Opinion
Enough is enough, Canada. Just buy the damned jets

Enough is enough, Canada. Just buy the damned jets

Canada has spent 28 years trying to buy a new fighter jet: the federal government made a decision, then unmade it, then made it again. We’ve already spent more than a billion dollars on this thing, and 1,500 Canadian jobs have been created to build it. It’s the tent pole of our plans to defend ourselves and co-operate with our...

BC Conservatives have been given a new lease on life with John Rustad’s resignation

BC Conservatives have been given a new lease on life with John Rustad’s resignation

One of the more infamous scenes in the movie sketch comedy Monty Python and the Holy Grail involved a sword fight between King Arthur and the Black Knight. Almost immediately, things do not go well for the Black Knight. He quickly loses a limb, then another. Despite his losses he defiantly fights on: “Just a flesh wound … I’m invincible.”...

Mark Carney’s embrace of Liberal enemies could be a good thing for all of us

Mark Carney’s embrace of Liberal enemies could be a good thing for all of us

Progressive-leaning folks are having a hard time watching Mark Carney link arms with the same forces that spent the past decade demonizing the Liberals. Whether it’s making a deal with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith or playing to the “bro” culture with all the sports talk and walking back feminist foreign policy, it seems like the prime minister is determined to...

How to fix Alberta’s broken carbon market
It’s turning-point time for the Conservatives and NDP – but don’t expect much

It’s turning-point time for the Conservatives and NDP – but don’t expect much

The leadership of two of our three major parties is in the course of being determined. It’s a big moment in the political trajectory of the country. The NDP leadership race could well decide the fate of that party – whether it revives itself or is reduced to a relic. The latter would see Canada devolving into a hollowed-middle, two-party...

Liberals nervously await the effects of Steven Guilbeault’s resignation on the party’s Quebec fortunes

Liberals nervously await the effects of Steven Guilbeault’s resignation on the party’s Quebec fortunes

The Montreal riding of Laurier–Sainte-Marie is ground zero for Quebec’s media elites and the beating heart of the province’s cultural industries. Not surprisingly, it skews progressive and has reliably sent left-leaning MPs to Ottawa for more than three decades. Last week’s resignation of local MP Steven Guilbeault from Prime Minister Mark Carney’s cabinet generated a minor earthquake in Laurier—Sainte-Marie whose...

Did Mark Carney give away the Liberals’ advantage on climate change?

Did Mark Carney give away the Liberals’ advantage on climate change?

Whether he intended to or not, Prime Minister Mark Carney cast aside a tenet of the Liberals’ brand last Thursday when he signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Alberta that jeopardizes the Grits’ work addressing climate change. For more than two decades, the Liberal Party of Canada told voters that it was the party that not only cared about...



The Canada-Alberta deal is good policy, and probably good politics, too

The Canada-Alberta deal is good policy, and probably good politics, too

Everyone could find something to hate about the energy agreement – technically, the Canada-Alberta Memorandum of Understanding – Mark Carney and Danielle Smith struck last week. For the right, the conditions on federal support for a heavy oil pipeline from Alberta to the West Coast – notably, a tightened provincial carbon pricing regime – are too onerous, if not altogether...

Our Best CUSMA Strategy: Canadian Cool

Our Best CUSMA Strategy: Canadian Cool

With hearings underway in Washington regarding the future of the CUSMA, U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade representative has signaled that the administration might withdraw completely unless it secures a “good deal.” To rattle our cages further, Trump recently reiterated his tired accusation that Canada and Mexico have taken advantage of the United States like just about every other country, threatening...

How Mark Carney is Realigning Canada’s Political System

How Mark Carney is Realigning Canada’s Political System

On the day last May when Mark Carney and his newly elected cabinet were sworn in, the Prime Minister promised, “Our government will deliver its mandate for change with urgency and determination. We’ve been elected to do a job. We intend to do it quickly and forcefully.” At the time, that sounded like a solid recipe for governing, but it’s...

An assisted-suicide political time bomb is ticking for Mark Carney

An assisted-suicide political time bomb is ticking for Mark Carney

Prime Minister Mark Carney has displayed a remarkable willingness to dismantle the legacy of his predecessor across the public policy board. In the coming months, he may be tempted to take another look at one of the more indefensible decisions made by former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s government: the expansion of its medical assistance in dying legislation.

