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Alberta separatists threaten to oust Premier Danielle Smith over referendum question

Alberta separatists threaten to oust Premier Danielle Smith over referendum question

Political rhetoric is ramping up ahead of a planned fall referendum in Alberta. “Our view is Danielle (Smith) needs to make a decision: Is she going to support Mister Lukaszuk, or is she going to support her base? What we are saying is she needs to understand that if she abandons her base or betrays her base, there will likely...

Poilievre says all Conservatives will campaign for Alberta to stay part of Canada

Poilievre says all Conservatives will campaign for Alberta to stay part of Canada

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said he and all Conservative MPs will press for Alberta to remain part of Canada in any separation referendum campaign in the province. "I'm a strong Canadian federalist, a proud Albertan and a proud Canadian. I want a strong Alberta within a united Canada, and all Conservatives will be campaigning for Canadian unity in Alberta," Poilievre...

Dr. Strangelove diplomacy: How the Pentagon’s symbolic defence board freeze with Canada could backfire

Dr. Strangelove diplomacy: How the Pentagon’s symbolic defence board freeze with Canada could backfire

Washington's decision to pause bilateral body appears aimed at influencing Canada's military policy. Although greeted with a mixture of angst, anger and genuine confusion in this country, it is undeniable that the Pentagon’s move this week to freeze one of the oldest pillars of continental defence co-operation — ostensibly to punish Canada — carried with it notes of dark comedy...

Alberta legislature committee eyes separation vote as meeting hits bizarre roadblock

Alberta legislature committee eyes separation vote as meeting hits bizarre roadblock

Alberta’s journey toward holding a fall referendum on separation took a bizarre turn Wednesday — straight into another roadblock. It occurred when the governing United Conservative members on a bipartisan legislature committee introduced a motion to formally ask Premier Danielle Smith and her cabinet to initiate a provincewide vote on Alberta's status in Confederation this October. The motion was expected...

Jason Nixon named Alberta's new finance minister in cabinet shakeup

Jason Nixon named Alberta's new finance minister in cabinet shakeup

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has shuffled her cabinet, naming Jason Nixon her new finance minister. Nixon takes over from Nate Horner, who announced earlier this week he was stepping down and won't run in the 2027 provincial election. Nixon had been social services minister.

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Ottawa: Sutcliffe Leads Decided Voters; Tierney Opens at 11%

Ottawa: Sutcliffe Leads Decided Voters; Tierney Opens at 11%

The latest Capital Tracker from the Ottawa Compass and Liaison Strategies shows Mayor Mark Sutcliffe leading among decided and leaning voters in an early Ottawa mayoral ballot, while Tim Tierney would enter the race in double digits. Among decided and leaning voters, with Tierney included on the ballot, Sutcliffe leads with 37%, followed by Jeff Leiper at 32%, Alex Lawson...

Economy, inflation and U.S. relations among top issues; Liberals lead

Economy, inflation and U.S. relations among top issues; Liberals lead

Economic concerns continue to dominate, with jobs and inflation at the forefront. Strained relations with the United States remain closely tied to this uncertainty. The Liberals maintain their lead over the Conservatives, with Mark Carney remaining as the preferred choice for prime minister, suggesting a largely stable political landscape shaped by persistent economic pressures.



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Volatility Is a Mandate: Why Economic Uncertainty Should Accelerate Government Reinvention
Danielle Smith is not a separatist. She’s an opportunist who got in over her head

Danielle Smith is not a separatist. She’s an opportunist who got in over her head

I take Alberta Premier Danielle Smith at her word that she supports a “sovereign Alberta within a united Canada,” which is the refrain she hauls out every time she is asked for her personal opinion on Alberta independence. While Alberta’s NDP is busy charging that the Premier and her entire caucus “are separatists. Period,” Ms. Smith’s long tenure as a...

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Pentagon’s ‘cancellation’ of Canada-U.S. defence board could have ‘ripple effects’ on major procurements, says former co-chair

Pentagon’s ‘cancellation’ of Canada-U.S. defence board could have ‘ripple effects’ on major procurements, says former co-chair

'It’s a shot across the bow. The U.S. administration has clearly been watching the PM’s moves on defence and has concludes that there’s too much talk and too little action,' says defence expert Christian Leuprecht.

Alberta cabinet minister who introduced separation vote says he wants a united Canada

Alberta cabinet minister who introduced separation vote says he wants a united Canada

The cabinet minister who put the wheels in motion for a referendum on Alberta's place in Canada says he doesn't want the province to separate. Nate Glubish says in a social media post that Canada is worth fighting for and that he'll vote for Alberta to stay if a referendum goes ahead as proposed on Oct. 19. He also says...

