This week Mark Carney applied for the job he really wants: leader of a new "rules-based international order" centred around "middle powers." It is pretty much the same job that every Canadian prime minister, chafing at American power, has wanted. John Diefenbaker bristled at U.S. expectations that Canada host nuclear weapons, or support its Latin America strategy, and so hoped the British Commonwealth of Nations could exist as almost a rival to the United Nations. Pierre Trudeau embarrassed Richard Nixon by normalizing relations with China first, and Paul Martin oversaw the creation of the G20. Justin Trudeau, of course, tried to lecture the world about how Canada could lead the way on lowering greenhouse gas emissions. Read More
The Danish prime minister is travelling to Greenland on Friday for talks on the island’s future after President Donald Trump seemingly deescalated his threats to take over the Arctic territory. Read More
Every January, gym memberships surge, only to plummet by February as cancellations roll in. We’ve all resolved to shed a few pounds with the New Year, tempted by the latest miracle diet, metabolism hack, or injectable fix. Still, obesity rates and diet burnout continue to climb. Read More
U.S. President Donald Trump says a large bruise on his left hand was caused by bumping it on furniture while in Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum. Read More
Nearly 30 years ago, Ben Affleck and Matt Damon shocked the movie industry when the then-unknown writer-actors sold their script for Good Will Hunting for US$600,000. Read More
Much of the country is facing hazardous or severe cold weather warnings going into the weekend, as a "destructive" winter storm from the United States is expected to hit Canada. Read More
First Reading is a Canadian politics newsletter curated by the National Post’s own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent directly to your inbox, sign up here.Read More
Ryan Wedding, a former Canadian Olympic snowboarder who became a most-wanted fugitive accused of being the boss of a billion-dollar transnational drug trafficking organization has been captured, according to U.S. officials. Read More
QUEBEC CITY — Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said on Friday that Canada will continue to stay true to its “values” in helping the people of Gaza. Read More
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s well-crafted and eloquently delivered speech at Davos has been widely noted, and I want to start by offering some praise of my own. The Prime Minister is right to restate what many have said for years: Canada must become more self-reliant, less dependent and work with like-minded countries to advance our interests. Conservatives are, as always, willing to work with him to turn these words into results. Read More
The family of a Canadian backpacker Piper James received preliminary results investigating her death after her body was found on an Australia beach earlier this week. Read More
Indigenous women and girls are killed at rates six times higher than non-Indigenous women — yet the perpetrators are frequently convicted of lesser offences than those guilty in the deaths of non-Indigenous victims.Read More
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s address in Davos was polished, ambitious, and deceptively fluent. But it cannot be read in isolation from his remarks in China last week, where he spoke approvingly of a coming “new world order.” Those words are not neutral. They carry a long and troubling history, particularly when invoked in Beijing, where the phrase is often used to justify the erosion of liberal norms in favour of hierarchy, managed markets and political control. Read More
Mark Carney’s speech this week at the World Economic Forum was impactful, if not masterful. It was a state of the union of sorts not only for Canadians, but for the international community to come to grips with what Carney sees as the new world order. By all accounts, he is doing his job — marketing Canada to new trading partners. But in the same breath, he has turned his back on our biggest ally and trading partner (even with tariffs) — the United States. Read More
It is always a little worrying when politicians wrap themselves in the flag. Patriotism is such an easy emotion to arouse that the public, with banners flying, almost always rally to the “cause” — whatever the cause is. Read More
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Since early January 2026 — fresh off his Venezuela operation — U.S. President Donald Trump escalated demands for American ownership of Greenland, threatening a U.S. invasion of the Danish territory and 10 per cent tariffs on NATO allies unless they backed him.Read More
OTTAWA — Canada’s two main political party leaders won’t boast about the connection, but they have at least one important thing in common these days: As a new session of Parliament opens Monday, they’re both sitting on hot seats. Read More