With typical Alberta governing-party arrogance, Danielle Smith waves away a scandal

With typical Alberta governing-party arrogance, Danielle Smith waves away a scandal

Back in October, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith wiped her hands clean of any scandal involving Alberta Health Services (AHS). Seven months earlier, the Premier had tapped retired Manitoba judge Raymond Wyant to probe alleged political interference involving the procurement of children’s medicine from abroad, and contracts for private surgical facilities in the province, both of which had ties to a...

Canada needs an alternative to Carney's one-man show

Canada needs an alternative to Carney's one-man show

When the Carney government’s honeymoon is over, and its missteps on a variety of fronts become more evident, the search will begin in earnest for “alternatives.” Looking ahead, what might such alternatives be? On the fiscal front, the recent federal budget gets off on the wrong foot by attributing Canada’s economic woes to major global events and Donald Trump’s tariffs...

Mark Carney carries the label ‘smartest man in the room’ but that comes with a warning

Mark Carney carries the label ‘smartest man in the room’ but that comes with a warning

Mark Carney didn’t run as a conventional politician. He ran as the outsider who wasn’t. It’s an appealing contradiction: a first-time candidate who also happened to be one of the most connected people in the country and abroad. Carney spent years at the centre of power in both Ottawa and London. He advised governments, soothed markets, briefed prime ministers, and...

Carney looks to Europe for defence, but at what cost?

Carney looks to Europe for defence, but at what cost?

Is Canada going continental? This week, Prime Minister Mark Carney quietly signed Canada up for the Security Action for Europe (SAFE) initiative, part of the European Union’s plan to rebuild its military industrial base by 2030. Membership gives countries access to 150-billion euros (C$243 billion) in loans to back defence manufacturing. Canada is the first non-EU country to join. In...

Mark Carney’s cabinet shuffle shows he’s still learning on the job

Mark Carney’s cabinet shuffle shows he’s still learning on the job

For weeks now, rumours have circulated that Mark Carney could be doing a major shuffle of his cabinet before the end of this year. The shuffle that happened on Monday wasn’t the one people were talking about — or expecting.



No, Canada didn’t ‘bow to the bros’ — it grew up

No, Canada didn’t ‘bow to the bros’ — it grew up

Let’s set the record straight: Mark Carney is not Justin Trudeau; and that is a good thing. The continued fixation of former Trudeau-era loyalists in insisting that Carney is pandering to the ‘bros’ because of his “rejection” of the word ‘feminist’ in Canada’s foreign policy reeks of nostalgia for a government that often mistook optics for substance. It’s time for...

The Leftward Tilt of Carney’s Casualty Count

The Leftward Tilt of Carney’s Casualty Count

They were among the few long faces at last Saturday evening’s annual Press Gallery Dinner. Stephen Guilbeault looked as though he had just lost his best friend. Green Party Elizabeth May looked as though she would break into tears. Guilbeault had resigned two days earlier from his job as heritage minister in the cabinet of Prime Minister Mark Carney over...

The Liberals’ post-Steven Guilbeault era looks more sensible by the day
In B.C., public support grows for pipelines and the NDP is playing catchup

In B.C., public support grows for pipelines and the NDP is playing catchup

If you listen to the noise coming out of British Columbia, rather than pay attention to what’s actually going on, you might conclude the province’s NDP government simply hates pipelines. A new line to the B.C. coast, they keep saying, is a terrible idea. It’s just a pipe dream, a “fantasy” in the words of Premier David Eby. Worse, the...

Once too close to Trudeau for a Carney cabinet, Marc Miller is back

Once too close to Trudeau for a Carney cabinet, Marc Miller is back

More than eight months have passed and it’s now safe to bring friends of Justin Trudeau back into the cabinet. Marc Miller was one of the Trudeau-era ministers tossed over the side of the ship of state when Mark Carney became prime minister, when the political imperative was making Canadians see his government as something new and different.

Mark Carney and Danielle Smith may be in for more hassle than they bargained for

Mark Carney and Danielle Smith may be in for more hassle than they bargained for

Danielle Smith was flying high last Thursday as she and Mark Carney signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in Calgary. Interesting that it was called an MOU and not an agreement, although most of the news media, and Smith herself, talked about it in those terms. So now Carney and Smith have an “understanding” that an oil pipeline may be...

