government posts $43 billion deficit between April '24 and March

OTTAWA -- The federal government says it ran a budgetary deficit of $43.2 billion between April 2024 and this past March.

Politician's Pen

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It’s time for Ottawa to make crime a top federal priority

It’s time for Ottawa to make crime a top federal priority

The new session of Parliament must take real action to address the public safety concerns of Canadians. Across the Greater Toronto Area, residents are increasingly alarmed by the rise in violent crime, and they are demanding action from every level of government. The federal election results in the GTA made that crystal clear.

Doug Ford is trying to use Trump’s tariff threat to repeat his mistakes with the Greenbelt

Doug Ford is trying to use Trump’s tariff threat to repeat his mistakes with the Greenbelt

Since U.S. President Donald Trump began threatening Canada with tariffs, I’ve heard from many people and businesses about the intense anxiety they’re feeling. Ontarians are already struggling in the face of an ongoing affordability crisis and are now facing potential layoffs and staring down the face of an impending recession. But instead of uniting people to push back against Trump...



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Trump’s attacks on Canada won’t stop. Here is how to avoid his traps

Trump’s attacks on Canada won’t stop. Here is how to avoid his traps

It didn’t take long for Donald Trump to make a liar — or at least a fool — out of his own ambassador to Canada. Pete Hoekstra did a round of introductory interviews last week as he made his debut as Trump’s representative to this country. One of his key messages was that all the talk about annexation is “over.”...

The diversity of candidates and MPs stalled for some groups in this election

The diversity of candidates and MPs stalled for some groups in this election

Recent elections would suggest Canada is increasingly integrating immigrants, visible minorities and others from diverse gender, social and religious backgrounds into the country’s political life. From 2015 to 2021, demographics and political realities combined for slow and steady increases in the number of these candidates and elected MPs.

Pierre Poilievre can’t ‘Bring It Home,’ alone

Pierre Poilievre can’t ‘Bring It Home,’ alone

When the Conservative party adopted the slogan “Bring it Home,” it was a catchy phrase reportedly inspired by Leader Pierre Poilievre’s wife. It signalled a return to fundamentals, to a familiar place of security and prosperity. It’s now clear that the promise of bringing it home has not fully materialized.

Calls for Albertan separatism are getting louder: Should Carney be worried?

Calls for Albertan separatism are getting louder: Should Carney be worried?

King Charles III’s speech on Tuesday from the throne in Ottawa was like a family reunion for Canadian politicians. Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper was there, joking around with his old opponent Justin Trudeau, who, playing to type, wore an inappropriate pair of running shoes. Justin’s mother, Margaret Trudeau, who has known the king for 50 years, embraced the monarch...

The public service needs to get better at firing its underperformers

The public service needs to get better at firing its underperformers

We sure aren’t measuring car sales in the public service. Growing up in Vancouver in the 1980s meant you knew at least one aspect of the reputation of Jim Pattison. Today, he is around the 200th richest person in the world with a net wealth of more than $9 billion. Back then, he was primarily a car dealer and his...

Golden Dome means Trump can tell Carney to pay up or shut up

Golden Dome means Trump can tell Carney to pay up or shut up

Trump’s latest blathering is just a plain statement of likely fact: only American territory will enjoy the protection of Star Wars II by right

The first Carney spending numbers are out, and they’re as bad as Trudeau’s

The first Carney spending numbers are out, and they’re as bad as Trudeau’s

The Main Estimates suggest that the prime minister's message of restraint has fallen on deaf ears in Ottawa

Mark Carney’s stand on Gaza could actually make a difference

Mark Carney’s stand on Gaza could actually make a difference

Despite enormous pressure from Washington, Jean Chrétien refused to send Canadian troops to join the foolish and destructive U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. It was one of Canada’s finest moments on the world stage. The former prime minister showed a degree of independence from Washington that took real guts — particularly given the “war on terror” mentality that the...

What’s Canada’s Innovation Week Story? The One That Feeds Us
I Weep For Canada’s Jewish Community


The Five Percent Reckoning

The Five Percent Reckoning

Admiral Hyman Rickover, known as the father of the American nuclear navy, understood something that is true of most large systems: they rarely reward risk-takers. They tend to value process over outcomes. They remember mistakes, not initiative. And unless political leaders demand otherwise, the system rarely changes. In the 1950s, Rickover was handed a task no one had ever attempted...

