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Leaked Canadian military report shows many new recruits are quickly leaving

Leaked Canadian military report shows many new recruits are quickly leaving

Attrition rate for new recruits more than double the average across Forces. The Canadian military insists it's getting a handle on its recruiting crisis, but a new leaked internal report obtained by CBC News suggests many of those who come through the door quickly leave in frustration over the inability to get trained and into the job they want.

Canada’s MPs spent $187.8M in 2024, including $32M on travel

Canada’s MPs spent $187.8M in 2024, including $32M on travel

Canadian members of Parliament spent a record $187.8 million in 2024, including $32 million on travel. That’s an increase of $12.7 million over 2023, according to proactively disclosed expenditure records. The $187.8 million in taxpayer money also included $114.1 million for MP staff salaries, $39.8 million for third-party contracts and $1.9 million for hospitality expenses.

Why Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre moved out of his office, but not Stornoway

Why Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre moved out of his office, but not Stornoway

It's up to his party to manage who lives in the official residence. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre closed his constituency and Parliament Hill offices following his election defeat in Carleton, but is expected to stay in Stornoway — Canada's residence for the leader of the Official Opposition — despite losing that title. While Poilievre remains the leader of the Conservative...

Almost half of Canadians say Carney 'stood up' for country in Trump meeting: poll

Almost half of Canadians say Carney 'stood up' for country in Trump meeting: poll

A new poll suggests nearly half of Canadians think Prime Minister Mark Carney "stood up" for Canada in his recent face-to-face meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump. The Leger poll says 48 per cent of poll respondents think Carney "clearly stood up for Canada's interests" in his meeting with Trump, while another 24 per cent say Carney should have taken...

The government could function without a budget, but will need a spending bill

The government could function without a budget, but will need a spending bill

Finance Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Wednesday that when Parliament resumes, the government will put forward a middle-class tax cut, deliver a throne speech and release a fiscal plan in the fall economic update. Absent from that plan, was the traditional federal budget to start the fiscal year. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Thursday the lack of a federal budget sends...

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Appetite to purchase US-made goods continues to drop – Four in five Canadians agree to some extent that Canada’s old relationship with the United States is over

Appetite to purchase US-made goods continues to drop – Four in five Canadians agree to some extent that Canada’s old relationship with the United States is over

The research gauged the opinions among Canadians on the impact of tariffs on purchase of US-made goods and the US-Canada relationship. Nanos conducted an RDD dual frame (land- and cell-lines) hybrid telephone and online random survey of 1,055 Canadians, 18 years of age or older, between May 5th and 8th, 2025 as part of an omnibus survey. The margin of...

Alberta Politics and Separatism Sentiments

Alberta Politics and Separatism Sentiments

44% of Albertans identify as primarily Canadian, while 21% identify as primarily Albertan, and 32% identify as both equally 29% of Albertans support the idea of Alberta becoming a country independant of Canada, while 67% are opposed to that idea.



Opinion

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Make housing cheaper without prices coming down? Mark Carney’s new housing minister is talking in riddles

Make housing cheaper without prices coming down? Mark Carney’s new housing minister is talking in riddles

Here’s a puzzle: How do you make homes more affordable without making them cost less? It’s a riddle that ex-Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson is promising to solve in his new role as federal housing minister. But I’m here to tell you it’s no ordinary brainteaser, but a paradox.

From Rollout to Pileup: The Week that Was for the Carney Cabinet

From Rollout to Pileup: The Week that Was for the Carney Cabinet

For an action-oriented new government about to reinvent the Canadian economy, find new trade and defence partners and withstand the onslaught of President Donald Trump and his tariffs and territorial ambitions, this week was not an auspicious beginning. Instead of appearing as a crack, recently elected team of men and women ready to redefine Canada, the first meeting of Prime...

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New Indigenous Services minister says she's been handed the 'toughest task'

New Indigenous Services minister says she's been handed the 'toughest task'

As the first Indigenous person ever to lead the federal department responsible for delivering services to First Nations, Inuit and Metis, Mandy Gull-Masty knows she has a daunting task ahead. But the newly-appointed Indigenous services minister also knows what it's like to sit at both sides of the table -- as a cabinet minister now and, until recently, as the...

