Top News
Smith-Carney pipeline deal to miss early deadlines, premier says

Smith-Carney pipeline deal to miss early deadlines, premier says

Sovereign wealth funds will want to invest in new oil pipeline, Smith says. The first set of deadlines included in the energy and climate deal struck between Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith are not expected to be met, showing early challenges with the agreement that includes pursuing a new export pipeline from Alberta to the West...

Liberals to debate age restrictions on social media, AI chatbots

Liberals to debate age restrictions on social media, AI chatbots

Age restrictions on using social media accounts and AI chatbots are among the topics up for debate when Liberal party grassroots gather next month for their national convention. Party rank-and-file are set to meet in Montreal for their policy convention April 9 through 11, where 24 different policy resolutions are on the agenda. They include two duelling proposals on reforming...

Liberals to debate use of ‘nuclear option’ against notwithstanding clause

Liberals to debate use of ‘nuclear option’ against notwithstanding clause

As the Supreme Court hears arguments on the notwithstanding clause’s role in Canada, some Liberal party members are arguing for using the federal government’s nuclear option, disallowance, which can invalidate any provincial laws, including those that use the clause to bypass the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. When they gather in Montreal for their national convention on April 9, Liberals...

Federal justice minister rejects premiers’ appeal for input on judicial appointments

Federal justice minister rejects premiers’ appeal for input on judicial appointments

The federal justice minister has rejected an appeal from four provinces for more input into judicial appointments, saying the status quo has served the administration of justice well. The premiers of Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan and Alberta signed a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney that calls for federal appointments to superior trial courts and courts of appeal of the provinces...

Canadian return trips from U.S. down more than 20% in January: StatCan

Canadian return trips from U.S. down more than 20% in January: StatCan

The number of return trips to the U.S. by Canadian residents was down more than 20 per cent in January, a year into the second term of U.S. President Donald Trump, Statistics Canada reported on Monday. “Starting in early 2025, travel trends among Canadian residents shifted alongside the political tensions between Canada and the United States,” StatCan said on its...

Polls

Section Sponsor

This section is sponsored by Canada's mining companies.
Concern about jobs/the economy pulling ahead of other issues: LPC 45.7, CPC 32.9, NDP 11.5

Concern about jobs/the economy pulling ahead of other issues: LPC 45.7, CPC 32.9, NDP 11.5

Worry about jobs/economy pulling away from the other concerns of Canadians. The Liberals are maintaining a double-digit lead over the Conservatives. Carney has a 32-point advantage on the preferred Prime Minister tracking over Poilievre.

Canadians Split on AI Data Centres as Cost Concerns and Local Opposition Emerge

Canadians Split on AI Data Centres as Cost Concerns and Local Opposition Emerge

Across North America, the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure has begun to collide with public concerns about energy use, environmental impact, and who ultimately benefits.



Opinion

More
Canada is slowly getting pulled into Trump’s incoherent mid-east conflict. This is the role we should play

Canada is slowly getting pulled into Trump’s incoherent mid-east conflict. This is the role we should play

Every March, millions of fans set aside their better judgment and give themselves over to the chaos of a basketball tournament aptly called March Madness. Its charm is simple. Anything can happen. Underdogs from small colleges sometimes topple the giants. We watch, we wince, we marvel. This year, the madness has spilled beyond the court into far more dangerous territory...

Restoring sanity to MAID laws in Canada will protect them

Restoring sanity to MAID laws in Canada will protect them

The scale of growth of Canada’s assisted-dying industry has become an easy talking point for skeptics both in Canada and abroad. The New York Post, in typical tabloid fashion, announced that Canada will “soon cross the sickly six-figure threshold” of 100,000 deaths by medical assistance in dying (MAID), noting the figure will surpass the number of Canadian deaths during the...

News

More
Manitoba Premier promises to end provincial tax on food from grocery store

Manitoba Premier promises to end provincial tax on food from grocery store

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says today's budget will take the tax off food from the grocery store. Kinew, in a post on social media, says everything from rotisserie chicken to salads would be free of the provincial sales tax of the budget passes. The change is a key part of a budget that promises to focus on affordability and health...

