The Parkland sale to Sunoco offers little benefit to Canada while risking jobs, innovation and sovereignty. Ottawa should say ...
“Who won [the] Cold War?” Hofstra University management professor John Ullman asked in a 1990 New York Times letter to the editor. “West Germany and Japan,” he argued, “simply by not wasting the ...
Canadians split on AI in government but broadly support shrinking the federal public service, with views shaped by trust and ideology.
Canada faces a personal support worker shortage as the aging population grows. Training programs lag despite government ...
Amidst the flurry of trade announcements ahead of the August 1 deadline to secure new tariff rates, one country ended up near the bottom of the pack, and it’s not the one you’d expect. Canada, a close ...
Canadians are facing yearly flood disasters while governments, builders and insurers debate about keeping our homes safe. We all know the weather is changing, so why are we still building where we ...
OTTAWA – As federal public servants race to wrap up an expenditure review the Liberals will use to map out massive change, the Carney government is learning how hard it is to shrink and reshape a ...
For the first time in two years, living standards have improved modestly for materially less well-off Canadians. The other piece of good news is the major improvement in seniors’ ability to afford ...
Concerns are growing that avian influenza could become a pandemic, resulting in possible widespread lockdowns and potential social as well as economic consequences similar to what occurred during ...
Image caption: In this 1997 photo, Clerk of the Privy Council Jocelyne Bourgon swears Arthur Eggleton into cabinet while Governor General Romeo LeBlanc and Prime Minister Jean Chretien look on. THE ...