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Carney, Smith to announce oil pipeline update Friday: sources

Carney, Smith to announce oil pipeline update Friday: sources

Prime Minister Mark Carney will travel to Alberta on Friday to meet with Premier Danielle Smith and announce an update on the memorandum of understanding to build an oil pipeline to the British Columbia coast, Global News has learned. While sources tell Global News the details of what will be announced aren’t yet finalized, the expected public announcement comes after...

The Canadian inspiration for Britain's surging right-wing Reform party

The Canadian inspiration for Britain's surging right-wing Reform party

After election victory, Reform UK leader says Canadian prairie populist Preston Manning is someone to emulate. Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage received a hero's welcome when he arrived late last week at a victory party in Chelmsford, an Essex commuter town on the outskirts of London, a world away from that city's centre of power. The silver-tongued leader of this...

Ottawa, Alberta close to reaching industrial carbon pricing deal, sources say

Ottawa, Alberta close to reaching industrial carbon pricing deal, sources say

Ottawa and Alberta are close to finalizing a new accord on industrial carbon pricing that would result in the fee going up to $130 a tonne by 2040, two government sources, one federal and one provincial, said Tuesday. If approved, the agreement would dramatically roll back former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s marquee climate policy and set the stage for the...

Fentanyl ingredients entering Canada via Vancouver en route to cartel-run drug labs, U.S. DEA boss says

Fentanyl ingredients entering Canada via Vancouver en route to cartel-run drug labs, U.S. DEA boss says

Terrance Cole names Port of Vancouver as key entry point for ingredients of illicit drugs. Chemicals used to make fentanyl are streaming into the Port of Vancouver on their way to drug labs run by Mexican cartels on Canadian soil, the head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration told senators in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday. DEA administrator Terrance Cole said...

Federal Tories chasing ‘magic in a bottle’ with B.C. land issue that may not translate over the Rockies, say observers

Federal Tories chasing ‘magic in a bottle’ with B.C. land issue that may not translate over the Rockies, say observers

National messaging built around B.C.’s property rights debate risks oversimplifying a complex legal reality, while a failure to communicate has 'ceded the stage to fear and misinformation,' say pundits.

Polls

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Liberals 45.5, Conservatives 33.4 and NDP 8.8

Liberals 45.5, Conservatives 33.4 and NDP 8.8

In this week’s political tracking, the Liberal’s currently have a 12 point lead over the Conservatives. Of note there has been downward pressure on NDP support in the period following the NDP leadership race. The Canadian top issue of concern remains centered on the economy. Jobs and the economy lead, followed by inflation and relations with the United States.

Little Movement in Canada’s Federal Political Scene

Little Movement in Canada’s Federal Political Scene

Public support for the governing Liberal Party is still high in Canada, a new Research Co. poll has found. In the online survey of a representative national sample, 46% of decided voters across Canada would back the Liberal candidate in their riding in a federal election, up one point since a similar Research Co. poll conducted in February 2026.



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The process of choosing the Governor-General is the problem, not the pick herself

The process of choosing the Governor-General is the problem, not the pick herself

The controversy over Louise Arbour’s appointment as Governor-General is unusual in that both sides cite the same set of facts. She’s a former Supreme Court justice, say her supporters, a former international war-crimes prosecutor, and a former UN high commissioner for human rights, among a long list of other offices and laurels. Exactly, say her opponents: a bona fide member...

Mark Carney could do the right thing and make a hero out of 23 MPs at the same time

Mark Carney could do the right thing and make a hero out of 23 MPs at the same time

As Mark Carney often reminds us, he is not, as he puts it, “a career politician.” In many ways, that is a good thing. After two decades of rancorous, often toxic uber-partisanship, Carney’s no-nonsense, low-key approach is a welcome relief and reassuring to Canadians who have been deeply unnerved by Donald Trump’s ongoing attacks on our country.

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Carney’s Trade Push Beyond the US Is Just a Gold Rush, For Now

Carney’s Trade Push Beyond the US Is Just a Gold Rush, For Now

Prime Minister Mark Carney set an ambitious target last year for the country to double its non-US exports over the next decade, a goal that built on his election campaign pledge to make Canada’s economy less reliant on its southern neighbor. Since then, his government has claimed early signs of success. Its recent budget update said trade diversification efforts “are...