‘Not feasible’ for any new government to ‘reset relations’ with China: Kovrig

‘Not feasible’ for any new government to ‘reset relations’ with China: Kovrig

Former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig says a full reset of the Canada-China relationship is not possible, and that the federal government should instead be focusing on building stable diplomatic relations with Chinese officials to mitigate any possible worsening of the relationship. “Always with a new government, there will be maybe a temptation for ministers to think that ‘I can be...

Politician's Pen

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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...

Reducing Trade Barriers in Atlantic Canada


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It’s a crisis that affects young people, is crying out for action and no-one is doing anything about it. No, it’s not housing

It’s a crisis that affects young people, is crying out for action and no-one is doing anything about it. No, it’s not housing

For nearly a decade, young Canadians have been drowning in a sea of economic pain. The rising tides of housing and inflation threaten to drown them as older Canadians, safely aboard sturdy boats bought decades ago, mostly float on by. In such circumstances, the only lifesaver is a relatively stable, and occasionally even healthy, job market. Now that’s gone, too...

Danielle Smith is against forest fires, but she’ll leave this lighter right here

Danielle Smith is against forest fires, but she’ll leave this lighter right here

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith absolutely, unequivocally does not want to see a cockfight. She’s merely provoking these specially bred roosters and will soon release them together in a pen. Whatever happens, happens. She has been adamant in her opposition to forest fires. “They’re dangerous,” she says, as she gingerly places a pack of matches on a pile of dry leaves...

After just one day, Carney’s cabinet already looks out of control

After just one day, Carney’s cabinet already looks out of control

There have been concerns about the “presidentialization” of the Canadian prime ministership for years — worries that have been exacerbated by Mark Carney’s tendency to sign Trump-style legislative orders to grant tax cuts.

It's official. Some Canadians' votes are more equal than others

It's official. Some Canadians' votes are more equal than others

Canada’s federal ridings range in population from 26,665 in Labrador to 134,415 in Kingston and the Islands

Canada’s Conservatives are flirting with danger

Canada’s Conservatives are flirting with danger

One vote. That’s all that separated the Liberal and Bloc Quebecois candidates in the riding of Terrebonne after a judicial recount that moved the Liberals one seat closer to a majority government. Unfortunately, it’s also apparently all that separated some Conservative Party of Canada candidates from flirting with election conspiracy theories — the very sort that now defines the MAGA...

Federalism without permission: Is the Canadian Right wasting its time on federal politics?

Federalism without permission: Is the Canadian Right wasting its time on federal politics?

Let Trudeau be our guide: How provincial power can break Ottawa’s grip In 1961, Pierre Elliott Trudeau published an essay, The Practice and Theory of Federalism, that remains among the most intellectually coherent and politically subtle defences of Canadian federalism. Trudeau did not merely justify, in abstract terms, the peculiar geometry of our constitutional order; rather, he advanced a bold—albeit...

Two pollsters talk about why they think Carney could be a transformational leader

Two pollsters talk about why they think Carney could be a transformational leader

When the federal election campaign was underway, the Star invited two eminent pollsters — David Coletto of Abacus Data and Allan Gregg of Earnscliffe Strategies — to discuss what they’ve learned from the election results. Here’s what they had to say:

Evan Solomon and the  Department of What Comes Next
We wasted 60 years indulging secessionist fantasies in Quebec. Must we make the same mistake in Alberta?
Carney’s Strong Move on Housing: Why Robertson’s Appointment Matters


Carney’s ambition to aim high and be a nation builder is a welcome departure from Trudeau

Carney’s ambition to aim high and be a nation builder is a welcome departure from Trudeau

James Moore is a former federal cabinet minister under prime minister Stephen Harper, and a columnist for CTVNews.ca. Perhaps the three most important words spoken by Prime Minister Carney during the campaign came after all the ballots had been cast and the results were known. During his victory speech on election night in Ottawa he said to Canadians: “Build, baby...

The day after cabinet swearing-in is the day it starts going wrong

The day after cabinet swearing-in is the day it starts going wrong

As the new prime minister reflects with pride on his unsullied cabinet, he should remember the words of P.G. Wodehouse’s Bertie Wooster: “It’s always when a fellow is feeling particularly braced with things in general that Fate sneaks up behind him with a bit of lead piping.”

