John Woodside
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Analysis, Politics
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February 26th 2025
When it comes to climate action, there is little middle ground and practically no one is satisfied with the status quo, Ottawa admits to United Nations in emissions filing. Where that leaves Canada in the coming decade is anyone's guess.
Last week, Progressive Conservative Dennis King stepped down as premier of Prince Edward Island, and on Tuesday, Liberal Andrew Furey announced that he was calling it quits as premier of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Ricochet editor Ethan Cox filed a complaint to the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission, which oversees the RCMP. The commission forced the RCMP to formally apologize late last week in a blistering report against the force’s boundary-crossing tactics against media.
Matteo Cimellaro
News, Urban Indigenous Communities in Ottawa
| February 25th 2025
Environmentalists are urging the British Columbia government to take stronger action against U.S. coal exports, proposing a ban rather than a carbon tax, to reduce harmful emissions.
An upcoming wave of retirements from Canada’s rapidly-growing nuclear energy sector is prompting two Ontario schools to start training the next generation of professionals.
Saying no to LNG and locking it out of current and future zero-emission pathways for the marine shipping sector is crucial to avoiding runaway climate impacts and tax payer boondoggles.
The candidates — former central banker Mark Carney, former finance minister Chrystia Freeland, former government House leader Karina Gould and former MP Frank Baylis — spent much of the debate talking about the threat Trump poses to Canada's economy and sovereignty.
Canadians have taken to social media wondering why Google Maps was referring to some provincial parks as "state" parks, an incorrect designation that has ruffled feathers at a time of heightened tension between Canada and the United States.