Liberal MP Erskine-Smith says provincial leadership bid 'less likely' now

Liberal MP Erskine-Smith says provincial leadership bid 'less likely' now

Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith cast doubt Tuesday on a potential leadership bid for the provincial Liberals, hours after filing a notice of appeal to that party challenging the result of a nomination race that he lost. Erskine-Smith was vying to represent the provincial party in the upcoming Scarborough Southwest byelection ahead of an intended bid for the leadership of the...

Politician's Pen

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Building Canada Strong Through Sport

Building Canada Strong Through Sport

Net zero, infinite damage—how policy is undermining Canada

Net zero, infinite damage—how policy is undermining Canada

Is Canada on track to meet its climate goals? The honest answer is “no,” and the really honest answer is that Canada’s climate goals will never be reached. They are folly and were designed by climate idealogues who had no concept of consequence, economic reality, or un...



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After a Year of Carney, the Conservatives are Biding Their Time

After a Year of Carney, the Conservatives are Biding Their Time

On the recent anniversary of the April 2025 election that confirmed Mark Carney and the Liberals as Canada’s government, there were many analyses offered on what the year had achieved and what the next one might hold. But few people took a closer look at what the first year of Carney’s tenure has meant to the Official Opposition, the Conservative...

As separatist leaders bumble, Smith hopes Ottawa deal will make them irrelevant

As separatist leaders bumble, Smith hopes Ottawa deal will make them irrelevant

The political ground in Alberta could shift radically in the next few days. Premier Danielle Smith will finally have a weapon to slap down separatism. The separatist leaders, meanwhile, are also doing an excellent job of slapping down separatism. A pipeline and economic deal with Ottawa is widely expected.

Canada’s stable, unified democracy at risk from Alberta’s rededicated MAGA disruptors

Canada’s stable, unified democracy at risk from Alberta’s rededicated MAGA disruptors

Commenting on the trucker convoys that took place in 2022 in Ottawa and Coutts, Alta., prominent security analyst Wesley Wark said, “I think the history of the Freedom Convoy has really not settled into the Canadian consciousness.” “It may be some time before we really figure out for ourselves what was involved here, what was at stake,” Wark, a senior...

We Must Confront Our Dependence on US Tech to Protect Canadian Sovereignty
Will Carney really risk his majority over Alberta?

Will Carney really risk his majority over Alberta?

Prime Minister Mark Carney is avidly wooing the west — but will his own caucus trip him up? Last Friday, Carney met with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith to reassure her that Ottawa’s got her back on a second bitumen pipeline from Alberta to Canada’s West Coast. After the tête-à-tête Smith said, “This morning I said ‘if’ a deal gets signed...

Done! Danielle Smith expected to ink MOU pipeline deal with Carney by Friday

Done! Danielle Smith expected to ink MOU pipeline deal with Carney by Friday

A deal between Premier Smith and Prime Minister Carney. Very soon. Book your seat



Nate Erskine-Smith's race to challenge Doug Ford crashes at the first hurdle. Will he stay on as an MP?

Nate Erskine-Smith's race to challenge Doug Ford crashes at the first hurdle. Will he stay on as an MP?

On Friday evening, just before he had hoped to secure the Liberal nomination for a provincial byelection in Scarborough Southwest, Nate Erskine-Smith posted a video to his social media feeds that did not leave a lot of room for interpretation of his future plans. It was an endorsement, of sorts, from Prime Minister Mark Carney. Erskine-Smith, the MP for the...

Separatist leaders hatred of Canada leads them and the province nowhere

Separatist leaders hatred of Canada leads them and the province nowhere

There is only one way Alberta leaders’ contempt for Canada makes any sense. They don’t think they need Canada because, as David Parker says, 'we have America backing us'

Why Alberta’s independence movement is bad news, even if — maybe especially — if they lose

Why Alberta’s independence movement is bad news, even if — maybe especially — if they lose

If you haven’t seen Richard Warnica’s reports over the weekend in the Star on the leadership of the Alberta separatist movement, do yourself a favour: read them. Warnica spent time among people pushing the cause of Alberta independence and specifically with Mitch Sylvestre, the man he describes as the “architect” of the movement.