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Why Nova Scotia Is Ready to Support Canada’s Defence, Security and Resilience Bank

Why Nova Scotia Is Ready to Support Canada’s Defence, Security and Resilience Bank

Canada’s selection as home to the new Defence, Security and Resilience Bank affirms our country’s credibility with its allies and its leadership at a time when defence, security and economic resilience is critical. Nova Scotia was one of the first to raise our hand in support of Canada’s bid.

Building Canada Strong Through Sport

Building Canada Strong Through Sport



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Premier Smith in a jam — You're in for a surprise on the Alberta separatist vote

Premier Smith in a jam — You're in for a surprise on the Alberta separatist vote

What is Premier Danielle Smith going to do? How is the Smith government going to get out of this jam? At this point you’re no doubt asking: What are you talking about? Read this column carefully. Don’t rush to a conclusion. Follow the stickhandling around the political land mines. The referendum question may not be what you think it is...

Two ministers quit, Smith will talk referendum on TV, legislature committee erupts

Two ministers quit, Smith will talk referendum on TV, legislature committee erupts

Events suddenly stacked up Wednesday into a pre-summer political blast. Top of the heap was two resignations from cabinet. Then came a bitter blow-up in the legislature committee reviewing Thomas Lukaszuk’s pro-Canada question for a referendum on independence. The cabinet shuffle had been rumoured. It turned out to be significant. Premier Danielle Smith will name new ministers Thursday morning.

It’s a failure, but Trump isn’t dropping his anti-Canada campaign

It’s a failure, but Trump isn’t dropping his anti-Canada campaign

In the latest NY Times/Siena poll, Donald Trump’s approval rating dropped to 37 per cent, among the lowest it has been in either of his presidential terms. He’s almost always managed to stay north of 40. Not now. In his own party, the mad King continues to command bristling support, as evidenced by his success in ousting Republican lawmakers who...

Mark Carney’s rightward shift makes room for the battered New Democrats

Mark Carney’s rightward shift makes room for the battered New Democrats

B.C. Premier David Eby stood by Mark Carney in Vancouver on Wednesday and said he would be the one to speak hard truth to the prime minister. A day earlier, without Carney present, Eby was pretty clear on what truth he wants to tell — that the federal government is putting Alberta’s interests above those of the other provinces because...

Canadian troops are steeling to fight Russia. Will Ottawa back them?

Canadian troops are steeling to fight Russia. Will Ottawa back them?

An extraordinary exchange with potentially dramatic consequences for Canada took place at the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday. Vasily Nebenzya, Russia’s potato-faced permanent representative at the UN, told the council that his country’s intelligence agency believes Latvia is deploying Ukrainian drones on its territory, with the intention of attacking Moscow. “Membership of NATO will not protect you from just...

Mr. Positive says yes to all the premiers’ projects

Mr. Positive says yes to all the premiers’ projects

David Eby doesn’t perform well when drawing lines in the sand. It’s not in his emotional range. But the Premier of British Columbia wanted everyone to know he is miffed. “There’s no doubt in my mind that the Prime Minister is a friend to British Columbia,” Mr. Eby said as he stood beside Prime Minister Mark Carney at a photo-op...



UCP may OK Lukaszuk's referendum question, amid threats to Smith's leadership

UCP may OK Lukaszuk's referendum question, amid threats to Smith's leadership

A pro-Canada independence referendum question may head for approval Wednesday. The separatists hate the question and threaten revenge. The proponent, Thomas Lukaszuk, is engaged in his own political brawl with the UCP. On Tuesday, Premier Danielle Smith was considering a televised address to the province, probably on Thursday, to talk about a referendum.

Danielle Smith’s support for separation threatens proposed oil pipeline

Danielle Smith’s support for separation threatens proposed oil pipeline

Is Alberta premier Danielle Smith’s strategy for getting a bitumen pipeline to B.C.’s northwest coast about to reach its breaking point? Sure, she’s got two Memorandums of Understanding (MOU) with Prime Minister Mark Carney that pave the way for the pipeline but there’s still a lot of terrain to cover before it becomes a reality. And the thing that could...

Momentum in cutting red tape is making mining in Canada more attractive to investors

Momentum in cutting red tape is making mining in Canada more attractive to investors

The prime minister is starting to collect evidence to help Canada reclaim its status as one of the world’s most investible, mining-friendly jurisdictions.