Mark Carney and the disappearing pipeline

Mark Carney and the disappearing pipeline

If there was ever a pipeline that was not going to get built, it was the Northern Gateway project to construct an oil conduit near some of the most cherished, pristine forest and marine areas of British Columbia’s north. The possibility of oil spills from the 1,170-kilometre line to carry oilsands bitumen from Alberta to a tanker terminal on the...

After his defeat, Pierre Poilievre finally has to go places he’s been avoiding

After his defeat, Pierre Poilievre finally has to go places he’s been avoiding

As the dust settled on election night, things immediately got off on the wrong foot for the defeated Conservative Party. Older voters had instructed Tory candidates that they wanted to see a “more conciliatory tone,” according to Calgary Centre MP Greg McLean, yet Bowmanville–Oshawa North MP Jamil Jivani weaponized what should have been a perfunctory election-night interview to settle personal...

The right to say ‘yes’ to resource development
Good Fences: Managing the Bilateral Re-Set

Good Fences: Managing the Bilateral Re-Set

In his second term as president of the United States, Donald Trump is forcing the Canadian body politic —every level of government and every party — to recalibrate. There is the threat not just of tariffs and economic upheaval but, for the first time since the 19th century, of annexation. Prime Minister Mark Carney set the record straight in the...

Mark Carney unveils his crisis cabinet

Mark Carney unveils his crisis cabinet

Standing outside Rideau Hall on Tuesday, Mark Carney said his new cabinet — the first real cabinet of his time as prime minister — was "purpose-built for this hinge moment." Carney has long been fond of thinking of this current moment as a hinge — even before its real depths were clear. The Hinge was the title of the book...

Mark Carney is trying to tell you something with his cabinet choices

Mark Carney is trying to tell you something with his cabinet choices

Most cabinet shuffles unfold with a flurry of attention on all the new faces, and Mark Carney’s first ministry after the election has plenty of them. But this was a shuffle with an unusual amount of attention on who and what wasn’t there — big names from Justin Trudeau’s time in office and of course, Trudeau himself.

With his new cabinet, Mark Carney is going for the wrong kind of change

With his new cabinet, Mark Carney is going for the wrong kind of change

Prime Minister Mark Carney has unveiled his new cabinet, and he has tasked his team with changing government. Not “small change,” he insisted, but “big change.” Applying the measuring tape to his new government, however, we can conclude that the freshly-elected prime minister is exaggerating just how radically different his new team really is. And in his medium-sized change cabinet...

An Expanded, Diverse Cabinet, Still Dominated by Central Canada

An Expanded, Diverse Cabinet, Still Dominated by Central Canada

Barely two months after he and his cabinet were first sworn in and two weeks after his election, Prime Minister Mark Carney attended the swearing-in ceremony at Rideau Hall Tuesday during which two dozen new people joined his shuffled, culled and expanded ministry. More than half of them are newly elected MPs, which brings many new faces to the fore...

Mark Carney’s cabinet change is a mirage

Mark Carney’s cabinet change is a mirage

Mark Carney’s bulky and performative cabinet

Mark Carney’s bulky and performative cabinet

Change is hard – Prime Minister Mark Carney is finding that out. His second cabinet is a departure from his first cabinet, which in turn was a departure from all of Justin Trudeau‘s cabinets. The new PM went from 37 ministers (including Mr. Trudeau) to 24 ministers (including Mr. Carney), and is now back up to 29 including Mr. Carney...

Fewer Voices, Faster Decisions: Carney’s Inner Cabinet Reflects a Proven Model

Fewer Voices, Faster Decisions: Carney’s Inner Cabinet Reflects a Proven Model

“You cannot fight a war on a committee of twenty.” That was the United Kingdom’s Prime Minister Lloyd George’s blunt assessment in 1916. Faced with a divided and sluggish Cabinet during the First World War, he created a five-member War Cabinet to bypass bottlenecks and focus Britain’s war effort. It worked. And it helped win the war.

Carney's cabinet still looks a lot like Trudeau's

Carney's cabinet still looks a lot like Trudeau's

He's prioritizing economic development, but not in the West.

Charlie Angus brings the punk energy the NDP needs in a leader

Charlie Angus brings the punk energy the NDP needs in a leader

With Jagmeet Singh out and the federal NDP’s seat count now so low that the party is begging for official party status, the choice for the party’s next leader could make the difference between death and survival. Canada’s social democratic party needs someone who can recapture the loyalty of blue-collar voters snatched by Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives in the most recent...

