Opinion
Canada is taking an outsized role in the construction of the post-American world

Canada is taking an outsized role in the construction of the post-American world

Annual gatherings of the great democracies in the age of Donald Trump have acquired a certain … rhythm. There is the meeting that takes place before the President arrives, when all is as it usually is between world leaders of the same broad ideological hue: convivial open sessions, chummy photo-ops, urgent side-conferences. Then there is what happens after he gets...

Twitter is poisoning the Conservative movement

Twitter is poisoning the Conservative movement

When Elon Musk bought Twitter in 2022, he promised to restore its commitment to free speech, eliminate its progressive bias and otherwise preserve its role as the “de-facto public square.” Instead, as anyone who has had the misfortune of spending time there knows, he turned it into a right-wing echo chamber — one increasingly populated with spam, crypto scammers and...

Carney may lead the Trump ‘resistance,’ but Canadian casualties are mounting

Carney may lead the Trump ‘resistance,’ but Canadian casualties are mounting

Real life does not follow the binary framework of the movies, where a Bond-like hero vanquishes a grandiose, arrogant, greedy villain

Mark Carney has said nothing about Alberta’s health care reforms. That’s a good thing

Mark Carney has said nothing about Alberta’s health care reforms. That’s a good thing

It’s not often that a prime minister is lauded for something that he doesn’t do, but Prime Minister Mark Carney is currently being celebrated by six policy organizations for his inaction on an important Canadian regulatory matter. In an open letter published late last month, the CEO of the Canadian Health Policy Institute, the deputy director of domestic policy for...

I'm a Conservative who wants to win! That doesn't make me a Liberal

I'm a Conservative who wants to win! That doesn't make me a Liberal

I am sick to death of being told that wanting Conservatives to win elections somehow makes me a Liberal. It's one of the stupidest ideas ever to infect the Canadian political right (and there have been some doozies in recent years), and it has become an excuse for failure. Apparently, if you care whether Conservatives can actually form government, you're...

Smith's big Stampede rollouts aimed at cutting separatist support

Smith's big Stampede rollouts aimed at cutting separatist support

The grandaddy of all Stampede political announcements came on July 12, 2004, when PC Premier Ralph Klein held up a sign that said: Paid In Full. Klein declared the provincial debt dead and buried after many years of harsh cost-cutting. The words and the photo sped around the country and beyond. Nobody paid off all debt in those days. Within...

Trump’s baldfaced America 250 corruption is a reminder to the world, and a warning

Trump’s baldfaced America 250 corruption is a reminder to the world, and a warning

There are plenty of ways to celebrate America’s ongoing semiquincentennial: see a fight on the White House lawn, watch the World Cup in the shadow of the Capitol, visit a Great American State Fair on the National Mall. However they celebrate, Americans will likely see banners advertising Freedom250, a private vehicle for outright corruption cooked up by President Donald Trump...



Defiant Pierre Poilievre fights back, vows to keep exposing Carney as a fake

Defiant Pierre Poilievre fights back, vows to keep exposing Carney as a fake

He's not giving up. He's not backing down. If he was a boxer you'd need to knock him out. The man insists he is not throwing in the towel. He will continue to throw down the gauntlet. Wasn't so long ago Pierre Poilievre had the momentum, drew the huge crowds at rallies across Canada, attracted the young and the working...

The humiliation of Pierre Poilievre continues

The humiliation of Pierre Poilievre continues

I’m starting to believe that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is the subject of an elaborate, prolonged hazing ritual. The frat house in this scenario might have better decorum and nicer furniture than those found on college campuses, but the initiation process is the same: subject the pledge to a succession of humiliating rituals to see if and how long he...