Mark Carney calls for humility in politics at National Prayer Breakfast

Mark Carney calls for humility in politics at National Prayer Breakfast

Prime Minister Mark Carney issued a call for politicians to be humble in their service and think broadly about their legacy as he offered his perspective on faith and public life Tuesday morning. Mr. Carney, as well as Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, were among the MPs who attended the National Prayer Breakfast, an annual Christian event held in downtown Ottawa...

Politician's Pen

More
As mayor of Vaughan, I’m urging Mark Carney to meet our Jewish community

As mayor of Vaughan, I’m urging Mark Carney to meet our Jewish community

I have an urgent request for Prime Minister Mark Carney: please come to Vaughan, Ont., to meet with our Jewish community. As Vaughan’s mayor, I want you to know that Jews here feel angry, scared, defiant, tired, shocked and beleaguered. Who can blame them? I’ve lived my entire life in this country, but I have never before witnessed the shocking...

People lose as Fossil Fuel prices soar.  Renewable Energy is Answer


Opinion (Continued) More

Mark Carney shouldn’t have to borrow a cottage

Mark Carney shouldn’t have to borrow a cottage

Start with the crisis everyone agrees on. A generation of young Canadians has been priced out of home ownership. Rents are consuming incomes. The dream of a mortgage, a backyard, a place to call one’s own has become, for millions, exactly that — a dream. Any serious federal leader must make housing affordability a defining mission. Which makes what I’m...

I learned something about the cruel cost of paradise

I learned something about the cruel cost of paradise

If you lay on the beach on the north coast of the Dominican Republic, warming your northern skin and admiring the play of the sun on the waves, you can sip pina coladas made from beautiful local pineapple juice, and when you want a snack, you can pay a few pesos for a little bag of brown Spanish peanuts from...

Canada’s political food fight is about to get even messier

Canada’s political food fight is about to get even messier

There are many ways that governments can be defeated, from self-inflicted scandals and political corruption to their failure to respond to broader global trends and events. But few things will bring a government to its knees faster than unchecked food price inflation. The surge of post-COVID inflation and the impact it had on grocery bills transformed the politics in most...

Prime Minister Carney and the power of first impressions

Prime Minister Carney and the power of first impressions

Despite some blemishes on Mark Carney’s otherwise immaculate image, his personal approval ratings are off the charts. If an election were held tomorrow, the Liberals would win north of 200 seats. Here's why.

What's in a "Net Favourability" Score?

What's in a "Net Favourability" Score?

Marjorie Harris and Michael Hughes are deadlocked, with net favourability scores of +1. The thing is, they are made up names for an experiment. Ever since I started working in public opinion research (back in the early 1980’s) I was keen to know about the sources of bias that can creep into research unless care is taken in survey design.

Pierre Poilievre is playing for Team Canada — with Mark Carney as captain

Pierre Poilievre is playing for Team Canada — with Mark Carney as captain

From the moment that Donald Trump first started talking about Canada as the 51st state, all sorts of people have debated whether the president was joking or serious. The answer, it seems, is both, and we learned that this week when Pierre Poilievre sat down for an epically long conversation with the right-wing American podcaster Joe Rogan.



Don Cherry, Pierre Poilievre, and Donald Trump

Don Cherry, Pierre Poilievre, and Donald Trump

We live in an increasingly uncertain world. Amid trade wars, hot wars, geopolitical conflicts, and rising oil prices, the disruption-and-destruction rap sheet of the second Trump administration grows longer by the day. As Prime Minister Mark Carney said during his now-famous Davos Speech on January 20, as a middle power, Canada must adapt to this challenging new context. Yet, despite...

Mark Carney government all over the map on foreign interference by India

Mark Carney government all over the map on foreign interference by India

What in heaven’s name is going on in Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government with regard to the threat posed to Canada’s national security by India?

Pierre Poilievre's Joe Rogan appearance a strong sign

Pierre Poilievre's Joe Rogan appearance a strong sign

If Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre had asked me whether he should go on Joe Rogan’s podcast in the United States this week, I would have told him, “No.” I would have been wrong. Poilievre’s appearance on the world’s No. 1 podcast may well mark the moment when he began turning around Canadian voters’ impression of him.

The Carney Government and Alberta’s Quest for a New Pipeline

The Carney Government and Alberta’s Quest for a New Pipeline

Sometime during the evening of April 13th, Mark Carney will quite likely find out that his majority in the House of Commons is secure. The results of the upcoming federal by-elections in University-Rosedale and Scarborough West in Toronto will confirm that. If, a few hours later, a Liberal victory in the Montreal-adjacent riding of Terrebonne is also confirmed, that will...

