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Interlibrary loans, training, professional development, catalogue system all at risk
Veterans of the Pierre Trudeau government, which won only a bare minority government four years after Trudeaumania, were in Ottawa this week to mark the 37th anniversary of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Species at risk could find survival tougher in Ontario under proposed changes from the Ford government.
The province’s economy is in a slump, but there is almost no chance that companies will ever do business the way they used to, writes Heather Scoffield.
The provincial New Democrats have complained to Elections Canada about the Progressive Conservative government’s gas pump stickers, which can net businesses who don’t post them a fine of $10,000 a day.
Greetings from Fortress Edmonton. On a colour map of Tuesday’s election result, Edmonton is an island of NDP orange in an ocean of UCP blue, writes Graham Thomson.
The battle over carbon pricing is just beginning in Canada’s courts of law and public opinion, but the bigger question is how it all ends, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
With a baby on the way, Marta Bedard says her future is uncertain given cuts to education by the Ford government.
The online survey found 61 per cent of respondents support a program of “massive” public spending to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change
In this exclusive excerpt from Jagmeet Singh’s new memoir, Love & Courage, the leader of the federal NDP speaks of his early life and family.
Vice-admiral’s legal team argued that testimony Michael Wernick gave to a parliamentary committee earlier this year opens the door for them to see the secret documents, over which the government has claimed solicitor-client privilege.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau must delay appointing a new justice to the Supreme Court until conducting an inquiry into the "damaging, politically motivated leaks" to the media about the 2017 nomination process, says Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer.
Canada’s automobile dealers say zero-emission vehicle sales have stalled since the Liberal government announced plans for a federal purchasing incentive last month that did not include a start date.
Ernie Hardeman says the province's vegetable procession industry's marketing and pricing system must be overhauled — two years after the previous Liberal government was forced to fire the Ontario Processing Vegetable Growers' entire board of directors.
A lawyer for the federal government argued in court Tuesday that Ottawa’s carbon-pricing scheme does not “displace” provincial authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, but rather sets a minimum standard to ensure its decision to fight climate change isn’t undermined by provinces that refuse to participate.
Marie-France Lalonde proposed the Sunshine Protection Act to provide more light in the evenings, and to end two clock changes a year that leave many people out-of-sorts for days at a time, often with disrupted sleep patterns, leading to health problems and traffic accidents.
In 2015, the Liberal government of Kathleen Wynne watered down legislation which had been implemented by her predecessor, Dalton McGuinty. Since then, the auditor general has complained that her office is no longer empowered to look at taxpayer-funded ads for accuracy, tone or context.
The number of households seeking social housing in Toronto had passed 100,000 by the end of 2018, according to the City of Toronto.
Premier Doug Ford’s government has fired the opening salvo in its advertising blitz against Ottawa’s controversial new carbon-pricing scheme.
Premier Doug Ford says “nothing is carved in stone, but we’re going to look at everything” to find efficiencies.
Premier Doug Ford says that surplus notices to teachers are typical at this time of year, “and then they all again end up getting hired.”
“There’s no way you can take 35 health agencies and whittle them down to 10 and make things better,” NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Monday.
The Canadian government’s behaviour toward Venezuela grossly contradicts its position on Cuba — Canada opposes sanctions against Cuba while levelling them against Venezuela.
Seven premiers have led their parties to defeat since Justin Trudeau became prime minister. That’s a trend the ruling federal Liberals might have to keep in mind as they look to their own re-election bid this fall, Chantal Hébert writes.
So far, Ontarians have little reason to trust that the Ford government is truly committed to child welfare, Tanya Talaga writes.
Justin Trudeau won’t have a new principal secretary before this fall’s federal election after losing his closest political adviser to the SNC-Lavalin controversy, Susan Delacourt writes.
Elected officials need to catch up with environmentally conscious consumers and businesses, not to mention the voters of tomorrow, who spilled into the streets of cities across Quebec last month to call for more action on climate change, Heather Scoffield writes.
A sit-down interview, Environment Minister Catherine McKenna explains Canada’s rationale for its climate change strategy.
Former justice minister is sticking by her refusal to comment on allegations that she was pressured by prime minister’s top aides to seek mediation instead of pursuing criminal charges against the Quebec construction giant.
The former justice minister is doing nothing to dispel the notion that she was dumped from the senior cabinet post for not helping out with a political favour, Susan Delacourt writes.
Jody Wilson-Raybould is in the best position to deny that she was pressured by the Prime Minister’s Office to intervene in the prosecution of SNC-Lavalin while she was justice minister. Her silence on the matter speaks volumes.
The Canadian engineering giant is taking a $1.24-billion write-down on assets for more deeply rooted reasons, writes David Olive.
Pierre Duhaime guilty of helping a public servant commit breach of trust around construction of a $1.3-billion Montreal hospital.