Carney may finally be unhitching Liberals from Guilbeault’s hardcore eco-activism

Carney may finally be unhitching Liberals from Guilbeault’s hardcore eco-activism

Building at speeds not seen in generations, as per Mark Carney’s oft-repeated election pledge, has been less hypersonic than the prime minister might have wished. As the new parliamentary budget officer pointed out last week in an analysis of the spring fiscal update, only two of 15 projects being overseen by Carney’s Major Projects Office are actually under construction, and...

Census day is a harder sell in an age of data insecurity

Census day is a harder sell in an age of data insecurity

It’s been a rollicking week in the nerdy world of data collection in Canada — the massive privacy breach of Alberta voter information, the disturbing revelations about how AI chatbots are mining personal details, and now on the heels of all that, national census day. Tuesday is the deadline for all Canadians to complete either a long-form or short-form census...

Acid test for Carney: if he’s faced with a bad deal from Trump, is he prepared to say no?

Acid test for Carney: if he’s faced with a bad deal from Trump, is he prepared to say no?

Something odd is happening in Canada’s national politics. Governing is usually a recipe for a short honeymoon followed eventually by a bitter divorce. Today’s man on the top of the wedding cake has a way of becoming tomorrow’s villain.



It’s time for Pierre Poilievre to finally quit Justin Trudeau

It’s time for Pierre Poilievre to finally quit Justin Trudeau

“I wish I knew how to quit you.” The line that defined the movie “Brokeback Mountain” is also, it turns out, a problem for the Leader of the Official Opposition. Pierre Poilievre cannot quit Justin Trudeau.

Carney’s Tilt Toward Europe is not Nostalgia, it’s Foresight

Carney’s Tilt Toward Europe is not Nostalgia, it’s Foresight

For generations, Canada’s foreign policy rested on a comfortable assumption: geography tied us to the United States, while values linked us to Europe. We never had to choose between the two because the Atlantic alliance functioned as one strategic community. That world has changed. This week, the European Delegation in Ottawa celebrated its 50th anniversary at a moment when the...

Pierre Poilievre encounters nothing but jerks, all day long

Pierre Poilievre encounters nothing but jerks, all day long

There’s an expression I heard years ago that I try to keep in mind for perspective on days when it feels like everyone in the world has been sent specifically to annoy and oppose me. The original version used naughty language, but I’ll clean it up for the sake of this venerable newspaper. It goes like this: If you wake...

Last chance for Carney's foreign policy

Last chance for Carney's foreign policy

Last week I reviewed mainly the domestic record of the government of Prime Minister Mark Carney over the past 13 months, although, as was mentioned, the principal point that Canadians seem to hold in his favour is the foreign policy perception of his ability ”to stand up to Trump.” Few could forget how Carney, with the connivance of the anti-conservative...

Mark Carney runs roughshod over the environment: ‘It’s worse than what Harper did’

Mark Carney runs roughshod over the environment: ‘It’s worse than what Harper did’

Prime Minister Mark Carney plans to make it easier to kill off endangered species, pollute waterways and risk human health, all in the name of fast-tracking private-sector development projects. For a prime minister who dismissed progressive Liberal MPs’ concerns over spending on child care, health care and pharmacare during a caucus meeting this week, Friday’s announcement on streamlining infrastructure project...

The accidental statesman: How Donald Trump saved free trade, European democracy and the free world

The accidental statesman: How Donald Trump saved free trade, European democracy and the free world

I feel perhaps I have been unfair to Donald Trump. Regular readers will know that he has been the subject of the occasional reproof in these corners. Among other things, it has been suggested that he is insane, incompetent, corrupt, treasonous, bottomlessly ignorant, easily manipulated, a Batman villain, and a modern-day Nero: possessed of every vice, devoid of every virtue...



Political Pulse: Premier Smith says she had a ‘meeting of the minds’ with Carney

Political Pulse: Premier Smith says she had a ‘meeting of the minds’ with Carney

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she’s ‘much more confident’ about progress on a pipeline deal after what she describes as a ‘meeting of the minds’ with Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa on Friday. The Political Pulse panel weighs in.