Mark Carney meets the battleground of question period

Mark Carney meets the battleground of question period

One of Mark Carney's greatest advantages over the last five months — the first five months of his political career — has seemingly been his ability to play the part of the adult in the room. One of the defining characteristics of the House of Commons is its ability to make grown men and women act like children. Carney's arrival...

From Brain Drain to Brain Gain: Canada’s Once-in-a-Generation Opportunity
Can the NDP Rebuild – or Is It Time to Start Something New?

Can the NDP Rebuild – or Is It Time to Start Something New?

ONCE THE CONSCIENCE of Canadian politics and a genuine alternative to the Liberal–Conservative duopoly, the New Democratic Party finds itself adrift. With the loss of the NDP’s official party status, the appointment of backbencher Don Davies as interim leader wasn’t just a placeholder move while the party regroups. It marks the culmination of a decade-long identity crisis, and a warning...

King Charles’ throne speech delivery was lauded as inspired. But Carney still has to deal with this one issue the speech didn’t address

King Charles’ throne speech delivery was lauded as inspired. But Carney still has to deal with this one issue the speech didn’t address

Some people have declared the decision to have King Charles III read the Speech from the Throne is an inspired, attention-grabbing gesture that will signal to a recalcitrant White House a powerful example of Canada’s distinctiveness and sovereignty. Another interpretation is that it is a meaningless symbol sent to an indifferent public, that runs counter and is tone deaf to...

Carney is already short-changing transparency

Carney is already short-changing transparency

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s May 21 mandate letter to his 38-member cabinet outlining seven vague priorities felt like it was an artificial-intelligence-generated letter, and the start of a limited tailored information packaged regime. The closest the mandate letter came to reminding cabinet of higher expected standards was near the end, when Carney said, “We will uphold the rule of law...

The Liberals haven’t exactly been a steady hand on the wheel, but that’s not hurting Mark Carney so far

The Liberals haven’t exactly been a steady hand on the wheel, but that’s not hurting Mark Carney so far

As Canada’s Formula 1 fans gear up for next month’s Canadian Grand Prix, they know all too well the sorrow of Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari. Despite the talent and technology those teams have assembled this season, the only way they’ll catch McLaren is if Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris spend the balance of the season driving into various track...

This was the moment Charles became King of Canada, and Canada his kingdom

This was the moment Charles became King of Canada, and Canada his kingdom

The original idea at Confederation was that this country would be called the Kingdom of Canada: like the United Kingdom, the Kingdom of Sweden, and so on. But there was concern this would antagonize the Americans, so instead we settled on the “Dominion of Canada” – a fine title in its own right, but one that eventually fell into disuse...

King Charles delivers soaring poetry and gristly prose in Throne Speech to giddy Senate
Liberals finally manage a serious throne speech, free of Trudeau’s divisive virtue-signalling
It’s Time to Build, Connect, and Grow Canada
It might have been the King’s speech, but the message to Donald Trump was all Mark Carney

It might have been the King’s speech, but the message to Donald Trump was all Mark Carney

King Charles no doubt had many reasons for his whirlwind trip to Canada this week, but really, it all goes back to one moment in the dead of winter earlier this year. It happened at the White House in February, when British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with a flattering flourish, issued a royal invitation to Donald Trump for a second...

From Feminism to Footnotes: Throne Speech Omits Women and Gender Equality
The King’s Speech: Shakespeare vs. Puzo in the War of the World Orders

The King’s Speech: Shakespeare vs. Puzo in the War of the World Orders

“The world is a more dangerous and uncertain place than at any point since the Second World War,” King Charles noted in the Speech from the Throne on Tuesday. “Canada is facing challenges that are unprecedented in our lifetimes.” In keeping with the divine right of kings to bury the lede, that section didn’t come until 660 words in. But...

King Charles visited an Ottawa market and Canada put on a play about itself
Albertans waiting — is Carney going to screw us over this week?

Albertans waiting — is Carney going to screw us over this week?