Carney meets world: Is prime minister a more international job now?

Carney meets world: Is prime minister a more international job now?

In his first year as prime minister, Mark Carney was restless. Two days after being sworn in at Rideau Hall, he made official visits to France and the United Kingdom. Shortly thereafter he went into a five-week election campaign, and a week after last spring's vote he travelled to Washington. In the months since, Carney has been to Belgium, the...

Pierre Poilievre and Joe Rogan talk a little bit about politics and so much about kettlebells

Pierre Poilievre and Joe Rogan talk a little bit about politics and so much about kettlebells

Pierre Poilievre arrived for his long-rumoured-and-finally-realized appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience bearing hefty baggage. The Conservative Leader presented Mr. Rogan with a 70-lb kettlebell created by a Calgary company that specializes in bespoke alterations to guns and knives. Before the episode even aired on Thursday, Mr. Poilievre’s office sent out a statement containing what I can only describe as...



The consequence of Trump’s war on Iran is a still-metastasizing military disaster

The consequence of Trump’s war on Iran is a still-metastasizing military disaster

It’s not true to say that the end justifies the means. Neither is it true that it never does. The true statement is: some ends justify some means. A lot of people who ought to know better seem to have persuaded themselves that the U.S.-Israel war on Iran (in? against? with?) is a case of the end justifying the means...

Stop it with the loser talk, Conservatives

Stop it with the loser talk, Conservatives

Members of Parliament are allowed to switch parties, and pretending otherwise just makes you sound weak. There is a thing that happens in sports sometimes when a coach or a player, after a tough defeat, refuses to accept that they might be at fault. They blame the officials, or a busy schedule, or a brutal stretch of injuries. Or maybe...

Pierre Poilievre gave Joe Rogan the interview he’s never given Canadians

Pierre Poilievre gave Joe Rogan the interview he’s never given Canadians

Pierre Poilievre’s interview with podcast giant Joe Rogan began on-theme, with the Conservative party leader gifting the skeptical-yet-gullible interviewer with a red maple leaf emblazoned 70-pound kettlebell, and stayed in the zone for the next two-and-a-half hours. The marathon chat managed to broach policy, personality, and puffery, sometimes simultaneously. And it was, if not particularly enlightening, fairly endearing. And equally...

Don’t mistake announcements by Carney and Ford for progress

Don’t mistake announcements by Carney and Ford for progress

Let’s talk for a moment about the scale of Canada’s ambition and how it compares to the scale of what we can plausibly achieve. Last week, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced major plans for Arctic infrastructure. Much of the $35 billion budgeted for them will be used to expand and upgrade existing military facilities; these, in theory, will increase the...

Time to plan for the return of sane immigration

Time to plan for the return of sane immigration

Canada is shrinking. For far back as records have been kept, and probably much farther, this country’s population grew year after year, seemingly inexorably. Until 2025. On Wednesday, Statistics Canada released figures for the fourth quarter, which estimated that Canada’s population declined by 102,436 people over the course of last year.

How to accidentally ban lower prices

How to accidentally ban lower prices

Manitoba has just become the first jurisdiction in Canada to introduce legislation that would make it an unfair practice for suppliers to charge higher prices based on algorithmic pricing. Bill 49 is aimed at preventing retailers from using personal data, such as purchasing history, to set higher individualized prices. Vass Bednar, managing director of the Canadian Shield Institute, which promotes...



Cherry-picking leaves Conservative Quebec MPs in the pits

Cherry-picking leaves Conservative Quebec MPs in the pits

When I was in the first grade, my hometown junior hockey team, the Granby Bisons, played the team from Trois-Rivières. After trailing Trois-Rivières for a while, Granby had finally managed to tie the game. Trois-Rivières decided to change up their goalie and put Mannon Rhéaume in net. My little, six-year-old mind was blown. A girl! Playing hockey! With boys...

The Guns of March

The Guns of March

Two recent tweets by Donald Trump on Truth Social reflect a dangerous unravelling of his Middle East war strategy, to the extent that there was one. The first is about the refusal of many countries to send military personnel or equipment as part of operation “Epic Fury”: “The United States has been informed by most of our NATO “Allies” that...