The Permanent Joint Board on Defence and the Slide from FDR to Trump

The Permanent Joint Board on Defence and the Slide from FDR to Trump

I recently taught an intensive course to Queen’s University graduate students on the origins of the current crisis in the relationship between Canada and the United States, after teaching a similar course at the Munk School in Toronto. It’s been a great experience, and fun to be back in the classroom. My stay in Kingston included an enjoyable visit with...

With its pause on the Permanent Joint Board on Defence, the U.S. is attempting to constrain Canada

With its pause on the Permanent Joint Board on Defence, the U.S. is attempting to constrain Canada

It is possible you have never heard of the Permanent Joint Board on Defence. It meets just once or twice a year – these days not even that – to provide Canadian and American military leaders with the opportunity for a full and frank exchange of views on bilateral defence issues. But it is far from the only instrument of...

It would be unwise for Carney to dismiss U.S. pulling out of defence board

It would be unwise for Carney to dismiss U.S. pulling out of defence board

This weekend, the U.S. paused its participation in an organization most Canadians have likely never heard of: the Permanent Joint Board on Defence. It was established in 1940, following U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s pledge that the U.S. would defend Canada if it were attacked, and Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King’s promise that “enemy forces should not be able...



We’re the closest we’ve ever been to fixing this outdated law. Carney needs to get us closer

We’re the closest we’ve ever been to fixing this outdated law. Carney needs to get us closer

Ottawa’s second crack at passing its big lawful access bill is going much worse than its first one did. Assailed by privacy advocates, Big Tech and bigwig Republicans in the United States, the Carney government faces a tough slog in trying to modernize the legal tools cops and spies use to do their jobs in the digital era. This is...

'Dangerous politics': Trump suspends joint defence board with Canada

'Dangerous politics': Trump suspends joint defence board with Canada

The moment when Canada moved from Britain’s orbit into America’s can be dated precisely to Aug. 17, 1940. That was the day when Canadian prime minister William Mackenzie King and U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Ogdensburg Agreement that defined the principle of the joint defence of North America

Why aren’t more Alberta MPs standing against separatism?

Why aren’t more Alberta MPs standing against separatism?

The night before the 1968 federal election, prime minister Pierre Trudeau attended the annual St. Jean Baptiste Parade in Montreal. A mob of enraged Quebec separatists began hurling bottles and rocks at him. As most of the other dignitaries scurried for cover, security tried to hustle the PM off to safety. Mr. Trudeau brushed them off, shot the rioters a...

Updating Canada’s Trade Laws to Meet (Legitimate) National Security Threats

Updating Canada’s Trade Laws to Meet (Legitimate) National Security Threats

National security — an elastic legal concept — has become associated with international trade thanks to Donald Trump, who has been using it as an excuse to apply wide-ranging tariffs under his administration’s trade policy. While largely a subsidiary trade issue for decades, national security is now top-tier in global trade relations at several levels. First, there is the scope...

Mark Carney Should Stop Trying to Impress His Progressive Flank

Mark Carney Should Stop Trying to Impress His Progressive Flank

I’M TRYING TO FIGURE out what Prime Minister Mark Carney thought he was doing at this year’s Global Progress Action Summit. The Global Progress Action Summit is an annual gathering of Canadian Liberals, United Kingdom Labour figures, United States Democrats, and assorted compatible figures from other countries. Carney spoke at this year’s summit on Saturday in Toronto, which took place...

More and more Canadians are declaring insolvency, which is kind of perverse good news for Conservatives

More and more Canadians are declaring insolvency, which is kind of perverse good news for Conservatives

Everything should be adjusted for inflation and population growth. This is something I always think of when looking at comparative stats. When I saw a few days ago that Canadian personal insolvencies had hit a level we hadn’t seen since 2009—the era of the global financial crisis and the so-called Great Recession—I immediately thought about this. And it turns out...



I was Canada’s first Parliamentary budget officer. I can see that Mark Carney is walking a tightrope

I was Canada’s first Parliamentary budget officer. I can see that Mark Carney is walking a tightrope

We live in an age of uncertainty and disorder. Prime Minister Mark Carney has called this a hinge moment. Long-term relationships have been ruptured. For policymakers, however, unpredictability is the norm. The current risks are long-term and complex (wars, international relations, climate, inequality, technology) but they also have significant short-term impacts (confidence, affordability, employment).

