Camera-shy Saskatchewan Senator blocks camera
Pamela Wallin, the Senator from Saskatchewan, was back in the news this week, refusing to tell CBC News if she had repaid any expense money.
Robocalls: Conservatives cheer federal court ruling
The Conservative government cheered Friday a federal court ruling that found a widespread, “thinly scattered” but ineffective vote suppression effort “likely” stemmed from the governing party’s own database.
NDP MP loses shadow cabinet post over non-payment of taxes
The NDP has suspended a member from its shadow cabinet because of his chronic, long-term failure to pay taxes.
As the federal ethics commissioner readies for a look at Stephen Harper’s former right-hand man, Mary Dawson is reminding Canadians her office can only look so far.
Read MoreThe Council of Canadians is calling on the Conservative Party to make a list of everyone who had access to its electoral database during the last federal election and turn the information over to the RCMP and the commissioner of elections.
Read MoreJustin Trudeau says he is satisfied with a Liberal senator’s handling of an investigation into his expense claims because the senator has stepped away from the party’s caucus.
Read MoreThe Senate asked external auditors examining the travel expenses of Sen. Pamela Wallin to broaden their investigation over concerns she was claiming refunds for activity unrelated to Senate business, the Star has learned.
Read MoreMore than two dozen senior officials and diplomats in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government monitored information about a Toronto artist over her criticism of the oil and gas industry’s environmental performance.
Read MoreA statement PM Harper made on Wednesday about when he first learned his former chief of staff gave Senator Mike Duffy $90,000 to repay expenses, under scrutiny at the time by a Senate investigation, conflicts…
Read MoreFeatured Ink
Senate scandal finds Conservatives slow on damage control
Tim Harper — There is a well-thumbed Conservative manual with a game plan for rising from the Senate spending mud. But this time it is doing no good. This is a government that can’t even get out of the starting blocks, let alone…
The growing heap of problems on Stephen Harper’s desk
John Geddes — John Geddes explains why Wright and Duffy are just the beginning. Springtime in New York has much to recommend it, but for Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the fact that Sen. Mike Duffy is unknown there must have been its most charming quality when he visited the city last week.
What the Mike Duffy scandal says about Stephen Harper
Paul Wells — “Colleagues, we have an active and important agenda on the issues that matter to hard-working Canadian families,” Prime Minister Stephen Harper told the Conservative caucus on Tuesday. “And there is much work to be done.”
Press Gallery smells blood in Senate
John Gormley — Just like the existence of one of the houses of Parliament in the 21st century, one to which lawmakers are appointed and not elected, words like “unacceptable” or “ludicrous” seem inadequate to describe the latest Senate scandal.
Harper abandons his underlings to the heat on the Hill
Michael Harris — When you ride into town to clean up Dodge and open a bordello instead, someone eventually needs to ask for your badge. If the Conservatives don’t get that message, their time in power will soon end. And if they maintain their silence…
Wallin can’t skip out on expenses
Murray Mandryk — Flip through CTV’s late-night re-run schedule and you just might catch a glimpse of now-independent Saskatchewan Senator Pamela Wallin on the beloved sitcom Corner Gas.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s ‘apology’ for Senate mess a day late, a dollar short
Michael Den Tandt — Prime Minister Stephen Harper, despite being off in sunny Latin America addressing vital affairs of state, took time out of his hectic schedule to say he’s “sorry,” “frustrated, “and “extremely angry” about the Senate expense scandal…
Amid the political morality tales, some serve us with distinction
Jeffrey Simpson — Thank you, Stephen Mandel. And thank you, Mark Carney. In Mr. Mandel’s case, the citizens of Edmonton can feel grateful for his service as mayor. In Mr. Carney’s case, he spoke clearly and intelligently to…
USDA move not COOL, say Canadians
James Anderson — May 23rd was the deadline for the U.S. Government to comply with a World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling calling for changes to its Country of Origin Labeling (COOL) Laws. Canadian livestock producers who had been hoping for the U.S….
Forget federal and provincial politics; the action is local
Christopher Hume — Municipal Canada is in shambles. Toronto’s Rob Ford may the most egregious example, but there are many others. From Montreal and Quebec City to Winnipeg and Mississauga, mayors across the country are…
Charles Pascal — We are getting close to the 41st anniversary of the June 1972 Watergate break-in that eventually led to president Richard Nixon’s resignation. Forty-one years of a political lesson every politician on Earth should have learned…
Read MoreBrian Lilley — Is there anyone left on Parliament Hill with clean hands? Canadians have been treated to a daily parade of outraged MPs fuming over the Senate expense scandal. Demands for audits followed by demands for more answers on edited reports…
Read MoreCharles Adler — It’s no secret that Thomas Mulcair loses his temper occasionally. That’s why he is known as Angry Tom. The NDP knows anger may sell well for a talk show host and may work well for a prosecutor, but they know that the public wants…
Read MoreEntertainment Plus
George Stroumboulopoulos’ CNN debut set for June 9
Long-time CBC-TV personality George Stroumboulopoulos will beam out from CNN starting June 9, the U.S. all-news channel announced Thursday.







