Danielle Smith helped create a separatist monster that is now attacking her

Danielle Smith helped create a separatist monster that is now attacking her

You couldn’t have faulted Alberta Premier Danielle Smith for thinking she might receive something of a hero’s welcome at this weekend’s United Conservative Party convention. After all, she would be waving a freshly signed memorandum of understanding with Ottawa to build a new pipeline to the northwest coast of B.C. Sure, there were literally mountains to cross before it came...

The UCP is a party with concerns wildly divergent from those of Albertans at large

The UCP is a party with concerns wildly divergent from those of Albertans at large

Premier Danielle Smith faces an uphill battle with her own party, which appears to be increasingly untethered from Alberta’s current reality. The United Conservative Party annual general meeting was a fractious affair, marked by divisions over separatism and policy resolutions mired in the 1950s. Albertans would be wise to pay attention to those resolutions – they have a habit of...

When leadership matters: Former cabinet minister James Moore on why we should applaud Danielle Smith

When leadership matters: Former cabinet minister James Moore on why we should applaud Danielle Smith

Across Canada, at all times, we are an appropriately judgmental people when it comes to holding our political leaders accountable. This is particularly true when we think our leaders have failed us, disappointed us or misled us. Whether it is a municipal politician caught in a scandal, a provincial cabinet minister who makes a terrible decision, an opposition backbencher who...


Problem with our feminist foreign policy was that we never really had a feminist foreign policy, we just called it that

Problem with our feminist foreign policy was that we never really had a feminist foreign policy, we just called it that

It seems like a million years ago now, but do you remember the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership? It was signed between Canada and some Pacific nations plus the United Kingdom way back in that long-ago time of 2018. I remember being amused by it—not because of what was in the deal, but because of some of the...

If an election were held now, would Canadians vote for Poilievre or Carney? It depends what they’re worried about

If an election were held now, would Canadians vote for Poilievre or Carney? It depends what they’re worried about

What happens when a government survives a big test, but the country still feels stuck? That is where Canada finds itself today. The Carney government survived its first major budget vote and avoided a holiday election. On paper, that is a win. Our latest Abacus Data survey, conducted between Nov. 20 and 27 with 2,421 adults, shows the Liberals have...

Danielle Smith serves up conservative red meat and wins big at UCP shindig

Danielle Smith serves up conservative red meat and wins big at UCP shindig

Premier Danielle Smith is no dummy. She is well aware the pipeline deal she made with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday would not be an easy sell but sell it she must. There are UCP voters and UCP members motivated enough to spend a couple of days at a political gabfest in Edmonton who have had it with Canada...

Smith draws boos at UCP convention with first mention of Carney deal

Smith draws boos at UCP convention with first mention of Carney deal

Premier Danielle Smith isn't personally challenged at this UCP convention, but still faces blowback from separatists and recall campaigns. Every United Conservative Party annual convention is odd in its own way, but this one is truly special. Article content Premier Danielle Smith faces pressure from separatists at the gathering in Edmonton this weekend. Recall campaigns are also a challenge for...

Mark Carney lost the minister who was the green conscience of his government. Here’s how it happened

Mark Carney lost the minister who was the green conscience of his government. Here’s how it happened

The CBC story landed with a thump on Monday afternoon: Prime Minister Mark Carney’s memorandum of understanding with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, it suggested, would include a carve-out for her province on clean electricity regulations. Canadian Identity and Culture Minister Steven Guilbeault was stunned.

The political plagiarism of Mark Carney

The political plagiarism of Mark Carney

If, as the Liberals say, Pierre Poilivere is a terrible leader and the Conservatives are bankrupt of ideas, why does Prime Minister Mark Carney keep stealing them?

Donald Trump’s fingerprints are all over Mark Carney’s Alberta deal

Donald Trump’s fingerprints are all over Mark Carney’s Alberta deal

Basking in the glow of new-found friendship between Ottawa and Alberta, Premier Danielle Smith declared that this day would never have arrived if Justin Trudeau was still prime minister. “I can tell you 100 per cent that the former prime minister would never have moved this far on these issues,” Smith said, after she and Mark Carney unveiled a whole...

Is Carney's pipeline deal with Alberta worth the political risk?

Is Carney's pipeline deal with Alberta worth the political risk?