War is back, but ‘MAD’ will save us from the worst of it

War is back, but ‘MAD’ will save us from the worst of it

In a competition for the prize of most wonderful irony ever, there is a strong candidate. How about the turn of events that has seen the most lethal, destructive force mankind ever created, nuclear weapons, becoming the greatest preserver of peace? Prior to 1945, major wars between great powers occurred about every 20 or 30 years. This era ended when...

A minority government is best suited to manage Canada in a crisis

A minority government is best suited to manage Canada in a crisis

A Liberal majority looks all but inevitable. Three Conservative MPs and one New Democrat having crossed the floor, the Liberals now have 170 seats out of 343 in the House. A probable sweep of the three by-elections scheduled for April 13 would leave them with 173, enough to outvote the combined opposition even without the help of the Speaker. That’s...

Don Cherry doesn’t fit the Order of Canada profile. But we shouldn’t ignore his legacy

Don Cherry doesn’t fit the Order of Canada profile. But we shouldn’t ignore his legacy

The Conservatives knew what they were doing – well, sort of – when they announced a petition to nominate former hockey commentator Don Cherry to the Order of Canada. It’s a great cultural wedge issue: one that pits the millions of Canadians with fond memories of Coach’s Corner against the ostensibly smaller cohort of Canadians who still begrudge Mr. Cherry...

The Longest Ballot Losers Are Killing the Most Important Night in Canadian Politics

The Longest Ballot Losers Are Killing the Most Important Night in Canadian Politics

If you’re a political nerd like me (and if you’re reading this, you clearly are), you enjoy a good by-election night. They’re a fun little pitstop between general elections - a chance to get a sense of where the parties actually stand. Sometimes they tell you a lot, sometimes they tell you nothing at all, but they tell you SOMETHING...

News (Continued) More

Four premiers ask for greater say in superior, appeal court judge appointments

Four premiers ask for greater say in superior, appeal court judge appointments

The premiers of Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and Saskatchewan are jointly calling on the federal government to give them more of a say in judges who are appointed to their superior and appeal courts. They say in a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney that having their governments actively engaged in the process will help ensure judicial appointments "appropriately reflect the...

Canadians with ‘Havana syndrome’ outraged as Ottawa backs disputed report

Canadians with ‘Havana syndrome’ outraged as Ottawa backs disputed report

Canadian foreign service officials who say they and their families continue to struggle with “Havana syndrome” are outraged over Ottawa’s latest statement on the mysterious health incidents, saying it’s the latest betrayal in a years-long dispute over what happened to them.

Future of corporate human-rights watchdog uncertain in Carney government

Future of corporate human-rights watchdog uncertain in Carney government

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government has left vacant for 10 months the role of a federal ombudsman whose job is to probe overseas human-rights abuses by Canadian corporations, and Ottawa says the once-heralded watchdog agency remains under review. The government is also declining to say whether federal budget cuts have affected staff who are responsible for enforcing Ottawa’s forced-labour import...

How RCMP spies infiltrated the 1970s Indigenous rights movement

How RCMP spies infiltrated the 1970s Indigenous rights movement

Secret files reveal Mounties penetrated Assembly of First Nations’ predecessor, spied on Indigenous leaders. The Mounties called it the "Native extremism program." Today, it sounds like a spy novel. Intelligence dossiers stuffed with documents. Wiretaps. Paid informants. Covert operatives with code numbers like "A-828." A Red Power dissident photo album. Surreptitious surveillance at homes, offices, airports and bars.

'Hoodie-gate': Is David Eby qualified as fashion police after dressing down B.C. MLA?

'Hoodie-gate': Is David Eby qualified as fashion police after dressing down B.C. MLA?

Style advisor Dale Olsen says he doesn't distinguish between party colours, but he doubts British Columbia Premier David Eby is well qualified to act as the fashion police. Eby thrust political attire onto the agenda this month when he dressed down Opposition legislature member Gavin Dew for wearing a grey hoodie as he voted remotely on a private member's bill...

Feds say more than 51,000 firearms reported as compensation program nears close

Feds say more than 51,000 firearms reported as compensation program nears close

Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree says gun owners have reported more than 51,000 firearms to the federal government with one week left to go in a program to provide compensation for banned guns. The figure is well short of the 136,000 firearms for which the government set aside money when the buyback program for individual owners opened in January. Anandasanagree...