A Public Opinion Lens on Carney’s Cabinet

A Public Opinion Lens on Carney’s Cabinet

Today, Mark Carney’s new government took office, and Canadians received their first clear look at how the Liberals intend to govern following a tightly contested 2025 election. In my view, it’s clear the cabinet composition reflects the challenging balancing act Carney faces between meeting heightened public expectations, distancing his government from Trudeau’s unpopular legacy, and managing competing domestic and international...

Premier Smith’s very risky referendum bet - Once out of the bottle, the referendum genie is impossible to control

Premier Smith’s very risky referendum bet - Once out of the bottle, the referendum genie is impossible to control

Twelve years ago, on Jan. 23, 2013, British Prime Minister David Cameron committed to holding a referendum on the United Kingdom’s membership in the European Union. “That is why I am in favour of a referendum, Cameron explained. I believe in confronting this issue — shaping it, leading the debate. Not simply hoping a difficult situation will go away.”

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Poll finds most Canadians keen on tariff retaliation as Ottawa walks a different path

Poll finds most Canadians keen on tariff retaliation as Ottawa walks a different path

OTTAWA -- Canadians are showing a lot of enthusiasm for retaliation against the U.S. over President Donald Trump's tariffs -- even as many of them fear that the country has slid into a recession already.

Fentanyl labs in Canada a ‘growing concern’ to U.S., DEA report warns

Fentanyl labs in Canada a ‘growing concern’ to U.S., DEA report warns

A new report from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) warns fentanyl “super laboratories” in Canada are “a growing concern for the United States,” particularly as production and supply from Mexico is disrupted. The DEA’s latest annual Drug Threat Assessment says that while the flow of fentanyl from Canada into the U.S. is far lower than from Mexico, Canadian opioid...

U.S. tariffs cast pall over Ontario budget with $14.6B deficit, slower growth

U.S. tariffs cast pall over Ontario budget with $14.6B deficit, slower growth

U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs cast a pall over Ontario's budget Thursday, dragging down GDP growth and knocking the province off its path to balance, with a $14.6-billion deficit projected this year. Now is the time to spend on infrastructure and job creation in Ontario so the province can come out stronger on the other side, Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy...

Highlights of Ontario's 2025 budget: U.S. tariff measures, boost for alcohol market

Highlights of Ontario's 2025 budget: U.S. tariff measures, boost for alcohol market

TORONTO -- The Ontario government tabled a budget Thursday that focused on investments it says will protect Ontario workers in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs.



Ontario to spend hundreds of millions to boost alcohol sector

Ontario to spend hundreds of millions to boost alcohol sector

TORONTO -- Ontario plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars boosting the province's alcohol sector, including programs to support grape farmers, wineries, distilleries and craft breweries.

Mark Carney’s second book may not be published this summer. Here’s what to know

Mark Carney’s second book may not be published this summer. Here’s what to know

In October 2024, it was announced that Carney would be writing a second book, entitled The Hinge: Time to Build an Even Better Canada.

Former aide to Doug Ford sanctioned for breaking Ontario lobbying rules

Former aide to Doug Ford sanctioned for breaking Ontario lobbying rules

One of Premier Doug Ford’s closest former aides has been sanctioned by the legislature’s ethics watchdog for breaking Ontario lobbying rules. Amin Massoudi, who was on the infamous 2020 Las Vegas trip with Greenbelt developer Shakir Rehmatullah that cost former Ford minister Kaleed Rasheed his job in cabinet, received a slap on the wrist from integrity commissioner Cathryn Motherwell.

Poilievre says the lack of a federal budget sends a 'bad signal' to investors

Poilievre says the lack of a federal budget sends a 'bad signal' to investors

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Thursday the lack of a federal budget sends "a bad signal" to investors and credit rating agencies. Poilievre told a press conference on Parliament Hill that he wants Prime Minister Mark Carney to "steal his ideas" and offered to help him draft a budget. The Conservative leader listed off policies his party campaigned on in...

