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index.feed.received.today — 18 avril 2025National Post

Jamie Sarkonak: Who won the debate? Poilievre, easy

18 avril 2025 à 07:11
There is no doubt as to who won Thursday night’s English-language debate. That achievement went to Pierre Poilievre, who, while delivering a coherent message about his own hopeful vision for a future, more prosperous Canada, ran circles around a sluggish Mark Carney and deflected the volley of Jagmeet Singh’s pea-gravel-sized interruptions. Read More

Judge rules Frank Stronach sex crimes case can advance to trial

18 avril 2025 à 00:01
“I don’t even know these women,” Frank Stronach told a small entourage of supporters this week after facing complainants accusing him of sex crimes for the first time in court. Speaking during a break in a preliminary hearing that examined two of the most serious charges he faces, the 92-year-old billionaire stopped talking after being told journalists were within earshot. Read More
index.feed.received.yesterday — 17 avril 2025National Post

As it happened: How Poilievre, Singh, Blanchet attacked Carney in federal leaders debate

17 avril 2025 à 22:56
The leaders of Canada’s major federal parties faced off Thursday night in the second, and final, nationally televised debate of the election campaign. The English-language debate took place just 24 hours after the leaders battled each other in the French-language debate. The National Post has video of the debate, below. Review our live coverage from National Post reporters Catherine Lévesque, Christopher Nardi, and Ottawa bureau chief Stuart Thomson in our live blog, below. Can’t see the blog? View it on the National Post. Read More

Michael Taube: Are cracks developing in the Liberal strategy to lionize the progressive vote?

17 avril 2025 à 20:00
Since Mark Carney became Prime Minister on March 9, the Liberals have been leading in most opinion polls. The reason for this significant shift was fear, anger and revulsion about U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs. This, in turn, was combined with an unfounded belief that Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre was Trump’s Canadian equivalent, in spite of the fact the two leaders have vastly different political and ideological beliefs. Read More

Pierre Poilievre gets personal in exclusive new interview: Full Comment bonus podcast

17 avril 2025 à 17:17
In a rare, casual interview, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre talks to Brian Lilley in this special bonus episode about what it’s been like campaigning for an election with his wife and kids, what he thinks about people saying he’s too “angry” and what he does to stay in shape during the race. He also discusses what he makes of provincial Conservatives in Ontario publicly criticizing his campaign, and fear tactics being used against him to scare seniors about their benefits. Of course, Poilievre also gets into his plan for handling U.S. President Donald Trump, the problem of younger Canadians losing hope in the future of their country and his plans to improve housing and the cost of living. (Recorded April 12, 2025.) Read More

Chris Selley: The spectre of Trudeau overshadows Carney’s French debate

17 avril 2025 à 13:05
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre landed a few pretty solid blows against Liberal leader Mark Carney during the French-language debate in Montreal on Wednesday night. Whether those blows will matter to Quebecers, who will have comprised the vast majority of the audience for the debate, it would be foolish to prognosticate. Read More

Jamie Sarkonak: Why Poilievre’s three strikes plan for violent offenders has promise

17 avril 2025 à 12:00
The worst of Canada’s academics are allergic to the thought of locking violent criminals up for any length of time, which is why they began to foam at the mouth when Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre announced his plan to give escalating sentences to repeat offenders in the form of a three-strikes law. Read More

Terry Newman: Won’t somebody please think of the mass murderers?

17 avril 2025 à 12:00
On Monday, during a campaign stop in Montreal, Pierre Poilievre had the audacity to suggest that his government would use the notwithstanding clause to overturn a Supreme Court decision that ruled that consecutive parole ineligibility periods for multiple murderers was "cruel and unusual punishment" and violated the murderer's human dignity. For most reasonable Canadians, this is a no-brainer. Liberal Leader Mark Carney, however, rushed to condemn the move as "dangerous," while CBC's Power and Politics host David Cochrane and his panel guest Rob Russo suggested it was a solution for a problem that doesn't exist. But the problem of light murder sentencing does exist, and not just for mass murderers. Read More

As it happened: Mark Carney attacked from all sides in French leaders’ debate

16 avril 2025 à 22:38
The leaders of Canada’s major federal parties met Wednesday for the first nationally televised debate of the 2025 election campaign. The French-language debate was a key opportunity to win over francophone voters. Liberal Leader Mark Carney, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet took to the stage in Montreal in an attempt to win over undecided voters before Canadians cast their ballots on April 28. With polls showing a tight race between the Liberals and Conservatives, the NDP and the Bloc were battling to put their parties back on the national agenda. Carney was attacked from all sides but avoided a gaffe. Review the live coverage from National Post reporters Catherine Lévesque, Antoine Trépanier, Christopher Nardi, and Ottawa bureau chief Stuart Thomson in our live blog, below, or watch the full video of the debate. Can’t see the blog? View it on the National Post. Read More
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