Jamil Jivani’s comments about Pride show how he wants you to hate him

Jamil Jivani’s comments about Pride show how he wants you to hate him

The Conservative MP’s culture war posts about Prime Minister Mark Carney's attendance at Toronto Pride are bait for persecution points

Carney starts to leave his mark on the Senate

Carney starts to leave his mark on the Senate

Is this the end of Trudeau's independent upper chamber? Though it is perhaps not foremost on their minds when they gain power, every prime minister has the opportunity to put their stamp on the Senate. And if there was particular speculation about what Mark Carney might do in regards to Parliament's upper house, it is because Justin Trudeau's stamp on...

Carney’s oil patch wishes might really come true

Carney’s oil patch wishes might really come true

The Prime Minister's grand bargain is just intentions for now. But it's harder for Alberta’s separatists to say he's trying to hobble their industry.

Why we should laugh off Doug Ford and Danielle Smith’s costly pipeline scheme

Why we should laugh off Doug Ford and Danielle Smith’s costly pipeline scheme

Just how nonsensical does a pitch for a new oil pipeline have to be, in the current political climate, to be rejected out of hand? Courtesy of Doug Ford and Danielle Smith, we’re about to find out.

Taxpayers to buy Alberta another pipeline in far-reaching shakeup of Canada’s energy picture

Taxpayers to buy Alberta another pipeline in far-reaching shakeup of Canada’s energy picture

When it comes to theatre of the absurd in public life, nothing tops pipeline politics. There was Alberta Premier Danielle Smith—who has accused the Liberals of hamstringing Big Oil, crushing her province’s aspirations, and inciting Albertans to break up the country—turning to the feds to build her long-sought new pipeline.

It’s good that we’re building pipelines, but not so good that we’re paying for them

It’s good that we’re building pipelines, but not so good that we’re paying for them

Suddenly, pipelines are all the rage. Time was when you couldn’t get a pipeline built in this country, for love or money. Three pipeline proposals – Northern Gateway, Energy East and Keystone XL – came and went, dead of political hostility, regulatory obstacles or both. Governments, some of them anyway, seemed positively eager to discourage them. Federal legislation, Bill C-69...

Mark Carney senate appointments are the break from Trudeau no one asked for

Mark Carney senate appointments are the break from Trudeau no one asked for

Mark Carney had better hope that Tom Pitfield and Richard Martel are good senators. If they are not, it will be his fault. Carney announced the two appointments to the Senate on Tuesday, setting aside the non-partisan process established by Justin Trudeau who reformed the Senate appointment process for good reason. Every prime minister before him used the Senate as...



This is why Carney is succeeding

This is why Carney is succeeding

Do politicians start parades, or merely get in front of them? That’s a question Canadians might be asking this week, following news that the government was polling them on the issue of oil pipelines last fall — just days before Prime Minister Mark Carney announced an agreement with Alberta to explore building a new one to B.C.

Does Pierre Poilievre actually want to be prime minister?

Does Pierre Poilievre actually want to be prime minister?

Instead of building a winning coalition against Mark Carney, Poilievre keeps picking unnecessary fights with Conservatives who should be helping him win.

Ukraine has exposed a Russian weakness. It’s up to NATO to fully exploit it

Ukraine has exposed a Russian weakness. It’s up to NATO to fully exploit it

As NATO leaders gather in Ankara, Turkey, this week, much of the attention will inevitably be focusing on U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest complaints about burden-sharing and American leadership. That’s understandable. But, if the summit becomes consumed by familiar political theatrics, it will miss a far more important strategic opportunity. Ukraine has exposed a vulnerability in Russia’s war economy that...

Canada picks an ally in its new wave of geopolitical military spending

Canada picks an ally in its new wave of geopolitical military spending

The South Korean bidder, Hanwha, backed by its government, promised to put money into a Canadian steel plant and put commercials on TV. Germany’s TKMS proposed later subproduction in Canada and lined up Canadian subcontractors. Somewhere in there, on top of the bidding war for highly exaggerated “economic benefits,” was a choice between two top-notch diesel submarines, a key future...

Expensive submarines are the cost to redeem years of Liberal defence complacency

Expensive submarines are the cost to redeem years of Liberal defence complacency

Just over two years ago, the Liberal government released its defence policy review, Our North, Strong and Free, which purported to focus on Arctic sovereignty by defending Canada’s coastline from maritime and airborne threats.