Costa Rica looks to Canada to safeguard rules-based trade, democracy in Latin America

Costa Rica looks to Canada to safeguard rules-based trade, democracy in Latin America

Canada can protect rules-based international trade and resist pressure from superpowers by working more with the Americas, shoring up supply chains and strengthening economic ties, Costa Rica's trade minister said on a recent visit to Ottawa. "We share the same vision of the type of world that we would like to live in," Manuel Tovar Rivera said in an interview...

Carney's government admits 'error,' says PM did raise human rights with Xi

Carney's government admits 'error,' says PM did raise human rights with Xi

Prime Minister Mark Carney's office says public servants are correcting information the government tabled in Parliament that suggested he did not "proactively" raise human rights or foreign interference during his visit to Beijing. Carney met in January with Chinese President Xi Jinping and told reporters at the end of his visit to Beijing that he had spoken with Xi about...

Liberals' fiscal watchdog nominee vows to hold government's 'feet to the fire'

Liberals' fiscal watchdog nominee vows to hold government's 'feet to the fire'

Conservatives to vote against PBO nominee Annette Ryan, who promised to remain independent. The Liberal government's nominee to be the next fiscal watchdog insists she'll run an independent and non-partisan ship — even though her candidacy has created a political rift. Senior public servant Annette Ryan appeared before the House finance committee Monday afternoon as part of the nomination process...

Auditor general report finds reforms to international student program ‘fell short’

Auditor general report finds reforms to international student program ‘fell short’

A new report from Canada’s auditor general found reforms to the international student program “fell short” on improving integrity, including only investigating a small number of potentially problematic cases flagged by post secondary institutions. The report, tabled in the House of Commons Monday morning, found that out of 153,324 potentially non-compliant students reported by schools to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship...

MPs debate contentious hate crimes legislation as House of Commons resumes

MPs debate contentious hate crimes legislation as House of Commons resumes

Members of Parliament continued debate on the government's contentious hate crimes bill Monday after they returned to Ottawa following a break week that saw both the Liberal and Conservative leaders on international trips. The Liberals have passed a motion to impose a time limit on debate for Bill C-9, which would define hatred in criminal law for the first time...

Phoenix backlog needs to be cleared to avoid errors in new system: AG report

Phoenix backlog needs to be cleared to avoid errors in new system: AG report

Canada's auditor general says the federal government is running out of time to clear the backlog of public service pay transactions under the old Phoenix system to avoid infecting the new system with errors. The federal government is working to replace the error-prone Phoenix with a new system, Dayforce, and all departments and agencies are expected to move to the...

Conservative campaign manager shrugs off polls showing Liberals have significant lead

Conservative campaign manager shrugs off polls showing Liberals have significant lead

Party determined to speak about priority issues like affordability, says Steve Outhouse. The federal Conservative Party's campaign manager is shrugging off polls showing the Liberals hold a double-digit lead over the Tories — while Pierre Poilievre says he's broadening his image but won't change who he is. "Polls are polls, and they do what polls do," Steve Outhouse said in...

Confidential contract between feds, Stellantis reveals Brampton factory and worker terms

Confidential contract between feds, Stellantis reveals Brampton factory and worker terms

$529M deal became target of scrutiny after Stellantis announced Brampton plant ‘pause.’ The multi-million-dollar deal at the heart of a high-profile fight between the Canadian government and one of the world’s biggest carmakers contains multiple clauses about the company’s footprint in Ontario, according to a copy obtained by CBC Windsor. The contract for up to $529 million in public funding...

Canadians face ‘tsunami’ of transnational repression in coming years, cyber-research group says

Canadians face ‘tsunami’ of transnational repression in coming years, cyber-research group says

Canada and the rest of the democratic world are facing a “tsunami” of transnational and digital repression with the rise of authoritarianism in the U.S., the arrival of artificial intelligence and a softening of attitudes on human rights, according to a respected Canadian cyber-research group. The director of the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global...