Bloc to contest recount in Terrebonne, after 5 more ballot issues declared in riding

Bloc to contest recount in Terrebonne, after 5 more ballot issues declared in riding

Liberals won the riding by 1 vote. The Bloc Québécois is expected to challenge the result in the federal riding of Terrebonne, where the party lost by one vote, as Elections Canada revealed issues with five more mail-in ballots. Radio-Canada sources say Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet will announce the party's intentions this morning. He will be holding a news...

Alberta government amends referendum bill in effort to placate First Nations' concern

Alberta government amends referendum bill in effort to placate First Nations' concern

Alberta's government has made 11th-hour changes to controversial proposed legislation declaring that no separation referendum question could threaten First Nations' existing treaty rights. Premier Danielle Smith's government is working to considerably lower the threshold to allow for citizen-initiated referendums, including whether the province should separate from Canada.

Joly says Honda still committed to EV investments after $15-billion project delayed

Joly says Honda still committed to EV investments after $15-billion project delayed

Industry Minister Melanie Joly says Honda Canada remains "fully committed" to major electric-vehicle investments in Canada after the company announced Tuesday that it was pausing a multibillion-dollar EV project in Ontario. Joly said in a statement that she spoke with Honda Canada president and CEO Dave Jamieson, who assured her that "no jobs will be lost."

Ontario budget to favour spending over balance amid tariff impacts

Ontario budget to favour spending over balance amid tariff impacts

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is signalling that his government's budget will favour spending over balanced books, as a way to keep the economy afloat in light of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs. Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy is set to table the 2025-26 budget later today. Ford has said the province can always balance the budget in a year or two...

Concerns grow over Canada’s electric vehicle manufacturing sector

Concerns grow over Canada’s electric vehicle manufacturing sector

With Canada’s electric vehicle industry stalling this week, some are worried the sector may experience a full-scale power outage in the months ahead. “You have to be worried, what (the industry) is looking at it, they’re looking at the (U.S.) tariffs”, says Ivey Business School professor Gal Raz. Honda‘s decision to take a reported 2-year break on its $15-billion investment...

Canada's military plans to be in the Arctic 'on a near permanent basis,' says commander

Canada's military plans to be in the Arctic 'on a near permanent basis,' says commander

Canada intends to expand its military training regime in the Arctic, deploying a variety of forces in the region for up to 10 months a year, starting this year, the military's operations commander says. Lt.-Gen. Steve Boivin says the military's signature Far North exercise — Operation Nanook — will see additional elements created, resulting in a greater, consistent presence in...

Minister says he won't 'sling mud' after Poilievre called him the 'master at failing upward'

Minister says he won't 'sling mud' after Poilievre called him the 'master at failing upward'

The Conservative leader took particular note of Sean Fraser who served as immigration minister and housing minister

Election campaign has made crime ‘top of mind’ for Carney government

Election campaign has made crime ‘top of mind’ for Carney government

The PM is placing a heavy emphasis on cracking down on crime after some Liberals say the issue cost them GTA seats in last month’s election.

CBC to stop paying individual bonuses after controversy

CBC to stop paying individual bonuses after controversy

OTTAWA — CBC will no longer pay individual bonuses to employees, its board said in a statement Wednesday more than a year after concerns about the practice became political fodder on Parliament Hill.

Elections Canada says Terrebonne vote is final, despite ‘error’ with special ballot

Elections Canada says Terrebonne vote is final, despite ‘error’ with special ballot

Elections Canada says the result of a recount in the federal riding of Terrebonne is final, despite a misprint that led to one special ballot being returned to sender. Elections Canada says there was an error on the envelope used to mail a special ballot from Terrebonne, a Quebec riding the Liberals won by a single vote after a recount.

Opposition slams Liberals for not tabling budget before summer

Opposition slams Liberals for not tabling budget before summer

Opposition parties are criticizing Prime Minister Mark Carney after his government said it would not table a federal budget before the House of Commons rises this summer. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and interim NDP leader Don Davies both say it's unacceptable that Carney will not produce a fiscal plan any time soon.

PM Carney’s new cabinet sending mixed signals on pipelines

PM Carney’s new cabinet sending mixed signals on pipelines

After Prime Minister Mark Carney explicitly said he supports building a pipeline if the consensus in Canada exists for one, members of his newly formed cabinet appear to have differing views on the issue as they gathered for their first meeting on Wednesday. When asked whether pipelines will continue to be a source of tension between Ottawa and Alberta, former...