Smith is coddling Alberta separatists, straddling the issue, stoking the fire

Smith is coddling Alberta separatists, straddling the issue, stoking the fire

A Pollara poll from April had support for Alberta separatism at 27 per cent, the highest level recorded in five years of tracking. A recent CBC News poll showed that 57 per cent of UCP members would vote for Alberta to separate from Canada. This means Smith is dependent on separatists to remain leader.

Alberta puts its own chaotic spin on the separation playbook

Alberta puts its own chaotic spin on the separation playbook

Alberta’s separatist sentiment has borrowed heavily on what you might call Quebec envy. But make no mistake, the direction it is taking now veers far from the well-worn Quebec separatist path. Though Alberta’s discontent in the federation goes back a long way, it was only in the past decade or so that it sharpened into a focus on getting Alberta...

Mark Carney is right to focus on this one strategic relationship. Here’s how he can make it even stronger

Mark Carney is right to focus on this one strategic relationship. Here’s how he can make it even stronger

The idea that Canada might one day join the European Union is having a moment. It’s not hard to see why. Canadians are looking for deeper ties with stable, liberal democracies which share our values and have strong institutions. EU membership for a North American country is fanciful but it’s just not in the cards. What we can do is...

Mark Carney’s pesticide policy could put the economy ahead of your health

Mark Carney’s pesticide policy could put the economy ahead of your health

Prime Minister Mark Carney is quietly bringing-in sweeping reforms to the pesticides law, making it more difficult for the government to ensure that the air you breathe, the water you drink and the food you eat is safe from dangerous toxins. Buried in two omnibus financial bills are provisions that overhaul the Pest Control Products Act. They change the health...

Parties had better clean up nomination races before the government decides to

Parties had better clean up nomination races before the government decides to

What are voters to make of a political party that can’t properly manage a riding nomination? The Ontario Liberals are the latest to pose that question implicitly — and not for the first time — to the electorate. Nate Erskine-Smith, a departing federal Liberal MP and presumed candidate for the provincial party’s leadership, alleges all manner of skulduggery in the...

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Alberta Premier Smith to make TV address amid talk of separation referendum

Alberta Premier Smith to make TV address amid talk of separation referendum

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is to make a TV address to the province tonight amid speculation of a referendum on separation. It is to be broadcast at 6:45 p.m. on CTV, Global and Rogers as well as livestreamed on the premier's social media accounts. The address comes a day after members of her United Conservative Party caucus failed to pass...

Military asks personnel in capital region to return field gear, citing ‘critical equipment shortages’

Military asks personnel in capital region to return field gear, citing ‘critical equipment shortages’

The Canadian Armed Forces are asking military personnel in the National Capital Region to return some field gear, including vests to hold body armour, to address what the Forces describe as “critical equipment shortages” for deployed operations. A May 13 e-mail from National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa, obtained by The Globe and Mail, cites this inventory shortfall. It directs all...

Feds working with City of Ottawa to ease public service transit woes: memo

Feds working with City of Ottawa to ease public service transit woes: memo

Officials managing the federal government's return-to-office plans are concerned about the ability of Ottawa's troubled municipal transit system to actually get public servants to their workplaces, an internal memo shows. Canada's top public servant, Privy Council Clerk Michael Sabia, and Isabelle Mondou, the deputy clerk, met with Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe on Feb. 19 to discuss the city's readiness to...

Alberta's Smith set to shuffle cabinet, high-profile ministries in play

Alberta's Smith set to shuffle cabinet, high-profile ministries in play

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is expected to announce changes to her cabinet today in Calgary. The premier has not shared details about who may be on the move either in or out of her government.

China ‘trying to move the goal posts’: Conservative MP visits Taiwan

China ‘trying to move the goal posts’: Conservative MP visits Taiwan

Conservative MP and parliamentary foreign affairs committee vice-chair, Michael Chong says China is attempting to “move the goal posts” by trying to prevent Canadian officials from visiting Taiwan. Chong, who is also the Conservative foreign affairs critic, is in Taiwan this week to meet with Taiwanese officials, including Lai Ching-te, president of the Republic of China Taiwan. Several delegations of...

Alberta's finance, hospital ministers stepping down, won't seek re-election

Alberta's finance, hospital ministers stepping down, won't seek re-election

Two of Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's longtime cabinet ministers are stepping down. In letters posted on social media Wednesday, Finance Minister Nate Horner and Hospitals Minister Matt Jones both said they are leaving their posts after deciding not to seek re-election in the October 2027 general election. "When the premier offered me this cabinet role, I told her it was...