Budget watchdog nominee Annette Ryan set to testify at finance committee

Budget watchdog nominee Annette Ryan set to testify at finance committee

Ottawa's choice for the next federal fiscal watchdog is set to face questions from MPs before she can be confirmed as the next parliamentary budget officer. Annette Ryan, a longtime public servant and the current deputy director at Canada's financial intelligence agency, Fintrac, was named as cabinet's pick to become the next parliamentary budget officer earlier this month.

‘From disaster to dominance’: Carney Liberals enjoy decade-high polling, but unpredictable events could undermine electoral fortunes, say political players

‘From disaster to dominance’: Carney Liberals enjoy decade-high polling, but unpredictable events could undermine electoral fortunes, say political players

As Mark Carney hits his one-year mark as prime minister and the Liberals reach their strongest levels of support in a decade, polls show the party could win more than 200 seats if an election were held now. But, pollsters caution that events such as a potential recession, rising gas prices linked to the United States-Israeli attack on Iran, and...

Two pilots flying Air Canada jet killed in collision with fire truck at N.Y. airport

Two pilots flying Air Canada jet killed in collision with fire truck at N.Y. airport

Aviation officials say two Air Canada pilots were killed late Sunday when their flight from Montreal crashed into a rescue vehicle on a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport. Kathryn Garcia with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey says 41 people were taken to hospital and that 32 have since been released. She says nine people remain...

How to get Canada's economy growing again

How to get Canada's economy growing again

This week lands between the Bank of Canada's last interest rate decision and next week's GDP report.

Why three byelections on April 13 could change the makeup of the House of Commons

Why three byelections on April 13 could change the makeup of the House of Commons

Three byelections are being held on April 13 and the results could have an impact on both the makeup of Parliament and how long it lasts. Here's a primer on how things could change.

Public servant 'scared' to retire due to problems with Phoenix pay system

Public servant 'scared' to retire due to problems with Phoenix pay system

A federal public servant says she's "scared" to take up the government's early retirement offer after being told that she owes the government about $10,500 because of a mistake in her pay file. Jennifer MacDougall got the letter from the pay centre in February but said the situation itself stems back to between 2014 and 2018. MacDougall was working in...

Polls show Americans dislike Canada more than ever, and that's bad news for the trade war

Polls show Americans dislike Canada more than ever, and that's bad news for the trade war

Canadians’ affection for the United States tends to rise and fall with whoever’s in the White House. It dropped for president George W. Bush, rose for Barack Obama, and then plunged during Donald Trump’s first term, only to rise again with Joe Biden. In the first year of Trump’s second presidency, however, Canada’s fondness for its southern neighbour has plumbed...

Clashing visions define pivotal NDP leadership race as party prepares to rebuild

Clashing visions define pivotal NDP leadership race as party prepares to rebuild

On a debate stage in Vancouver last month, Heather McPherson tried to narrow the choice facing New Democrats in the weakened party’s leadership race. “We are New Democrats, and we all believe in fairness, in equity, in looking out for your neighbour,” McPherson, the only MP in the race, said to party faithful. “So this race isn’t about debating those...

Poilievre set up Joe Rogan podcast appearance himself: Conservative campaign manager

Poilievre set up Joe Rogan podcast appearance himself: Conservative campaign manager

Conservative campaign manager Steve Outhouse says leader Pierre Poilievre arranged his appearance on the hugely popular Joe Rogan podcast himself. During his first U.S. tour since becoming Conservative leader, Poilievre made stops in Michigan, Texas and New York City this week, and sat down to record a more-than-two-hour podcast episode with Joe Rogan. The episode, which dropped Thursday, is set...

Canadians living abroad looking to increase voter turnout ahead of byelections

Canadians living abroad looking to increase voter turnout ahead of byelections

Canadians living abroad are calling for increased turnout among overseas voters and arguing that barriers to casting a ballot could be affecting election results. Timothy Veale, the director of Grits Abroad -- an organization aimed at connecting Canadian Liberal voters living worldwide -- said nearly five million Canadians live outside the country and roughly 3.5 million of them are eligible...

Queen's Park resumes sitting after 14-week break, straight into budget season

Queen's Park resumes sitting after 14-week break, straight into budget season

Ontario's legislature is set to resume sitting Monday after a 14-week break that ended in a veritable deluge of news, partial proposals and headline-grabbing musings from Premier Doug Ford and his government. It is a flood-the-zone strategy, opposition parties say, in an attempt to drown out criticism over a government plan to keep records of cabinet ministers and the premier...