Desperately seeking an energized Conservative revival

Desperately seeking an energized Conservative revival

Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre had an opportunity to reinvigorate his party this week at one of Canada’s most important political networking conferences. Unfortunately for the part, he delivered an underwhelming speech that lacked vision, energy and real answers to the challenges facing Canada’s conservative movement.

The buzz in Conservative circles this week isn’t about Pierre Poilievre

The buzz in Conservative circles this week isn’t about Pierre Poilievre

Pierre Poilievre’s speech to the conservative Canada Strong and Free Network conference in Ottawa on Thursday was a perfectly acceptable Opposition leader’s address. Modestly delivered and modestly received, it had much to be modest about. The problem was, it sounded like a reheated version of one of his speeches from last year’s election, a campaign in which he was rejected...

How Ottawa can fight back in a separatist referendum

How Ottawa can fight back in a separatist referendum

There is still a chance, however remote, that Alberta Premier Danielle Smith comes to her senses and realizes the risks associated with a separatist referendum aren’t worth the rewards they offer to her political career. But I certainly wouldn’t bet on it, and I doubt Prime Minister Mark Carney will either. And while overt federal involvement in any separatist referendum...

Ontario FAST shows what’s possible: Now make speed the standard for all priority cancer meds
Carney has two energy strategies — and there’s not enough room for both

Carney has two energy strategies — and there’s not enough room for both

The first international conference devoted to moving the world off of oil, gas and coal closed last week in Santa Marta, Colombia, where more than 50 nations agreed to hold a follow-up summit and strike a new global panel to draft a roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels. It was co-hosted by Colombia and the Netherlands, both middle powers, working...

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Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith to resign federal seat this summer following GTA nomination loss

Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith to resign federal seat this summer following GTA nomination loss

Despite losing a nomination contest to run for the Ontario Liberals over the weekend, federal Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith says he plans to follow through on his plan to resign his seat in the House of Commons before MPs rise for the summer. “I am going to resign my seat by the end of the parliamentary session to ensure that...

Separatist leader behind voter list leak unco-operative: Elections Alberta

Separatist leader behind voter list leak unco-operative: Elections Alberta

The man at the centre of a massive public data leak isn't co-operating with an investigation by Elections Alberta, says the agency. Chief electoral officer Gordon McClure said in a statement that David Parker, leader of the Centurion Project, has so far refused to comply with a cease-and-desist letter sent last week. The letter says Parker is required to sign...

Government extends contracts of 750 pay centre workers to manage job cuts

Government extends contracts of 750 pay centre workers to manage job cuts

OTTAWA -- The federal government is extending the contracts of about 750 term workers at its pay centre to manage a surge in expected job cuts.

Parti Quebecois leader worries -- without proof -- that Ottawa is spying on his party

Parti Quebecois leader worries -- without proof -- that Ottawa is spying on his party

Parti Quebecois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon says he's worried the federal government is spying on his party. St-Pierre Plamondon admits he has no proof but says there's a long history of spying and surveillance against his party. The Parti Quebecois is leading the polls with only months to go before October's general election and has promised to hold a sovereignty...

Former minister says energy project review changes could cause further delays

Former minister says energy project review changes could cause further delays

The former environment minister who helped to create the Impact Assessment Agency eight years ago says the federal government's proposal to change how pipelines are assessed risks delaying those projects even further. "I'm not saying you couldn't improve the process. But trying to jam through projects and making major changes, similar to what we saw under Stephen Harper, isn't going...

Liberal MP Erskine-Smith challenges provincial nomination loss

Liberal MP Erskine-Smith challenges provincial nomination loss

Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith filed a notice of appeal Tuesday to the provincial Liberals, challenging the result of a nomination race that he lost. Erskine-Smith was vying to represent the provincial party in the upcoming Scarborough Southwest byelection ahead of an intended bid for the leadership of the party. He lost Saturday to Ahsanul Hafiz by a slim margin then...

