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Caroline Elliott: B.C. NDP misleads the public to further its shadowy ‘reconciliation’ agenda

The B.C. government’s secretive and exclusionary approach to "reconciliation" took a sordid turn recently, with the ministers of Indigenous relations and forests both caught in blatant and readily disprovable attempts to mislead the public. Meanwhile, British Columbians have yet again been left on the outside as huge tracts of land are signed away, one-sided "consultations" are held in secret and the public interest is ignored. Read More
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André Pratte: There’s still time for a Legault comeback in Quebec

According to a poll released last week by the Angus Reid Institute, Quebec Premier François Legault is by far the least appreciated of the 10 premiers in their respective provinces, with only 22 per cent of Quebecers approving of his performance. Considering that five years ago, at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Legault’s appreciation score was close to four times that (77 per cent), his downfall is nothing but spectacular.  Read More
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David Cayley: CBC actively suppressed credible COVID dissent

In his provocative new book The CBC: How Canada’s Public Broadcaster Lost Its Voice (And How to Get It Back) — released with Sutherland House Books on Sept. 16, 2025 — veteran producer and broadcaster David Cayley examines the decline of the institution he served for more than four decades. He argues that the CBC has abandoned its duty to serve as an open forum for the whole country, narrowing instead into a partisan voice that polices dissent. In this excerpt, Cayley revisits the broadcaster’s early coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic, showing how its suppression of credible but divergent views revealed a troubling willingness to act as a mouthpiece for government rather than as a true public forum. Read More
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Chris Selley: On ‘hate speech’, Trump’s attorney general sounds downright Canadian

President Donald Trump and his gang have always appealed much more to the authoritarian wing of the American conservative coalition than to the libertarian wing. He talks as good a game on “freedom” as any other Republican — freedom of speech on university campuses has been a major preoccupation, for example — but many doctrinaire libertarians can’t stand the sight of him. His obvious affinity for “strong man” leaders like Vladimir Putin and the most generous Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani Al-Thani understandably rankles. Read More
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