Carney signs order to prioritize middle-class tax cut, after first meeting with new cabinet

Carney signs order to prioritize middle-class tax cut, after first meeting with new cabinet

Prime Minister Mark Carney signed a symbolic order signalling his government will prioritize passing his promised middle-class tax cut, following the first in-person meeting of his cabinet on Parliament Hill Wednesday. Surrounded by his cabinet, Carney signed a note of instruction directing his ministers to prepare the legislation to be tabled first thing when Parliament returns later this month. “We...

Liberals planning for a fall economic statement but no budget just yet

Liberals planning for a fall economic statement but no budget just yet

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says the Liberal government will not table a budget when Parliament returns in the coming weeks but will instead put forward a fall economic statement. Champagne hasn't offered a clearer timeline for the introduction of the government's latest fiscal plans and has not explained the delay. The finance minister says the government will present a ways-and-means...

Should home prices go down? ’No,’ says Canada’s new housing minister

Should home prices go down? ’No,’ says Canada’s new housing minister

Higher housing supply, not lowering home prices, are the solution for Canada’s housing crisis, Canada’s new housing minister said on Wednesday. Gregor Robertson, the former Vancouver mayor who was sworn in as housing minister in Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new cabinet on Tuesday, attended the first meeting of the new cabinet on Wednesday.

Liberal MP says Carney will run a more corporate-style government

Liberal MP says Carney will run a more corporate-style government

A newly appointed junior member of cabinet said Wednesday the federal government will operate more like a "corporation" under Prime Minister Mark Carney than it did under Justin Trudeau. Heading into his first cabinet meeting as secretary of state for the Canada Revenue Agency, Liberal MP Wayne Long said he's already seeing a big difference in how things are being...

Process Nerd: Could MPs pick an opposition member to occupy the speaker’s chair?

Process Nerd: Could MPs pick an opposition member to occupy the speaker’s chair?

A little less than two weeks from today, the 343 members elected to serve in the 45th Parliament will gather in the freshly powered-up House of Commons to collectively carry out their first official democratic responsibility: namely, choosing one of their own to occupy the speaker’s throne. One of just two House voting procedures conducted by secret ballot, it’s traditionally...

US Poli

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Trump administration officials say Secret Service is investigating Comey's '86 47' social media post

Trump administration officials say Secret Service is investigating Comey's '86 47' social media post

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Thursday that federal law enforcement is investigating a social media post made by former FBI Director James Comey that she and other Republicans claim is a call for violence against President Donald Trump.

Gabbard fires 2 top intelligence officials and will shift office that preps Trump's daily brief

Gabbard fires 2 top intelligence officials and will shift office that preps Trump's daily brief

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard fired two veteran intelligence officials because they oppose President Donald Trump, her office said, coming a week after the release of a declassified memo written by their agency that contradicted statements the Trump administration has used to justify deporting Venezuelan immigrants.

Trump administration rescinds curbs on AI chip exports to foreign markets

Trump administration rescinds curbs on AI chip exports to foreign markets

NEW YORK (AP) -- After a week of promises to alter the policy, the U.S. Department of Commerce has rescinded a Biden-era rule due to take effect Thursday that placed limits on the number of artificial intelligence chips that could be exported to certain international markets without federal approval.

Trump's $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs

Trump's $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs

WASHINGTON (AP) -- House Republicans proposed sweeping tax breaks Monday in President Donald Trump's big priority bill, tallying at least $4.9 trillion in costs so far, partly paid for with cuts to Medicaid, food stamps and green energy programs used by millions of Americans.

International

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After Putin is a no-show at talks in Turkey, Trump says he'll meet the Russian leader soon

After Putin is a no-show at talks in Turkey, Trump says he'll meet the Russian leader soon

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- President Donald Trump said Friday he's moving to set up direct talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin as soon as he can.

Trump meets with Syria's insurgent-turned-leader in Saudi Arabia

Trump meets with Syria's insurgent-turned-leader in Saudi Arabia

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- U.S. President Donald Trump met with Syria's interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, the first such encounter between the two nations' leaders in 25 years.