PBO nominee Annette Ryan enters spotlight at a pivotal time for federal finances

PBO nominee Annette Ryan enters spotlight at a pivotal time for federal finances

Ottawa's nominee for federal fiscal watchdog will face questions from members of Parliament on Monday after a turbulent period for the budget office. Annette Ryan, a longtime public servant and currently a deputy director at Canada's financial intelligence agency, Fintrac, was named as cabinet's pick to be the next parliamentary budget officer earlier this month. Ryan's nomination, which must be...

ISED cuts $20-million from Strategic Science Fund nearly two years after signing agreements with recipients

ISED cuts $20-million from Strategic Science Fund nearly two years after signing agreements with recipients

Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada informed organizations receiving money through the Strategic Science Fund late last month that it will cut $20-million from the $800-million fund as a part of the government’s plan to reduce spending. The decision affects 17 of the 19 organizations that will be funded until 2028-29 and have had contribution agreements in place since May...

‘I’m glad he’s dead’: Trump cheers Robert Mueller’s passing with tone-deaf message

‘I’m glad he’s dead’: Trump cheers Robert Mueller’s passing with tone-deaf message

President Donald Trump took to social media Saturday to celebrate the death of Robert Mueller, the former FBI director who famously led the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.



US Poli

More
Senators consider deal to fund Homeland Security but not ICE enforcement

Senators consider deal to fund Homeland Security but not ICE enforcement

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senators raced Tuesday to clinch an emerging proposal to end the Homeland Security shutdown by funding much of the department, including the Transportation Security Administration airport workers going without pay, but excluding the ICE enforcement operations that have been core to the dispute.

It's a bad time to hunt for new jobs, most US workers say in new Gallup poll

It's a bad time to hunt for new jobs, most US workers say in new Gallup poll

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans' outlook on the job market has turned increasingly pessimistic, a surprisingly negative shift given the low unemployment rate but one that likely reflects an ongoing hiring drought.

Trump casts Florida mail ballot as he pushes Congress to severely limit that voting option

Trump casts Florida mail ballot as he pushes Congress to severely limit that voting option

President Donald Trump has cast another mail ballot in Florida as he continues to publicly bash the voting method as a source of fraud and push Congress to curtail the practice.

Senate confirms Markwayne Mullin to lead Homeland Security as TSA standoff deepens

Senate confirms Markwayne Mullin to lead Homeland Security as TSA standoff deepens

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate confirmed Markwayne Mullin as homeland security secretary late Monday, approving President Donald Trump's nominee to take over the embattled department after the firing of Kristi Noem during a public backlash over the administration's immigration enforcement and mass deportation operations.

International

More
‘I’m glad he’s dead’: Trump cheers Robert Mueller’s passing with tone-deaf message

‘I’m glad he’s dead’: Trump cheers Robert Mueller’s passing with tone-deaf message

President Donald Trump took to social media Saturday to celebrate the death of Robert Mueller, the former FBI director who famously led the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Iran’s military warns ‘parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations’ worldwide won’t be safe

Iran’s military warns ‘parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations’ worldwide won’t be safe

Iran’s top military spokesman has warned that “parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations” worldwide won’t be safe for Tehran’s enemies. Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi made the threat Friday as Iran continues to be hit by American and Israeli airstrikes. It was likely to renew concerns that as the war goes on, Iran may revert to using militant attacks beyond the Middle...

French foreign minister suggests Canada could 'maybe ... at some point' join EU

French foreign minister suggests Canada could 'maybe ... at some point' join EU

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot is openly mulling the idea of Canada seeking membership in the European Union. Speaking at the Europe 2026 conference in Berlin today, Barrot said the European Union is attracting more candidate countries, such as Iceland, and suggested "maybe Canada at some point" will sign up.

‘Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation’: Trump-appointed intelligence official resigns over Iran war

‘Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation’: Trump-appointed intelligence official resigns over Iran war

A senior US intelligence official appointed by President Donald Trump abruptly announced he is stepping down from his post on Tuesday, citing misgivings about the administration’s war with Iran. “After much reflection, I have decided to resign from my position as Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, effective today,” Joe Kent wrote in a post on X.

