| Raucous YouTube videos
leave Senate committee embarrassed |
The
shouting, swearing and even name-calling at
a high-profile Senate committee have rendered
it a dysfunctional, public spectacle on Parliament
Hill, senators have told CBC News. MORE.... |

FEATURED INK
| Why Parliament Hill's
gong show goes on |
Travers: Frustration
is the national capital hamster wheel. Here
are 10 reasons for the futile spinning: LIQUID
CASH Somewhere, somehow, Ottawa spends
nearly $300 billion a year. No one knows where
it all goes. Ministers and mandarins spent.. MORE... |
| Is social policy
too boring for Ignatieff? |
|
Hepburn: Back in March
2005, when Michael Ignatieff was being courted
to return to Canada and lead the Liberals,
he delivered the keynote address to the party's
policy convention. The Liberal party is "more
than a machine for winning.. MORE...
|
| It's time for a fresh
start in Parliament |
| Preston Manning: Let's
reform Question Period, the media that cover
it and our over-the-top partisan zeal. The
current session of Parliament ended last
week on very much the same note as it began
last fall –with partisanship carried
to excess.. MORE... |
| Misplaced confidentiality |
| G&M: Stephen
Harper's Conservatives have been fairly criticized
for making the culture of government more secretive,
after pledging to make it more transparent.
But the recent conduct of a joint committee
of senators and members of the.. MORE... |
| Good news: Ignatieff
sees Downtown Eastside as national problem |
| Mason: While
it might seem difficult to imagine, there was
a time when federal Liberal Leader Michael
Ignatieff enjoyed frequenting country-and-western
bars. As he tells the story, this is how he
was first introduced to one of the country's
most.. MORE... |
| Curtail MPs' newsletter
rights |
|
Ed.Journal: Conjure up
the following scenario: You are a thoughtful,
lifelong Conservative voter who believes
in small government, lower taxes, and less
junk mail. You come home from a hard day's
work, and discover in your mailbox a.. MORE...
|
| Our greatest fisheries
minister |
| Doucet: At
Sunday dinner, my father said, "I suppose
I must be someone." No one replied. My
father has Alzheimer's disease. He approaches
his decline with calm, courage and good humour
as his old friend Roméo LeBlanc did.
I'm not sure.. MORE... |
| Goldstein: EPA experts
who deviate on climate change get muzzled.
Where are all the "green" media
pundits who used to scream bloody murder
about the George W. Bush administration censoring
expert opinion on climate change, now. MORE... |
| Sanctimonious U.S.
governors go down for the count |
|
L. IAN MACDONALD: There
must be something about being a governor
of an American state that confers a sense
of entitlement, invulnerability and simply
an idea that you won't get caught. First
there was Eliot Spitzer, the scourge of white.. MORE...
|
| Tim Hudak: Drop the
Harris bit |
| Wente: The new leader
of Ontario's Progressive Conservative Party
thinks a dose of Castor oil is still necessary.
Only a political junkie could care about
the fate of Ontario's Progressive Conservative
Party - a bunch of old white guys so lost.. MORE... |
| Afghanistan a battle
for hearts |
|
Cockburn: It only
took eight years for some truly good news
to come out of the mess that is Afghanistan.
Last week, in Deh-e-Bagh, a small village
of about 900 people south of Kandahar City,
Canada threw a coming-out party to celebrate.. MORE...
|
| A reason to celebrate
the Fourth of July |
| L.Martin: A Canadian
in the White House. For much of
its history, Canada fashioned its prosperity
on the basis of an open border with the United
States. That era, as former Washington ambassador
Allan Gotlieb has perceptively.. MORE... |
|
|
- Liberals
regain slim lead, poll finds
The
Liberal Party has regained its slender
lead in public support, thanks largely
to a sharp dip in backing for the Conservatives,
according to a poll released on Thursday.
|
- Air
France plane plunged at high speed
into Atlantic
The
pilot of a doomed Air France flight was
flying with neither the help of the autopilot
nor information about the plane's speed
and direction when it slammed into the
Atlantic Ocean a month ago, French officials
said Thursday.
|
- Arab
group exec quits after online tirade
The
Canadian Arab Federation moved to distance
itself from one of its own executives
who resigned yesterday after he apparently
posted "F--- Canada Day" on
his Facebook page, called Canada a "genocidal
state," and said he "couldn't
be more ashamed to be Canadian."
|
- India
decriminalizes homosexual sex
The New Delhi High Court struck down the law that criminalized
consensual homosexual sex today, in a move that will
radically change life for millions of gay, lesbian
and transgender Indians..
|
- NNW Insider: GG Jean wearing
ulu knife earrings?
Did
Canada's Governor General Michaelle Jean
wear ulu knife earrings during yesterday's
Canada Day celebrations to show support for
the seal hunt?
|
- Nuclear
liability limit called too low
The Conservative government is putting the nuclear
industry ahead of the lives of Canadians with a proposed
law limiting damages in the event of an accident, a
New Democrat MP says.
|
- Oilsands
earns Canada bottom ranking
Canada is doing the least of any of the world's wealthiest
countries to fight climate change--and Alberta's oilsands
is largely to blame, says a report card released Wednesday
by the World Wildlife Foundation.
|
- Air
Canada workers target Olympics
The
Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics have become
a bargaining chip at Air Canada as the
country's largest airline tries to overcome
labour strife and avoid filing for bankruptcy
protection.
|
- Magna
may face Chinese rival over Opel
Opel
frontunner Magna's consortium partner
Sberbank said the race to acquire the
carmaker was all but over, though Beijing
Automotive Industry Holding Co (BAIC)
may still lodge a bid in the coming days.
|
- Family's
death plunge a mystery
Montreal police are assisting Kingston investigators
in piecing together how three teenage sisters and a
female relative died after a car containing their bodies
was pulled from a lock northeast of Kingston.
|
- PC
beef recalled from stores due to
E. coli
Consumers
should avoid eating certain President's
Choice brand steaks, roasts and ground
beef products that are being pulled from
store shelves due to possible contamination
with E. coli, the Canadian Food Inspection
Agency says.
|
- Canadian
caught in U.S. prison limbo
The Harper government has denied an Alberta man's bid
for a transfer from a U.S. jail to a Canadian prison
on the grounds that he may one day commit a crime.
|
- Al
Jazeera gaining favour in Canada
They are professional journalists. They give voice
to terrorists. They are vital to democracy. They suppress
it. They are Al Jazeera English and they are hoping
to come to a television near you.
|
- Stampede
kicks up a fury among animal-rights
groups
The Calgary Stampede is being called a "brutal
violent spectacle" of animal cruelty by the Humane
Society of Canada, which has filed a complaint with
Canada's broadcasting regulator over the airing of
the world's largest outdoor rodeo.
|
- Obama
defends Canada's medicare
U. S. President Barack Obama yesterday blasted health-care
reform opponents for citing faults in Canada's medicare
system as a tactic to "scare" Americans away
from embracing his plan to create a publicly run health
insurance program in the United States.
|
- French
PM supports Quebec in green talks
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon
lent his support yesterday to Quebec Premier
Jean Charest's call for greater provincial
government influence on Canada's climate-change
policy.
|
- Great
One to get Canada's top honour
Wayne Gretzky, arguably Canada's favourite hockey great,
is getting Canada's highest honour -- he's being made
a companion to the Order of Canada.
|
- Liberal-Era
Diplomatic Language Killed Off
It
was once considered a hallmark achievement
of modern Canadian foreign policy, but
few breathe the words "human security" in
Stephen Harper's Ottawa. And this is
no accident.
|
|