The question. A simple question. Easy to answer if you’re not playing games. Easy to answer if your words have any meaning. Prime Minister Mark Carney will roll out his plans for the country Tuesday. King Charles III will read the script. Ottawa insiders expect it to be mostly high-minded words. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she will be listening...

Mark Carney's quest for a majority

Mark Carney's quest for a majority

Poaching season has arrived

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‘Secret’ memo reveals how Canada’s refusal to join missile system in 2005 hurt our reputation

‘Secret’ memo reveals how Canada’s refusal to join missile system in 2005 hurt our reputation

A “secret” memo from the Department of National Defence last year said Canada’s 2005 decision not to join the U.S. ballistic missile defence system harmed the country’s reputation as a security partner and could make it harder to participate in the AUKUS military collaboration between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States. The memo also raised Canada’s long-standing failure...

Poll finds that Alberta-Ottawa tensions are boosting Smith's popularity

Poll finds that Alberta-Ottawa tensions are boosting Smith's popularity

Separatist winds are lifting the political sails of Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, according to a study from an Alberta pollster. The province-wide poll, taken this month by Calgary’s Janet Brown, found that Smith’s popularity has ticked upward from the same time last year, giving her a double-digit edge over rival NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi. Asked how impressed they were with...

Halting spy operation placed CSIS team in unnecessary danger, watchdog report says

Halting spy operation placed CSIS team in unnecessary danger, watchdog report says

A new spy watchdog report says an overseas Canadian Security Intelligence Service operation was suddenly halted by government officials, "creating unnecessary danger for the CSIS team" and raising questions about ministerial accountability. The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency found no written records indicating the decision to suspend the operation had been made by the CSIS director or the minister...

Canada-India relations will be repaired ‘one step at a time’: Anita Anand


The time when foreign invasions were impossible is over, former diplomats tell defence conference

The time when foreign invasions were impossible is over, former diplomats tell defence conference

At the onset of the First World War, Britain's veritable foreign secretary, Sir Edward Grey, remarked that the lamps were going out all over Europe and "we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime." The metaphor has long been considered as the unofficial epitaph to what at the time was the longest run of peace and prosperity on...

It's time to act on foreign interference, attacks on dissidents, say opposition MPs

It's time to act on foreign interference, attacks on dissidents, say opposition MPs

Critics call for Carney government to implement foreign agents registry, commissioner. Opposition parties are calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney's government to quickly implement key provisions of the law adopted last year to counter foreign interference following new revelations that attacks on Chinese dissidents living in Canada and around the world are on the rise. Conservative foreign affairs critic Michael...

Amid 51st state taunts, King's popularity in Canada grows

Amid 51st state taunts, King's popularity in Canada grows

'Strong and free' defence sees more Canadians backing the Crown: pollsters. King Charles is enjoying a popularity boost and there is considerably more support for maintaining Canada's ties to the Crown now than when he assumed the throne, according to public opinion polls released this week around his two-day visit to deliver a historic throne speech. After the long-reigning and...

Preparing for CUSMA negotiations crucial

Ottawa planning 'up-front' approval for projects deemed in the national interest

Ottawa planning 'up-front' approval for projects deemed in the national interest

Internal federal documents suggest legislation could be tabled as early as next month. The Liberal government will introduce legislation to assist in identifying projects in the national interest and provide "up-front regulatory approvals" to major projects, according to a federal document obtained by CBC News. "Once a project is determined to be in the national interest, federal reviews will shift...

Saskatchewan premier declares state of emergency as rampaging wildfires spread

Saskatchewan premier declares state of emergency as rampaging wildfires spread

PRINCE ALBERT -- For the second time in two days, a Prairie province declared a state of emergency in the fight against rampaging wildfires that have forced thousands from their homes.

Saab, CAE to work jointly on training for Royal Canadian Navy's new submarine fleet

Saab, CAE to work jointly on training for Royal Canadian Navy's new submarine fleet

Swedish defence manufacturer Saab and Canadian tech company CAE Inc. say they will work together to create training simulators for the Royal Canadian Navy's next submarine fleet. The two companies signed a memorandum of understanding to cooperate on the initiative on Thursday, the last day of the CANSEC defence industry trade show in Ottawa.

Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs back on after appeals court decision

Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs back on after appeals court decision

U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs are still hitting most countries around the world after a federal appeals court temporarily paused a decision from the U.S. Court of International Trade. The lower court's Wednesday decision found Trump's use of an emergency powers law to impose sweeping tariffs exceeded his authority.

Appeals court allows Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now

Appeals court allows Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now

A federal appeals court on Thursday allowed President Donald Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now, as his administration appeals an order striking down the bulk of his signature set of economic policies. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit granted an emergency motion from the Trump administration arguing that a halt is "critical...

Pierre Poilievre’s campaign was faltering — but Mark Carney’s was vulnerable too. The inside story of how the Conservatives and Liberals both fumbled the 2025 federal election

Pierre Poilievre’s campaign was faltering — but Mark Carney’s was vulnerable too. The inside story of how the Conservatives and Liberals both fumbled the 2025 federal election

In a three-part series, based on interviews with 106 political insiders, candidates and staff members, the Star’s Althia Raj explores how mistakes and missed opportunities saw a near-certain victory slip from the Conservatives’ grasp, while the Liberals experienced a political rebirth that stalled just three seats shy of a majority government.

When Donald Trump upended the election race, Mark Carney was already ‘Mr. Business’ — but Pierre Poilievre couldn’t pivot fast enough

When Donald Trump upended the election race, Mark Carney was already ‘Mr. Business’ — but Pierre Poilievre couldn’t pivot fast enough

Part two of Althia Raj’s three-part series details how Trump’s tariff threats dominated the campaign, how Carney emerged as the election front-runner, and Poilievre’s scramble to redefine his message.

Why Pierre Poilievre lost his seat — and why Mark Carney stumbled short of a majority government

Why Pierre Poilievre lost his seat — and why Mark Carney stumbled short of a majority government

As the last days of the campaign approached, the outcome of the election was far from certain. The final part of this three-part series by the Star’s Althia Raj unpacks what both parties got wrong — and what comes next for both Carney and Poilievre.

Canada 'not out of the woods' yet as appeals court pauses ruling on Trump's tariffs

Canada 'not out of the woods' yet as appeals court pauses ruling on Trump's tariffs

While Ottawa welcomed a U.S. federal court ruling that would block President Donald Trump's fentanyl-related tariffs against Canada, experts say local businesses are "not out of the woods" yet -- especially as an appeals court paused that decision Thursday. The ruling by the lower court on Wednesday would halt the sweeping "Liberation Day" tariffs Trump imposed on around 90 countries...

Cabinet ministers watch their words as pressure builds on defence file

Cabinet ministers watch their words as pressure builds on defence file

National defence is becoming an increasingly thorny topic for Prime Minister Mark Carney's government as Canada comes under heavy pressure from its allies to do more and spend more. But with just weeks to go until NATO member nations assemble in the Netherlands for a summit that could put Ottawa in the hot seat on defence spending, several of his...

Conservatives had a ‘leader problem,’ not a ‘strategy problem’: Liberal campaign director

Conservatives had a ‘leader problem,’ not a ‘strategy problem’: Liberal campaign director

The Liberal national campaign director is commending the Conservatives for employing what he characterizes as the right strategy during last month’s election. “I think that their strategy is right to concentrate on change, cost of living,” Andrew Bevan said in an interview on CTV Power Play with Vassy Kapelos on Wednesday. “I don’t think they had a strategy problem. “I...

Carney 'welcomes' U.S. court ruling striking down some U.S. tariffs

Carney 'welcomes' U.S. court ruling striking down some U.S. tariffs

Prime Minister Mark Carney said he "welcomes" the decision by the U.S. Court of International Trade to strike down President Donald Trump's broad-based tariffs on most countries. On Wednesday, court ruled that Trump does not have the authority to impose tariffs on nearly every country using the International Economic Emergency Powers Act, usually referred to by the acronym IEEPA. The...

Southern Alberta's 472 confirmed measles cases 'tip of the iceberg,' health official says

Southern Alberta's 472 confirmed measles cases 'tip of the iceberg,' health official says

As southern Alberta battles its worst measles outbreak in decades, some doctors are warning the virus is more rampant than the case counts show and they're now struggling to keep up with demand. As of midday Wednesday, 628 cases had been confirmed in Alberta since the outbreaks began in March.