Zelenskyy says Ukraine has a 'drone deal' with Canada in the works

Zelenskyy says Ukraine has a 'drone deal' with Canada in the works

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his country has started preparations for a military drone deal with Canada. In a post on social media, he says 20 countries are already working with Ukraine on similar deals. The Canadian Press has reached out to National Defence Minister David McGuinty and Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand for comment. Prime Minister Mark Carney's office...

Doug Ford says he won't attack other bids in his push for Toronto as defence bank HQ

Doug Ford says he won't attack other bids in his push for Toronto as defence bank HQ

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he doesn't believe in attacking other cities' bids to host a multinational defence bank as he makes his own pitch for Toronto as the best choice for the project. Ford made the comments in a news conference today after he was asked to respond to allegations that Toronto officials have been lobbying for their city...

Alberta's chief electoral officer wants pause on sharing electors list until law amended

Alberta's chief electoral officer wants pause on sharing electors list until law amended

Elections Alberta estimating 33 million ballots required for October referendum. Alberta’s chief electoral officer says the province’s list of electors shouldn’t be shared with any political parties until the legislature makes changes to better protect Albertans’ personal information. Speaking to reporters for the first time since his announcement last month that the personal information of nearly three million voters may...

‘It’s a matter of respect’: forest and wildland firefighters battling Ottawa over silviculture classification ‘insult’

‘It’s a matter of respect’: forest and wildland firefighters battling Ottawa over silviculture classification ‘insult’

As Canada prepares for another “challenging” fire season, provincial and private-sector wildland and forest firefighters are intensifying their push for federal recognition and respect for the public safety work they already perform. “We know we’re heading into another very dangerous wildfire season, and these firefighters need to head into it knowing that we’ve got their back,” said NDP MP Gord...

Separatist leader accused of misusing Alberta electors list refuses to co-operate with investigators

Separatist leader accused of misusing Alberta electors list refuses to co-operate with investigators

The leader of the separatist organization accused of misusing Alberta’s list of electors by providing hundreds of supporters with access to private information belonging to 2.9 million residents is refusing to co-operate with investigators. David Parker, the political organizer behind the Centurion Project, is stonewalling Elections Alberta, according to a statement from the head of the agency. “I can confirm...

Liberals 45.5, Conservatives 33.4 and NDP 8.8. - there has been downward pressure on NDP support in the period following the NDP leadership race

Liberals 45.5, Conservatives 33.4 and NDP 8.8. - there has been downward pressure on NDP support in the period following the NDP leadership race

In this week’s political tracking, the Liberal’s currently have a 12 point lead over the Conservatives. Of note there has been downward pressure on NDP support in the period following the NDP leadership race. The Canadian top issue of concern remains centered on the economy. Jobs and the economy lead, followed by inflation and relations with the United States.”

'It has been devastating,' U.S. spirits group says about Canadian alcohol boycotts

'It has been devastating,' U.S. spirits group says about Canadian alcohol boycotts

Distilled Spirits Council of the United States says global exports decreased in 2025 partly because of Canada. Whether at the grocery store or the NSLC, Martha Reynolds pays attention to where products are from. "I'm doing my very best to not buy American," she said outside a Halifax location of the province's Crown-run alcohol retailer. For alcohol, this means bourbon...

The never-ending effort to expand First Nation status

The never-ending effort to expand First Nation status

The federal government has known for decades that the second-generation cut-off is legally problematic. Despite nearly three years of consultations, the minister says more are needed before addressing it

Advocates demand release of RCMP-China co-operation agreement at William Majcher trial

Advocates demand release of RCMP-China co-operation agreement at William Majcher trial

Security experts and human rights advocates are sounding the alarm about the renewal of a co-operation agreement between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and China’s Ministry of Public Security as troubling details surface at a foreign interference trial. Court documents filed at the trial of alleged double agent William Majcher reveals that at least 25 Canadian residents were targeted by...

Untapped growth potential in Canada’s wine sector hindered by trade barriers, taxes: report

Untapped growth potential in Canada’s wine sector hindered by trade barriers, taxes: report

Canadian wineries could be adding billions more to this country’s GDP in the years ahead if the barriers they are facing were to be addressed, new analysis finds. At a time where Prime Minister Mark Carney is pushing to strengthen domestic industries, there’s significant untapped growth potential in the wine sector, according to a new Deloitte report commissioned by Wine...

