Harper Steps Into Alberta Unity Fight as Referendum Battle Gets Bigger
A political tension that once lived mostly in petitions, panel discussions, and activist circles has moved squarely into the mainstream
A political tension that once lived mostly in petitions, panel discussions, and activist circles has moved squarely into the mainstream
Ottawa’s latest economic fight moved from spreadsheets to the House of Commons floor, where Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre tried to
Doug Ford’s sharp answer to Donald Trump’s “51st state” rhetoric cut through a noisy trade fight with one unmistakable message:
Canada’s economic story has become harder to read at exactly the moment the country wants clearer signals. Prime Minister Mark
Canada’s fighter-jet debate has moved from a long-running procurement file to a broader question about sovereignty, cost, and who Ottawa
Trade fights rarely arrive with a clean ending. More often, they shift by inches, hidden in proclamations, customs language and
Rising grocery bills have made warehouse shopping feel more essential than ever, but a big cart does not automatically mean
Canadian homeowners often notice the renewal premium first, but the real story usually sits in the details: deductibles, exclusions, rebuild
Canadian banking fees rarely arrive with drama. They show up as a few dollars on a statement, a small charge
Canadian households rarely feel a single dramatic jump all at once. More often, the squeeze arrives through a renewal notice,
Canadians have become used to checking receipts a little more closely. A coffee run, a phone bill, a concert ticket,
Dominic LeBlanc’s trip to Washington comes at an awkward moment for Canada: the calendar is moving faster than the negotiations.
Canada’s federal books ended the 2025-26 fiscal year with a deeper shortfall, as spending pressures moved faster than the government’s
A defence contract can sound abstract until it starts being sold in the language of paycheques, mill orders, and factory
For months, Washington could still argue that higher rates were a nuisance rather than a verdict. That is getting harder
A 40-cent hourly increase rarely looks dramatic until it lands on thousands of paycheques and payroll ledgers at once. As
Ottawa’s latest defence move is not just about buying new equipment. It is about deciding who gets a seat at
By the time Canada’s next jobs numbers arrive on Friday, June 5, the economic mood in Ottawa may already feel
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