Foreign minister calls for ‘no weaponization’ of Strait of Hormuz, offers no specifics on Canada’s support

Foreign minister calls for ‘no weaponization’ of Strait of Hormuz, offers no specifics on Canada’s support

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand spoke out against the “weaponization” of the Strait of Hormuz in the face of an ongoing blockade but offered no specifics on what kind of support Canada is prepared to offer. “There should be no weaponization of international shipping lanes and prevention from countries around the world having the resources that they need,” Anand told...

Think Tank

More
More hammers, fewer homes: Why a construction labour surge isn’t ending Canada’s housing crisis

More hammers, fewer homes: Why a construction labour surge isn’t ending Canada’s housing crisis

Canada’s housing shortage is no longer just an affordability problem. It is increasingly a constraint on economic growth, labour mobility, and the ability of cities to function effectively. Despite record levels of construction employment and investment, housing supply continues to fall far short of what Canadians need. The core problem lies in a sustained decline in residential construction productivity. Employment...

Two-step immigration selection and post-admission earnings

Two-step immigration selection and post-admission earnings

Economic immigrants selected through the two-step process — first as temporary foreign workers before being permanent residents — generally earn more than those selected directly from abroad. But outcomes vary widely: two-step immigrants with high pre-admission Canadian earnings enjoy substantial and persistent earnings advantages, while those with lower pre-admission earnings often fare worse than one-step immigrants. The findings suggest that...

Sault Ste. Marie: Ontario Steel City Looks to Forge New Path

Sault Ste. Marie: Ontario Steel City Looks to Forge New Path

A one-time northern Ontario fur-trading post, Sault Ste. Marie’s fortunes changed when U.S. industrialist Francis Clergue built a hydroelectric power plant on the banks of the St. Mary’s River more than 100 years ago. The dam brought cheap power to the area and turned it into an industrial hub. Clergue also opened a steel mill, a pulp and paper mill...


Substacks

More

A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Canada takes a big step toward troops in Iran war

Canada takes a big step toward troops in Iran war

Canadian troops may be only days away from deploying to the Middle East to aid the U.S.’s and Israel’s war on Iran. The latest indication is a joint statement expressing concern about Iran’s restriction of oil tankers through the narrow Strait of Hormuz signed by Prime Minister Mark Carney and NATO allies late in the week.

CRA's popular tax-amnesty program

CRA's popular tax-amnesty program

Canadians who have neglected to pay their taxes to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) have been coming forward in droves to take advantage of new amnesty rules.

Dimming the lights in Ontario

Dimming the lights in Ontario

Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s spurious excuses for gutting the province’s freedom-of-information (FOI) law are exactly why we need transparency legislation in the first place: governments are habitual liars. Last week, the Ford government said it plans to weaken its sunshine law by erecting brick walls around every minister’s office, including the premier’s. Freedom-of-information requests will no longer be accepted. The...

Podcasts

Section Sponsor

Reporter's Notebook -- Is This The Week The NDP Begins a Comeback?

Reporter's Notebook -- Is This The Week The NDP Begins a Comeback?

By the end of this week, the NDP will have a new leader but what will that signal? Comeback, rebuild, or continue to disappear from the national stage? Are we. missing something about Canada without the NDP's voice? That's one of the topics for Althia Raj and Rob Russo on this Tuesday's installment of Reporter's Notebook. That and a lot...

Is Cuba Next? with Mark Entwistle

Is Cuba Next? with Mark Entwistle

What could Trump's latest threats toward Cuba mean for a country already in deep economic and humanitarian crisis? Peter and Jeremy welcome former Canadian ambassador to Cuba Mark Entwistle to unpack the pressure now bearing down on the island: the long aftermath of COVID, the collapse of tourism and tightening US sanctions. Is Washington pursuing regime change, a transactional economic...

I gotta have more kettlebell, baby!

I gotta have more kettlebell, baby!

Join us for insights on the latest in Canadian politics.

The Iran War -- Trump Delays One Threat But Things Could Still Get A Lot Worse.

The Iran War -- Trump Delays One Threat But Things Could Still Get A Lot Worse.

It's now Week Four of the Iran War and Trump delays one threat but things remain very tense. How bad could things get? We ask those questions of Dr Janice Stein from the Munk School at the University of Toronto as she makes her regular Monday Bridge appearance.