Carney government tables $486 billion spending plan with few details

Carney government tables $486 billion spending plan with few details

The Carney government presented Parliament Tuesday with a plan to spend about the same amount of money in the fiscal year ahead as the Trudeau government did in its final year — about $486 billion, a plan that left the Conservatives unimpressed.

Carney to brief premiers on plan to fast-track major nation-building projects

Carney to brief premiers on plan to fast-track major nation-building projects

Prime Minister Mark Carney will present provincial and territorial premiers next week with the broad outlines of legislation that will impose a two-year approval process for major nation-building projects such as ports, critical mineral mines and trade corridors. The legislation contains measures to fast-track significant infrastructure projects through upfront regulatory approvals, and includes a framework to remove all federal barriers...

Followed, threatened and smeared — attacks by China against its critics in Canada are on the rise

Followed, threatened and smeared — attacks by China against its critics in Canada are on the rise

CBC/ICIJ investigations reveal increasing transnational repression here and around the world. For Yao Zhang, the news came as a shock. Sexually explicit, deepfake images of her were circulating widely online — an attack that Ottawa blamed on the Chinese government. It wasn't the first time Zhang had been targeted by China. Shortly after the Quebec-based accountant-turned-influencer travelled to Taiwan in...

Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canada, world blocked by U.S. trade court

Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canada, world blocked by U.S. trade court

The U.S. Court of International Trade on Wednesday struck down U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on Canada and the rest of the world, ruling he exceeded his authority under an emergency-powers law. The three-judge panel’s decision blocks both the fentanyl and border security-related tariffs on Canada and Mexico and the global “reciprocal tariffs” Trump imposed in April that have...

US Poli

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White House acknowledges problems in RFK Jr.'s 'Make America Healthy Again' report

White House acknowledges problems in RFK Jr.'s 'Make America Healthy Again' report

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The White House will fix errors in a much-anticipated federal government report spearheaded by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which decried America's food supply, pesticides and prescription drugs.

Musk came to Washington wielding a chain saw. He leaves behind upheaval and unmet expectations

Musk came to Washington wielding a chain saw. He leaves behind upheaval and unmet expectations

Elon Musk arrived in the nation's capital with the chain saw-wielding swagger of a tech titan who had never met a problem he couldn't solve with lots of money, long hours or a well-calibrated algorithm.

Trump's big plans on trade and more run up against laws of political gravity, separation of powers

Trump's big plans on trade and more run up against laws of political gravity, separation of powers

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Once again, President Donald Trump's biggest policy plans were stopped in their tracks.

Appeals court allows Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now

Appeals court allows Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal appeals court on Thursday allowed President Donald Trump to continue collecting tariffs under an emergency powers law for now, as his administration appeals an order striking down the bulk of his signature set of economic policies.

International

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Two Israeli Embassy staffers shot dead outside D.C.’s Capital Jewish Museum

Two Israeli Embassy staffers shot dead outside D.C.’s Capital Jewish Museum

Two staff members of Israel’s embassy in Washington, D.C., were shot dead outside the district's Capital Jewish Museum on Wednesday night, officials said.

U.K. suspends free trade talks with Israel and announces sanctions over West Bank settlers

U.K. suspends free trade talks with Israel and announces sanctions over West Bank settlers

The British government says it is suspending free trade negotiations with Israel and has levelled new sanctions targeting West Bank settlements as it criticizes Israel’s military actions in Gaza. Tuesday’s actions came a day after the U.K., France and Canada condemned Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza and its actions in the occupied West Bank. Foreign Secretary David Lammy...

The Latest: Putin says Russia is ready to work to end fighting in Ukraine after call with Trump

The Latest: Putin says Russia is ready to work to end fighting in Ukraine after call with Trump

Moscow is ready to work toward ending the fighting in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Monday following a two-hour phone call with U.S. President Donald Trump.

CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon quits amid potential Trump lawsuit settlement

CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon quits amid potential Trump lawsuit settlement

CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon said Monday that she is resigning, the latest fallout at the network as its parent company considers settling a lawsuit with President Donald Trump over "60 Minutes."

