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Avi Benlolo: Where did Canada go? Reclaiming our place in the world

As Canadians approach the upcoming federal election, much attention will understandably focus on the economy — especially in light of recent trade challenges and the mounting cost of living. However, to rebuild not only our prosperity but also our purpose as a nation, Canada must reclaim its lost international standing. The next government must restore Canada’s global credibility and voice. This is not merely a matter of pride — it is a matter of principle, strategy, and long-term national resilience. Read More
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Jamie Sarkonak: Plunging gas prices? More like fake Liberal charity

Last April, the Liberals advertised their broadly disliked consumer carbon tax, est. 2019, by reminding people about that its associated rebate would soon be going out to eligible recipients. And then they attacked the guy who pledged to get rid of it all: “Pierre Poilievre and his Conservatives would cut your rebates and take us backward,” read one faux-threat. Read More
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Adam Zivo: Serbia is roaring for revolution

BELGRADE, Serbia — In Serbia, revolution is in the air. The streets of Belgrade roar each evening as citizens whistle and honk in support of a student protest movement that has, for months, demonstrated against corruption and authoritarianism. Hundreds of thousands of Serbs have marched alongside these students, despite threats of violence, bolstering the greatest wave of civil unrest seen within the country in nearly three decades. Read More
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Peter MacKay and David Pratt: Bolstering national defence is critical

“The leaders agreed to begin comprehensive negotiations about a new economic and security relationship immediately following the election.” The Prime Minister’s Office readout of last week's phone call between Liberal Leader Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump appears to signal a desire by both to reset a trade and defence relationship that is giving every indication of running off the rails. Read More
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Terry Newman: Mark Carney, put your elbows down

It's finally happened. On April, 2, a day he coined "Liberation Day," U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled large placards, not unlike the tablets of Moses, with the names of countries and the tariff rates he'd assigned to them, revealing his plans to reshape global trade. Read More
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Ivison: Emissions cap is ‘stupid,’ says former Canadian ambassador to the U.S.

The day after Donald Trump released his “declaration of economic independence,” raising the weighted average tariff rate on U.S. imports to 24 per cent, John Ivison sat down with Canada’s former ambassador to the U.S., David MacNaughton, to discuss how this country might respond to what appears to be the end of the globalization era. Read More
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Trump tariffs a remote, penguin-inhabited island in the Indian Ocean

When the White House published a complete list of its reciprocal tariffs — running over several pages and naming close to 200 countries and territories — it was topped by China, a country of more than 1.4 billion people and home to the second largest economy in the world, after the United States. Its reciprocal tariff rate was 37 per cent. Read More
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