En Route to NATO, Carney Doubles Down on NATO

En Route to NATO, Carney Doubles Down on NATO

While the Carney government bills itself as Canada’s “new government”, it has gone with the conventional choice in selecting a German-Norwegian consortium to supply and maintain up to 12 new submarines for the Royal Canadian Navy’s Canadian Patrol Submarine Project (CPSP). After a monthslong contest between South Korean shipbuilder Hanwha and the German/Norwegian consortium TKMS, Prime Minister Mark Carney went...

Don’t fret about Trump rejecting the CUSMA trade extension — if anything, he did Canada a favour

Don’t fret about Trump rejecting the CUSMA trade extension — if anything, he did Canada a favour

Donald Trump has often been described as unpredictable. And that’s true — but when he chose not to renew the CUSMA trade deal, no one could claim to be surprised. The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement could have been renewed by all three parties on its existing terms for an additional 16 years. Having announced this week that it would not be...

Canada-U.S. relationship is one bad president away from disaster

Canada-U.S. relationship is one bad president away from disaster

Prime Minister Mark Carney is proving that politics at its most important is a big-picture game. Which is to say, it isn’t only about the price of gas, the cost of housing, and the dozens of other kitchen-table issues that normally dominate the public debate.

A prime minister from Alberta firmly closes the door on the Trudeau era

A prime minister from Alberta firmly closes the door on the Trudeau era

Mark Carney keeps saying he’s running a new government, not just a sequel to the Justin Trudeau years. This week, Canadians may finally have to admit he’s right. As the door opens to a new Alberta pipeline, Carney closed the door on the Trudeau era.


Donald Trump offers a master class in what not to do at 24 Sussex

Donald Trump offers a master class in what not to do at 24 Sussex

Let’s thank U.S. President Donald Trump for one thing. As Ottawa launches a national competition to restore 24 Sussex Drive, the White House renovations are a lesson in what not to do. A master class, really. Trump is building to glorify himself. The “goldening” of the Oval Office, the transformation of the Rose Garden into a Mar-a-Lago-style patio designed to...

When Mark Carney made a pipeline deal with Alberta, the real winner was B.C.

When Mark Carney made a pipeline deal with Alberta, the real winner was B.C.

British Columbia Premier David Eby, had, in U.S. President Donald Trump’s words, “no cards” to play during contentious pipeline talks, but he walked away this week with a winning hand, leaving Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith with successes to boast of, but with major political wounds, too. When Carney and Smith signed a memorandum of understanding...

Canada's Greatest Competitive Advantage Isn't AI. It's Talent.
Trump is closer to the vision of America’s founding fathers than Canadians think

Trump is closer to the vision of America’s founding fathers than Canadians think

Enlightened Americans will watch in horror today as Donald Trump presides over a grotesque national birthday celebration, recoiling at the president’s kingly indulgences, seeing them as affronts to the memory of the noble patriots who established their republic 250 years ago.

This one agreement with the U.S. is a betrayal of Canada’s values

This one agreement with the U.S. is a betrayal of Canada’s values

When Canada signed the Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States in 2002, the bargain rested on one assumption: that the U.S. offers a fair, humane process to people fleeing persecution. That assumption is no longer true, and this week the U.S. Supreme Court made it official. In two rulings on June 25, the Court sided with the Trump...

Welcome to the Mark Carney major projects sweepstakes

Welcome to the Mark Carney major projects sweepstakes

One of the perverse joys of politics is when an elected official looks you in the eye and tells you that the thing going on directly in front of your face is not happening. This happened twice during Mark Carney’s Oprah giveaway day on Thursday: You get a port! And you get a tunnel! And everybody gets a pipeline, whether...