Carney says the world is facing an 'energy crisis' and Canada must help solve it

Carney says the world is facing an 'energy crisis' and Canada must help solve it

If development gets bogged down in B.C., PM says his government will be 'spending more time elsewhere.' In B.C. to meet with the province's premier who is skeptical of another oil pipeline, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the world is in the throes of an "energy crisis" and Canada must do its part to supply it with the natural resources...

Carney lays out pipeline conditions before talks with Eby on B.C.'s priorities

Carney lays out pipeline conditions before talks with Eby on B.C.'s priorities

Prime Minister Mark Carney and British Columbia Premier David Eby have agreed to enter negotiations on B.C.'s economic priorities and Ottawa's role in national development projects. Carney met with Eby in a closed-door meeting in Vancouver Wednesday, shortly after the prime minister spoke to B.C. business leaders at a separate event where he outlined prerequisites for a possible pipeline championed...

Feds didn't push carbon price backstop in Alberta in show of co-operation: Dabrusin

Feds didn't push carbon price backstop in Alberta in show of co-operation: Dabrusin

The government didn't enforce the federal standard on Alberta's industrial carbon price as a gesture of co-operation with the province, Federal Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin said Tuesday. "Fighting with our provinces, being tied up in courts … we're working to be in really a true co-operative federalism," Dabrusin told The Canadian Press when asked why Ottawa didn't enforce the federal...

Conservative MP Michael Chong meets with Taiwan president as China dials up pressure

Conservative MP Michael Chong meets with Taiwan president as China dials up pressure

Conservative MP Michael Chong said his meeting with Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te on Wednesday was a way to assert Canadian sovereignty in the face of Beijing's warnings to lawmakers in this country that such visits are inappropriate. "I thought it was important to make it clear that we are not going to take direction from a foreign government about where...

Carney calls Israel's treatment of flotilla 'abominable,' as Ottawa summons envoy

Carney calls Israel's treatment of flotilla 'abominable,' as Ottawa summons envoy

Prime Minister Mark Carney is calling Israel's treatment of people aboard an intercepted flotilla "abominable" and "unacceptable," and says Ottawa is seeking assurances about the safety of Canadians involved.

PBO says Canadian governments set to spend $1 billion to host World Cup

PBO says Canadian governments set to spend $1 billion to host World Cup

Canada will spend just over $1 billion to host the World Cup this summer, the federal budget watchdog said Wednesday. That sum includes money from all levels of government. The federal government's contribution is expected to be $473 million. The $1.066 billion total averages to $82 million per game for the 13 games that will be played in Toronto and Vancouver.

Canada taps Gen. Jennie Carignan for NATO's top military chair

Canada taps Gen. Jennie Carignan for NATO's top military chair

Defence chief hailed as an 'exceptional' leader and candidate for key alliance post. The Liberal government is nominating Canada's top military commander to be the next chair of the NATO military committee when the post becomes vacant next year. Defence Minister David McGuinty announced the candidacy of Gen. Jennie Carignan on Wednesday and said she'll continue in her current role...

Canada navigating ‘new reality’ of defence ties with U.S. over a year after Carney declared end to ‘old’ bond

Canada navigating ‘new reality’ of defence ties with U.S. over a year after Carney declared end to ‘old’ bond

More than a year after Prime Minister Mark Carney declared that the “old” defence relationship with the United States was “over,” some signs have emerged about a new path forward, but Canada remains closely tied to historic Canada-U.S. military relations. In the Defence Industrial Strategy last fall, Canada signalled a pivot away from its reliance on U.S. arms exports, but...

Saskatchewan open to talks on industrial carbon tax, 'refining' the deal struck with Alberta, Moe says

Saskatchewan open to talks on industrial carbon tax, 'refining' the deal struck with Alberta, Moe says

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says his province will begin talks with the federal government around how to find a “workable place” when it comes to the question of charging an industrial carbon tax. “We’re open to the discussion about finding a place where that would work for the industries that are employing people here,” he told National Post on Tuesday...

Despite change to lobbying rules, foreign governments and groups still funding MP travel

Despite change to lobbying rules, foreign governments and groups still funding MP travel

A small change to Canada’s lobbying rules has led to a big drop in free trips for members of Parliament, a CBC News analysis found — however many MPs continue to head to destinations like Taiwan, China and India courtesy of foreign governments and groups not registered to lobby. Duff Conacher, co-founder of Democracy Watch, praised the change but said...