MP calls on Canadians to fill out census as some express privacy concerns

MP calls on Canadians to fill out census as some express privacy concerns

As some Canadians claim that the federal government's national census violates their privacy, a Liberal member of Parliament is calling on them to fill out their 2026 census forms for the good of their communities. Canadians have been asked to fill out the census form by May 12, though Statistics Canada says that's a "reference date" rather than a deadline...

Environment Canada disbands radar research team amid cuts to weather services

Environment Canada disbands radar research team amid cuts to weather services

Environment and Climate Change Canada has quietly disbanded the team behind the country’s upgraded weather radar network and disconnected some radio programming, changes that critics say could affect storm forecasting and emergency communications. Experts and advocates are warning that the ECCC’s reductions to weather-related services could hamper Canada’s ability to track, forecast and warn the public about severe weather events...

'Kicking it into gear': Jason Kenney says pro-Canada forces must counter separatism

'Kicking it into gear': Jason Kenney says pro-Canada forces must counter separatism

Former Alberta premier Jason Kenney says it's high time federal MPs take a stand and fight against those who wish to see Canada torn apart. Kenney, also a former federal cabinet minister, shared a stage at the University of Calgary on Monday with an unlikely ally -- Calgary Liberal MP Corey Hogan. "We may just be 150 days away from...

'Unwanted wherever you go': New Canadian asylum law leaves some migrants in limbo

'Unwanted wherever you go': New Canadian asylum law leaves some migrants in limbo

When a 26-year-old Haitian mother and her young daughter crossed into Quebec from the United States through forest trails on a freezing night in January, she had dreams of a fresh start in Canada. The woman was leaving behind a country she felt no longer wanted her and thought Canada would be different. But soon after she arrived, a new...

Former Progressive Conservative justice minister joins the Nova Scotia Liberal Party

Former Progressive Conservative justice minister joins the Nova Scotia Liberal Party

Becky Druhan, Nova Scotia's former justice minister and Independent member of the legislature, has joined the provincial Liberals and plans to run for party leadership. Druhan represents the Lunenburg West riding in Nova Scotia's South Shore and was elected twice as a member of Premier Tim Houston's Progressive Conservatives. She left the party in the fall citing differences with the...

Steven Guilbeault evasive about political future after criticizing major projects reform

Steven Guilbeault evasive about political future after criticizing major projects reform

Liberal MP Steven Guilbeault, a former federal environment minister, remained evasive about his political future after starkly criticizing his government’s new proposal to speed up Canada’s regulatory process for major projects. Guilbeault has been the talk of the town in Ottawa ever since he said in media interviews on Friday and over the weekend that Prime Minister Mark Carney’s proposed...

Smith says caucus executive director didn't report voter list meeting to higher-ups

Smith says caucus executive director didn't report voter list meeting to higher-ups

Premier Danielle Smith says the buck stops with her caucus when it comes to questions over why Smith didn't know sooner about a massive breach of private information on Albertans. Smith's caucus has confirmed one of their staffers was at an April 16 meeting in which private information on Albertans was shown on an app. Smith says the caucus staffer...

If Erskine-Smith says nomination was unfair, prove it: Interim Ontario Liberal leader

If Erskine-Smith says nomination was unfair, prove it: Interim Ontario Liberal leader

The interim leader of the Ontario Liberal Party says a nomination race this weekend to select a byelection candidate was fair, and if the unsuccessful contestant -- Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith -- wants to call that into question, he should "prove it." Erskine-Smith was vying to represent the provincial party in the upcoming Scarborough Southwest byelection ahead of an intended...

MPs, senators set to cut back U.S. exchange travel, despite pressure on trade file

MPs, senators set to cut back U.S. exchange travel, despite pressure on trade file

MPs and senators are set to drastically reduce interparliamentary exchanges with the U.S. Senate and Congress, despite multi-party efforts to save a crucial trade deal with the United States. Parliamentary funding for intergovernmental legislative exchanges has been flat for years, yet fees have been rising for participation in interparliamentary groups such as those linked to the Commonwealth and NATO.