250 Things Still Right With America
Canada and America were born in different ways. Even today, it shows

Canada and America were born in different ways. Even today, it shows

Canada’s national holiday and America’s fall within a few days of each other, yet celebrate two very different things. Each celebrates their respective country’s birth, of course, but they define this in different ways. The American commemorates a breach, an abrupt and indeed violent rupture with the imperial power; the Canadian, the date scheduled for its inception as a federal...

Restoring 24 Sussex is worthy, but Ottawa shouldn’t be competing for charity dollars to do it

Restoring 24 Sussex is worthy, but Ottawa shouldn’t be competing for charity dollars to do it

Prime Minister Mark Carney deserves credit for doing the thing that prime ministers before him have been too pusillanimous to do for decades. While it shouldn’t be politically risky, really, to spend some money to refurbish the official residence of the Prime Minister ‐ which has been inhabited only by mice and insects for the last 10 years – this...

Premier Smith launches pipeline, but B.C. wins the pot

Premier Smith launches pipeline, but B.C. wins the pot

Mark Carney makes $17 billion in infrastructure pledges to B.C. on same day door opens to pipeline from Alberta to tidewater

Danielle Smith sees pipeline win, feels Alberta is now a long way from Trudeau

Danielle Smith sees pipeline win, feels Alberta is now a long way from Trudeau

Right after Alberta Premier Danielle Smith rolls out her pipeline plans to the country Thursday night she heads off to the Cowboys Music Festival. As the premier makes her way to Cowboys she sounds very happy. She is not claiming victory when the goal line is still down the field. But she and her government have clearly moved the yardsticks...

In Ankara, Trump May Not be NATO’s Biggest Problem

In Ankara, Trump May Not be NATO’s Biggest Problem

On July 6th and 7th, NATO leaders will gather at the presidential palace in Ankara for their annual summit. As at every heads-of-government meeting at which the United States is present these days, all eyes will be on Donald Trump. Will he berate his fellow leaders for refusing to support the United States in its Iranian misadventure? Will he announce...

At 250 years old, America is barely recognizable

At 250 years old, America is barely recognizable

In a recent appearance at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, U.S. Vice-President JD Vance opened up about his admiration for the disgraced former Republican leader. In particular, Mr. Vance wanted to express his outrage over the fate Mr. Nixon met for his involvement in the Watergate scandal that ultimately forced his resignation as president in 1974. “If Watergate...

It’s time Canada cut diplomatic ties with Israel

It’s time Canada cut diplomatic ties with Israel

Israel’s right to defend itself “does not grant us the right to oppress others,” the Israeli newspaper Haaretz once warned in an editorial. Seizing new land requires ruling that land, and rule without representation brings resistance. In turn, it continued, “resistance brings in its wake oppression. Oppression brings in its wake terrorism and counterterrorism.”

There is more bad news coming for separatists in Alberta

There is more bad news coming for separatists in Alberta

When the Alberta government announced the makeup of what was to be an impartial panel examining the economic cost of independence, a couple of the names raised eyebrows. Ted Morton would be taking part. The former provincial finance minister was a signatory to the infamous “firewall letter” that was published in 2001 and called for greater Alberta autonomy in Canada...

Carney’s condo controversy is a warning about two of his biggest liabilities

Carney’s condo controversy is a warning about two of his biggest liabilities

Mark Carney has only himself to blame, for the controversy that erupted last week when he announced a half-baked plan to buy up vacant condominiums. But the blowback, as strong as any he’s faced since becoming prime minister, may ultimately prove a blessing in disguise both for him and for the country

The Liberals are finally getting things right on national defence under Carney

The Liberals are finally getting things right on national defence under Carney

For all the ills former prime minister Justin Trudeau left his successor to face, the defence file has been a surprising bright spot. What makes this all the more remarkable is the fact that just 30 months ago, the then-head of the Royal Canadian Navy took to YouTube to declare that his team and equipment were in a “critical state.”...

Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

Who does Mark Carney think we are, anyway?

The Prime Minister has been telling a gleaming story about Canada, but is avoiding the dark clouds gathering ahead