Global Affairs numbers show disproportionate level of cuts to staff based overseas

Global Affairs numbers show disproportionate level of cuts to staff based overseas

Canada's foreign service cuts are disproportionately affecting positions based abroad, with those rotational positions being eliminated at three times the rate of those for Global Affairs staff based in Canada. Data obtained by The Canadian Press also shows an even larger drop in foreign workers hired at missions overseas, just as the Carney government seeks deeper diplomatic and trade ties...

B.C. Premier Eby says Canada won't work if Ottawa favours separatist premiers

B.C. Premier Eby says Canada won't work if Ottawa favours separatist premiers

Canada cannot work if "separatist premiers" get all of the attention of the federal government, B.C. Premier David said Tuesday. Eby said that is the message he'll relay to Prime Minister Mark Carney, when they meet Wednesday after Carney's meeting with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith last week announcing pipeline promises to the West Coast and a lower carbon tax for...

Panel concludes Quebec energy deal not in Newfoundland and Labrador's best interests

Panel concludes Quebec energy deal not in Newfoundland and Labrador's best interests

Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Tony Wakeham has invited Quebec back to the bargaining table, after a panel concluded a framework energy agreement with Hydro-Quebec was not in his province's best interests. In a report made public Tuesday, the three-person panel appointed months ago by Wakeham outlines a series of concerns with the non-binding framework agreement signed in 2024 by the...

Alberta NDP says last-minute petition meeting may signal referendum vote

Alberta NDP says last-minute petition meeting may signal referendum vote

Alberta's Opposition says the decision by Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservatives to schedule a last-minute committee meeting suggests the government might be looking for a new way to get a separation question on a fall referendum. A bipartisan legislature committee headed up by the UCP is to meet Wednesday to discuss a pro-Canada petition put forward by former deputy premier...

‘Keep it closed’: Windsor mayor doesn’t want Canada to accept ‘bad’ trade deal just to open Gordie Howe bridge

‘Keep it closed’: Windsor mayor doesn’t want Canada to accept ‘bad’ trade deal just to open Gordie Howe bridge

Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens says he doesn’t want Canada to accept a bad trade deal just to open the Gordie Howe International Bridge. The new bridge is slated to open in “spring 2026,” according to bridge officials. U.S. President Donald Trump and high-ranking Canadian politicians have indicated trade renegotiations are what’s keeping the bridge closed. “We’ve fulfilled our end of...

Construction begins on new Quebec graphite mine, billed as largest in the G7

Construction begins on new Quebec graphite mine, billed as largest in the G7

Prime Minister Mark Carney was on site at Quebec’s Matawinie Mine site Tuesday to break ground on a project billed as the biggest graphite mine in the G7. According to Carney, the mine is expected to eventually pump nearly $2 billion into the economy and add 1,000 jobs, with annual production expected to hit more than 106,000 tonnes of natural...

Carney downplays Washington's decision to pause bilateral defence board

Carney downplays Washington's decision to pause bilateral defence board

Prime Minister Mark Carney has shrugged off a surprise move by the United States to suspend for review a bilateral defence board that predates the Cold War. "It has a long heritage but I wouldn't overplay the importance of this," Carney told a news conference in Quebec on Tuesday, when asked about the surprise development. "We have many aspects of...

Shake-up in Poilievre's office as chief of staff Ian Todd announces retirement

Shake-up in Poilievre's office as chief of staff Ian Todd announces retirement

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s longtime chief of staff Ian Todd is retiring, marking the latest of several recent departures of senior staffers in his office. In a note sent to Conservative caucus members and Poilievre’s office, Todd said he would retire from his position at the end of this Parliamentary session. The House of Commons spring session is scheduled to...

Liberals hit highest point in the seat projection

Liberals hit highest point in the seat projection

It was a relatively quiet week on the polling front, but the new numbers that were published have pushed the Liberals to their highest point in The Writ’s Vote and Seat Projection. The Liberals are projected to be leading in 227 ridings across the country, a gain of three since last week and they highest the party has been in...

Canada’s Snowbirds jets grounded until 2030s as replacement aircraft identified

Canada’s Snowbirds jets grounded until 2030s as replacement aircraft identified

The Snowbirds are entering a final chapter. After more than five decades in the skies, the federal government has confirmed to CTV News that the Canadian Forces’ iconic aerobatic team will fly its last season with the aircraft that made it famous. Defence Minister David McGuinty will announce Tuesday at Canadian Forces Base Moose Jaw that Canada will retire and...

Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 2.8% in April, thanks to soaring energy prices

Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 2.8% in April, thanks to soaring energy prices

Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 2.8 per cent in April, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday, in large part due to soaring prices at the pump. Energy prices overall rose a whopping 19.2 per cent year-over-year in April, following a 3.9 per cent increase the month before. Statistics Canada said the cost of gasoline specifically rose even quicker, and was...

Trump administration’s decision to freeze Canada-U.S. defence board is a gangland threat uttered through clenched teeth

Trump administration’s decision to freeze Canada-U.S. defence board is a gangland threat uttered through clenched teeth

Elbridge Colby’s post casts shade on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s growing spotlight, minimizes Canada’s defence spending and targets its partnerships.

Inside Prime Minister Mark Carney's hunt for office art — and what he liked the most

Inside Prime Minister Mark Carney's hunt for office art — and what he liked the most

Less than a week after winning last year’s election and just days before he was set to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Mark Carney was looking for art to hang on his office walls. Staff who arrived at the National Gallery of Canada that Saturday morning had been instructed to dress casually: sport coats and dress pants...

Panel concludes Quebec energy deal is not good enough for Newfoundland and Labrador

Panel concludes Quebec energy deal is not good enough for Newfoundland and Labrador

A panel appointed by the Newfoundland and Labrador government says a proposed energy deal with Hydro-Quebec is not in the province's best interests. In a report expected to be released Tuesday, the three-person panel outlines several concerns with the non-binding framework agreement to share power from Labrador, which was signed by the provinces' hydroelectric utilities in 2024. In particular, the...



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Stephen Colbert is saying goodbye to 'The Late Show.' How it ends is still a secret

Stephen Colbert is saying goodbye to 'The Late Show.' How it ends is still a secret

NEW YORK (AP) -- Stephen Colbert's long goodbye to late-night TV ends Thursday night when the host of "The Late Show" appears behind his CBS desk for the final time.

Ex-prosecutor charged with sending to herself copy of Smith report on Trump classified files probe

Ex-prosecutor charged with sending to herself copy of Smith report on Trump classified files probe

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A former federal prosecutor in Florida sent to her personal email account a special counsel report from the investigation into President Donald Trump's hoarding of classified documents despite a judge's order that it was to remain sealed, according to an indictment made public on Wednesday.

Officers who defended Capitol from rioters sue to block payouts from $1.8B 'anti-weaponization' fund

Officers who defended Capitol from rioters sue to block payouts from $1.8B 'anti-weaponization' fund

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two police officers who helped defend the U.S. Capitol from an attack by a mob of Trump supporters sued on Wednesday to block anyone -- including Jan. 6, 2021, rioters -- from receiving payouts from a new $1.776 billion settlement fund for people who claim to be victims of politically motivated prosecutions.

Stephen Colbert's long goodbye is coming to an end, leaving a void

Stephen Colbert's long goodbye is coming to an end, leaving a void

NEW YORK (AP) -- On his very first time hosting "The Late Show" back in 2015, Stephen Colbert ripped into Donald Trump while gorging on Oreos, likening his inability to resist the cookies to his inability to resist going after the then-presidential candidate.

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Carney calls Israel's treatment of flotilla 'abominable,' as Ottawa summons envoy

Carney calls Israel's treatment of flotilla 'abominable,' as Ottawa summons envoy

Prime Minister Mark Carney is calling Israel's treatment of people aboard an intercepted flotilla "abominable" and "unacceptable," and says Ottawa is seeking assurances about the safety of Canadians involved.

Chinese Embassy in Canada denounces MP Chong's visit to Taiwan

Chinese Embassy in Canada denounces MP Chong's visit to Taiwan

China's embassy in Canada says a Canadian MP's visit to Taiwan crosses a "red line" at a time when Ottawa is attempting to rebuild its relationship with Beijing. Conservative MP Michael Chong is in Taiwan this week to meet with Taiwanese officials and assert Canadian sovereignty after China's ambassador to Canada warned MPs against travelling to Taiwan in an interview...

A ‘red line’: Chinese embassy condemns Canadian MP’s visit to Taiwan

A ‘red line’: Chinese embassy condemns Canadian MP’s visit to Taiwan

A Canadian MP is on route to Taiwan to assert “Canadian sovereignty” in the face of what he called is a warning from China’s ambassador to Canada against members of parliament visiting the island. Conservative MP Michael Chong will meet with Taiwanese leaders next week. China’s embassy has already condemned the trip, arguing it contravenes a “red line for China-Canada...