Canada gave citizenship to a terrorist. Revoking it has been ‘ridiculously’ slow

Canada gave citizenship to a terrorist. Revoking it has been ‘ridiculously’ slow

On May 31, 2001, a former Pakistan army captain named Tahawwur Hussain Rana swore the oath of citizenship in front of an Ottawa judge, who anointed him a Canadian.

Economic growth now tops environment as priority in energy policy, poll suggests

Economic growth now tops environment as priority in energy policy, poll suggests

More Canadians now say economic growth should be a bigger priority in Canada's energy policy than protecting the environment, a new Angus Reid Institute report suggests. The pollster released a report Monday indicating 61 per cent of Canadians now see economic growth as the biggest priority in energy policy. The question offered two options on the top priority shaping federal...

More public servants needed to administer military mobilization plan: documents

More public servants needed to administer military mobilization plan: documents

The Defence department will need more money to hire additional public servants and military personnel to handle the influx of 300,000 Canadians into a new mobilization force, according to federal government documents. The mobilization plan now being developed is an initiative being pushed by Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Jennie Carignan.

Liberals Lead But Carney Approval Continues Slide

Liberals Lead But Carney Approval Continues Slide

The latest Weekly Federal Tracker from Liaison Strategies shows the Liberal Party, led by Prime Minister Mark Carney, holding an 11-point lead over Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives but the Prime Minister's approval rating has fallen to 58%. If a federal election were held today among decided and leaning voters, the Liberals would receive 44% of the vote, followed by the Conservatives...

Trump goes and a Democrat occupies the White House? Carney still leads, poll says

Trump goes and a Democrat occupies the White House? Carney still leads, poll says

Many Canadians and Americans have at least one thing in common: They’d like to see someone other than Donald Trump in the White House. In the United States, this bias largely falls along partisan lines, but in Canada, resentment over the president’s “51st state” rhetoric and punishing trade tariffs is held by a majority of people. Polls show that majorities...



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US grocery prices rose in April, but gas spikes weren't the only reason

US grocery prices rose in April, but gas spikes weren't the only reason

Americans paid more for their groceries last month, but high gasoline prices resulting from the Iran war were only one of the reasons why.

Brad Raffensperger became famous by defying Trump. Now he wants Georgia Republicans to forget that

Brad Raffensperger became famous by defying Trump. Now he wants Georgia Republicans to forget that

CHAMBLEE, Ga. (AP) -- Being as well known as Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger would be a dream for many ambitious politicians.

FBI Director Kash Patel denies drinking allegations in heated Senate exchange

FBI Director Kash Patel denies drinking allegations in heated Senate exchange

WASHINGTON (AP) -- FBI Director Kash Patel angrily lashed out at a Democratic lawmaker at a budget hearing Tuesday, calling allegations that he drinks excessively on the job and has been unreachable to his staff at times "unequivocally, categorically false."

Obama meets with Talarico, aiming to boost Democrat's bid for US Senate in Texas

Obama meets with Talarico, aiming to boost Democrat's bid for US Senate in Texas

AUSTIN (AP) -- Former President Barack Obama met with U.S. Senate candidate James Talarico Tuesday in Texas, putting his support behind a campaign that Democrats see as a shot, if a long one, for the party to win statewide in the reliably conservative state.

International

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The Canadian inspiration for Britain's surging right-wing Reform party

The Canadian inspiration for Britain's surging right-wing Reform party

After election victory, Reform UK leader says Canadian prairie populist Preston Manning is someone to emulate. Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage received a hero's welcome when he arrived late last week at a victory party in Chelmsford, an Essex commuter town on the outskirts of London, a world away from that city's centre of power. The silver-tongued leader of this...

Senate bill proposes giving Ottawa the power to confiscate Russian state assets

Senate bill proposes giving Ottawa the power to confiscate Russian state assets

A Senate bill headed for the House of Commons proposes to give the federal government explicit power to confiscate the assets of foreign states that are held in Canada, a measure that could help repurpose Russian funds for Ukraine’s reconstruction. Analysts say, however, that Prime Minister Mark Carney, with his majority in the Commons, will have to weigh the risks...