Trump in Saudi speech will urge Iran toward a 'new and a better path' as he pushes for nuclear deal

Trump in Saudi speech will urge Iran toward a 'new and a better path' as he pushes for nuclear deal

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- President Donald Trump in a speech in Saudi Arabia will urge Iran to take a "new and a better path" as he pushes for new nuclear deal.

Trump and Saudi crown prince sign a host of agreements as US leader begins 4-day Mideast tour

Trump and Saudi crown prince sign a host of agreements as US leader begins 4-day Mideast tour

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- U.S. President Donald Trump signed a host of economic and bilateral cooperation agreements in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday as he kicked off a four-day Middle East trip with a focus on dealmaking with a key Mideast ally while shared concerns about Iran's nuclear program and the war in Gaza dragged on in the background.

U.S. and China agree to slash reciprocal tariffs in major step toward easing trade war

U.S. and China agree to slash reciprocal tariffs in major step toward easing trade war

The United States and China said Monday they had agreed to a 90-day pause on most of the tariffs they have imposed on each other since last month, in a major step toward easing a trade war between the two powers that has rattled the global economy.

Think Tank

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Build Big Things

Build Big Things

For too long, Canada has been content to muddle in the slow lane when what is needed — now more than ever — is a breathtaking build out. Here’s how to do it.

Fighting mortgage fraud in Canada

Fighting mortgage fraud in Canada

Mortgage fraud in Canada has surged in recent years, raising deep concerns across multiple sectors. Anxiety is soaring among lenders as they face rising losses and inflated property prices. Meanwhile, organized criminal actors are overwhelming regulators and law enforcement. Several complex factors are behind the growing crisis, including pressures from housing affordability, rising interest rates, and the lingering effects of...

Nova Scotia leading the way on reducing interprovincial trade barriers

Substacks

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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Why trouble for the NDP spells trouble for democracy

Why trouble for the NDP spells trouble for democracy

Parliament will look very different when newly-elected MPs return to Ottawa this month. There will be far less diversity of voices in the House of Commons with the demise of the NDP, and this is not good for our democracy.

Cyber-protection agency a victim of fraud

Cyber-protection agency a victim of fraud

Canada’s premier agency for cyber-security, which helps governments and businesses defend against bad actors, itself got scammed as part of a wide-ranging IT overbilling fraud worth several million dollars.

The Conservatives’ best-performing ad was probably their most derided

The Conservatives’ best-performing ad was probably their most derided

Some dismissed it as the “erectile dysfunction” ad. Others laughed it off as a desperate Hail Mary to salvage a faltering campaign in Southern Ontario—specifically in the all-important 905 region. Well, they can stop laughing. Call it the blue belt now. The Conservatives not only held their ground in the 905—they flipped several Liberal ridings.

Podcasts

Measles is back. How did it come to this?

Measles is back. How did it come to this?

On this episode of WONK, Dr. Joss Reimer and Dr. Michael Gardam discuss the ‘devastating’ return of measles, the vaccination problem and hard COVID lessons Once eliminated in North America, measles is making a comeback. Is it part of a bigger, post-pandemic trend we’re seeing of vaccinations declining? What will it take to get public health back on track? Host...

Liberals plan tax cut this summer, but no plan for budget

Liberals plan tax cut this summer, but no plan for budget

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says the government's first priority is passing a tax cut for July 1, but signals that the Liberals aren't planning to release a budget this year — just an economic statement in the fall. Plus, Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith explains why he posted on social media that it's 'impossible not to feel disrespected' after being left...

Does Ontario Actually Need Tougher Judges?

Does Ontario Actually Need Tougher Judges?

Premier Doug Ford recently declared that he thought it was time for Ontario to start electing judges, ranting against "bleeding heart" jurists and suggesting that all appointments are political. Could tougher judges indeed help fix our system? What's the best way to ensure judicial independence, and who gets to define it? To discuss, we're joined by Donna Kellway President of...

The ethical issues around "Trump coin" and the overall impact on crypto

The ethical issues around "Trump coin" and the overall impact on crypto

Has the White House gone completely "pay for play"? While experts debate the ethics of U.S. President Donald Trump's latest actions including accepting a plane from Qatar, others are watching his foray into cryptocurrency closely. While many in the space have called for more regulation of crypto, "Trump coin" is causing issues for those trying to build cryptocurrencies as a...