Microsoft says it provided AI to Israeli military for war but denies use to harm people in Gaza

Microsoft says it provided AI to Israeli military for war but denies use to harm people in Gaza

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Microsoft acknowledged Thursday that it sold advanced artificial intelligence and cloud computing services to the Israeli military during the war in Gaza and aided in efforts to locate and rescue Israeli hostages. But the company also said it has found no evidence to date that its Azure platform and AI technologies were used to target or harm...

Think Tank

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Japan Tweaks Trump Strategy as Tariffs Begin to Hit

Japan Tweaks Trump Strategy as Tariffs Begin to Hit

In April, the United States imposed a baseline 10 per cent tariff on nearly all imports, with higher country-specific rates proposed for its major trade partners. Japan was hit hard: it faces a potential 24 per cent U.S. tariff on its exports beginning July 9 unless the two sides can reach an agreement before then. A separate 25 per cent...

Mission: Critical Minerals

Mission: Critical Minerals

How Canada can seize a once-in-a-generation opportunity and win the coming natural resource arms race The transition to a clean and digital economy has ignited a global race for critical minerals — the essential inputs for batteries, electric vehicles (EVs), wind turbines, solar panels, advanced electronics and defence technologies. These minerals (such as lithium, cobalt and nickel) are now as...

(Im)balance of power – How federal overreach fuels Western Alienation

(Im)balance of power – How federal overreach fuels Western Alienation

Western anger is largely fuelled by Ottawa’s decade-long legislative and regulatory agenda, which trampled on provincial jurisdiction while specifically targeting the oil and gas industry – a major source of Western Canada’s wealth.


Substacks

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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Longer wait times, abandoned calls at RCMP emergency call centres

Longer wait times, abandoned calls at RCMP emergency call centres

RCMP communications centres that receive 911 calls are so short of staff that wait times have doubled – prompting increasing numbers of frustrated callers to hang up. That’s one of the main findings from an internal evaluation that was triggered in part by the fumbles of the Mountie call centre in Truro, N.S., during the 2020 mass murder, which left...

Axworthy: Carney joining Trump's Golden Dome a ‘betrayal’

Axworthy: Carney joining Trump's Golden Dome a ‘betrayal’

Former Liberal Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy accused Prime Minister Mark Carney of betraying Canadians in a strongly worded opinion article published by The Globe and Mail. Axworthy was responding to the announcements this week, first by Donald Trump and then by Carney a day later, that Canada wants to join and help pay for Trump’s “Golden Dome” scheme that...

How to explain to Americans why we're so upset

How to explain to Americans why we're so upset

There are plenty of problems confronting progressives in the United States right now. So lots of our American cousins may not even be aware of the angst and hardship that Trump is inflicting upon Canada.

Podcasts

Canada caught in Trump tariff uncertainty

Canada caught in Trump tariff uncertainty

At Issue this week: How will another week of back-and-forth on tariffs from the U.S. change Canada’s negotiating position? The changing dynamics in the House under a new government. Plus, the prime minister looks to sell his plans to the premiers. Rosemary Barton hosts Chantal Hébert, Andrew Coyne and Althia Raj.

Does Canada still need the monarchy?

Does Canada still need the monarchy?

A whirlwind trip for King Charles, in his first visit to Canada as a sitting monarch, is being viewed by some as a success. It was a show of support amid annexation talk by the U.S. president but it also served as a benefit to the King. Host Kris McCusker speaks to Carolyn Harris - Historian, Author and Royal Commentator...

Dominic LeBlanc on getting to 'zero' tariffs

Dominic LeBlanc on getting to 'zero' tariffs

Job number one of Canada's new Liberal government is salvaging our trade relationship with the United States. Next is the job of uniting the country — doing away with internal trade barriers and getting big projects built. All of that is the unwritten mandate of Trade and Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc. He talks to host Amanda Lang about his...

Why Inuit Self-Determination Is Key to Canada’s Future

Why Inuit Self-Determination Is Key to Canada’s Future

Canadians are living through uncertain times. Our country faces interconnected challenges including a new geopolitical world order, economic headwinds, climate change, technological disruptions, shifting demographics and deepening inequality.