U.S. ambassador cancels speaking appearance in Ottawa due to ‘important’ meetings with White House officials

U.S. ambassador cancels speaking appearance in Ottawa due to ‘important’ meetings with White House officials

U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra has cancelled a planned speaking engagement in Ottawa. Just over one hour before Hoekstra was scheduled to be a featured speaker at the 2026 Canada Strong and Free Networking Conference in Ottawa, organizers announced the ambassador’s fireside chat had been cancelled. “Today’s programming has been adjusted as Ambassador Hoekstra was called to D.C. for urgent meetings,”...

Senior diplomat skeptical of Carney's middle powers pitch

Senior diplomat skeptical of Carney's middle powers pitch

Malaysia's high commissioner in Canada says she is skeptical about Prime Minister Mark Carney's push to have middle powers band together against the great power of the world's dominant nations. Shazelina Abidin told the Canadian Global Affairs Institute's annual trade conference in Ottawa on Tuesday that Carney's speech at the World Economic Forum was profound, not because of its content...

World doesn’t grasp implications of ‘largest energy crisis in history’: IEA executive director

World doesn’t grasp implications of ‘largest energy crisis in history’: IEA executive director

The head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) said the world “has not yet completely understood” the major economic and political implications of the war in Iran, as Fatih Birol repeated earlier comments that the war and ongoing closure of the Straight of Hormuz represents the “largest energy crisis in history.” Speaking in Ottawa at a fireside chat with Tim...

Think Tank

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Unseating responsible government: Judicial interference in Canada’s parliamentary democracy

Unseating responsible government: Judicial interference in Canada’s parliamentary democracy

When the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms came into force in 1982, many warned that it would undermine the foundations of Canada’s system of parliamentary democracy and usher in a new age of judicial supremacy. For a time, those concerns appeared overstated. Canadian courts exercised a degree of restraint, and the basic contours of Westminster parliamentary governance remained intact...

Layers of Medicare dysfunction

Layers of Medicare dysfunction

Invisible internal trade barriers: How Canada’s fragmented, opaque procurement systems limit competition and drive up spending

Invisible internal trade barriers: How Canada’s fragmented, opaque procurement systems limit competition and drive up spending

Canada’s declining productivity and weak competitiveness are increasingly tied to structural barriers that limit competition in domestic markets. One of the most consequential – and overlooked – of these barriers lies in public procurement. Accounting for 13.4 per cent of GDP, or roughly $350 billion annually – government purchasing should exert strong downward pressure on costs and expand opportunities for...


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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

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...

This bizarre F-35 crash is a red flag for Canada

This bizarre F-35 crash is a red flag for Canada

An F-35 crash in Alaska should give shivers to Canada’s military. The pilot survived thankfully, but the $200 million plane was completely destroyed.

Carney’s sovereign wealth fund gets it backwards

Carney’s sovereign wealth fund gets it backwards

By now, most of you reading this column are aware of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s announcement earlier this week that the government is launching a sovereign wealth fund (entitled the Canada Strong Fund). There is, in theory, nothing wrong with such an idea. Indeed, the logic behind such a fund is quite sound.

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Moore/Butts -- Is Jason Kenney Crying Wolf?

Moore/Butts -- Is Jason Kenney Crying Wolf?

The former Alberta Premier wants Canadians to wake up and realize they have to speak out to show Albertans that being in Canada matters. Is he right and what does our past tell us about what needs to be done? Plus, James Moore and Gerald Butts also have something to say about Canada's increasing ties to Europe.

What the Alberta data leak can teach us about separatists

What the Alberta data leak can teach us about separatists

Experts are calling it the largest data breach in Canadian history, sparking fears for the safety of all Canadians - everyone from public figures to victims of domestic abuse.

Should Canadian airports be privatized?

Should Canadian airports be privatized?

As part of its Spring economic update, the federal government revealed that it’s considering privatizing the country’s airports. The Prime Minister says it could free up money to fund other major projects and improve air travel for Canadians.

Who To Believe -- Iran or the United States?

Who To Believe -- Iran or the United States?

The question above seems almost ridiculous, that we would even consider believing the world's worst terrorist government before believing the country we once thought of as the leader of the free world. But that's where we are with the latest news from the Iran War.