Conservative MP Michael Chong visits Taiwan to meet President in defiance of China

Conservative MP Michael Chong visits Taiwan to meet President in defiance of China

A Canadian MP has arrived in Taiwan to meet President Lai Ching-te in defiance of a recent warning from China’s ambassador against further trips to the self-governed island by Parliamentarians from Canada. Beijing considers the democracy of 24 million people a breakaway province despite the fact China’s governing Communist Party has never ruled the territory since it took power more...

Why Mark Carney and Europe are doubling down on each other

Why Mark Carney and Europe are doubling down on each other

The prime minister’s comments about rebuilding an international order “out of Europe” hints at a bold insight and potential plan from a man who is emerging as an architect of the global reordering. No sooner were the words out of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s mouth than one French news magazine dubbed them “a breath of fresh air from Canada.” “It...

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Beyond Capability: The Strategic Calculus Behind Canada’s Submarine Procurement

Beyond Capability: The Strategic Calculus Behind Canada’s Submarine Procurement

By the end of next month, it is widely expected that the Government of Canada will make one of the most consequential military procurement decisions in modern Canadian history under the Canadian Patrol Submarine Project (CPSP). The contract for the acquisition and in-service support of 12 new submarines to replace the aging Victoria-class fleet is estimated to cost approximately $8...

The Effect of National Borders as an Obstacle to Trade Flows: Consequences for Our Economic and Political Choices

The Effect of National Borders as an Obstacle to Trade Flows: Consequences for Our Economic and Political Choices

The resurgence of protectionism internationally and trade tensions between Canada and the United States have brought the issue of borders in international trade back to the forefront. While at one time many envisioned a future in which national borders would cease to be a significant economic factor, the current situation very much suggests otherwise.

Canadian coal – From dirty secret to critical mineral: Heather Exner-Pirot

Canadian coal – From dirty secret to critical mineral: Heather Exner-Pirot

Coal is often treated as a relic of the past – dirty, declining, and politically toxic. Yet globally, it remains indispensable, the backbone of electricity systems in Asia and the primary input for global steelmaking.


Substacks

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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Can the Ottawa Treaty banning landmines survive?

Can the Ottawa Treaty banning landmines survive?

“Despite the ongoing conflict between Hezbollah and Israel which has resulted in thousands of deaths and injuries…Lebanon moved forward with the ban on antipersonnel landmines,” said the Ottawa-based group Mines Action Canada in a statement, celebrating the new addition.

Protecting a pedophile's privacy

Protecting a pedophile's privacy

Canada’s privacy laws are supposed to protect ordinary citizens from unwarranted intrusions into their personal lives. But they can also protect pedophiles. Dead pedophiles. Dead pedophiles from America.

How Polarized is Canada... And Should We Worry?

If you want to sound wise these days, just blame the crazy state of the world on polarization. If you want to sound really wise, say that fighting polarization needs to be part of the political agenda and be sure to blame social media and Donald Trump (although not necessarily in that order) for the current chaos. Despite it being...

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Little irritants, big deadline | Erin O'Toole

Little irritants, big deadline | Erin O'Toole

Little irritants are piling up ahead of the July 1 USMCA deadline: a suspended defense board, revived potato tensions, mushrooms duties and renewed attacks on the Online Streaming Act. Nick Taylor-Vaisey and Mickey Djuric unpack the friction. POLITICO’s Anne McElvoy joins to discuss her interview with Chrystia Freeland in Europe, including a Mark Carney nickname and a “lubricious” dinner from...

Reporter's Notebook -- Kathleen Petty and The Real Alberta Story

Reporter's Notebook -- Kathleen Petty and The Real Alberta Story

Althia Raj is on holidays this week and the host of West of Centre, friend and colleague Kathleen Petty joins us from Calgary. There is so much happening in Alberta these days and almost all of it has national implications from referendums to pipelines. So today is designed to get a much better feel from on the ground. Rob and...

Grenade Pin Pulled. Bomb Coundown Ticking.

Grenade Pin Pulled. Bomb Coundown Ticking.

Join us for insights on the latest in Canadian politics.

Is Carney undoing the Liberals’ climate legacy?

Is Carney undoing the Liberals’ climate legacy?

Late last week, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced a new energy agreement that paves the way for a new pipeline to the West Coast. It includes an industrial carbon pricing deal, and is contingent on the approval of the Pathways project— a proposed carbon capture, utilization and storage facility.