Former environment minister Steven Guilbeault has resigned from cabinet over the Carney government's memorandum of understanding with Alberta that sets a path for an oil pipeline to B.C.'s coast. The Power & Politics panel of party insiders discusses the politics around the deal and possible risks to Liberal seats.

If nothing else, Danielle Smith is a disruptor

If nothing else, Danielle Smith is a disruptor

Every so often a Canadian politician comes along and decides he or she is ready to challenge the orthodoxy. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was Saskatchewan Premier Tommy Douglas, who insisted that universal, publicly funded medical care was possible in Canada, despite strong opposition from health care providers, which culminated in a doctors’ strike.

Stephen Maher: Mark Carney’s in a bigger mess than he thinks with this pipeline

Stephen Maher: Mark Carney’s in a bigger mess than he thinks with this pipeline

I am starting to wonder if Mark Carney knows what he is doing. On Thursday, he met with Premier Danielle Smith in Calgary to sign a new agreement with Alberta, which includes federal support for a bitumen pipeline to northern British Columbia. On the surface, this is splendid news. It was good to see Smith and Carney working together on...

Mark Carney is giving in to the bros

Mark Carney is giving in to the bros

Before leaving for the recently held G20 in Johannesburg, Canada had laid out its priorities, for the summit: “improving critical mineral supply chains, using AI for sustainable development, preventing wildfires and natural disasters, reforming development funding and debt, and advancing gender equality through economic growth.” During a press conference at the summit, however, Prime Minister Carney explained to reporters that...

Witkoff-Dmitriev and the Anti-Democracy Order

Witkoff-Dmitriev and the Anti-Democracy Order

Analysts are always searching for “turning points”, “tipping points”, and “inflection points”. For me, February 2025 was such a moment. It was the month when the world we thought we understood was turned on its head. As the third anniversary of the illegal Russian invasion of Ukraine approached, Ukraine was determined to have another General Assembly debate and a resolution...

A blockbuster not-yet-agreement with the devil in the politics

A blockbuster not-yet-agreement with the devil in the politics

There is a negotiation maxim widely heard in trade talks that nothing is agreed until everything is agreed. By that measure nothing has been agreed between Ottawa and Alberta. Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith wanted to make a show of signing a memorandum of understanding on energy and the environment, even though all the actual commitments...

The Alberta-Ottawa energy deal marks a major shift in Canadian politics

The Alberta-Ottawa energy deal marks a major shift in Canadian politics

Boom. Until this week, among the more reliable constants in Canadian politics were that the federal Liberals would oppose building any new pipelines to the B.C. coast (the Trans Mountain exception proving the rule); that Alberta’s United Conservatives would oppose any extension of carbon pricing (beyond what the province already had in place); and that the two governing parties, so...

The Carney-Smith agreement surely won't make pipelines 'boring again'

The Carney-Smith agreement surely won't make pipelines 'boring again'

Shortly after Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith formally signed their memorandum of understanding on Thursday, Smith joked to reporters in Calgary that she would love for "pipelines to be boring again." It's not clear that pipelines have ever been boring — they have been associated with political tumult in Canada for at least 70 years. And...

The method to Mark Carney’s madness

The method to Mark Carney’s madness

Liberal prime ministers aren’t supposed to get standing ovations in Calgary, much less from a room packed full of mostly-Conservative business leaders and provincial cabinet ministers who spent the better part of a decade honing their hatred of the Trudeau government. But Mark Carney, for better or worse — more on that in a moment — is clearly not your...

As Trump meddles with the Fed, Carney must safeguard the Bank of Canada’s independence

As Trump meddles with the Fed, Carney must safeguard the Bank of Canada’s independence

U.S. President Donald Trump’s monetary-policy monkeyshines are plumbing new depths. Mr. Trump has spent months calling Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell every name in the book, including “clown,” “nincompoop” and “major loser.” Now, his Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, is undermining Mr. Powell by stirring speculation about his possible successor.

Carney's focus on Alberta's prosperity will help calm separatist movement

Carney's focus on Alberta's prosperity will help calm separatist movement

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith credited former prime minister Justin Trudeau for creating the independence movement in her province, thanks to a litany of nine “bad laws” — and his successor, Mark Carney, for taking the wind out of separatism with “good policy that genuinely addresses the concerns of Albertans.”