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Federal election live updates: Get the latest news and commentary as Canada votes

Millions of Canadians will cast their ballots in the federal election today. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Liberal Leader Mark Carney have been campaigning across Canada for the past 35 days, in the hopes of becoming the next prime minister. There are 343 seats up for grabs and the winner will need at least 172 seats to form a majority government. Read More
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Adam Zivo: Vancouver car ramming suspect should have never been free in the first place

A joyful Filipino street festival ended in carnage Saturday night after a man driving an SUV rammed into a crowd, killing 11 people and injuring at least 20 more. The man arrested and charged with eight counts of murder has a history of mental illness. While many factors contributed to this avoidable tragedy, perhaps the greatest of them was Canada’s failure to embrace involuntary treatment and institutionalization.  Read More
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Brian Cox: Singh, Carney help perpetuate lie that Israel’s committing ‘genocide’

As the sprint of the shortest election period allowed under Canadian law nears the finish line, one aspect of the campaign that has stood out is the central role that international law has played in political messaging. The unsubstantiated claim that Israel is committing genocide while fighting against Hamas has surfaced several times. Read More
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Terry Newman: Carney’s East-West energy grid is a green fiction

The Liberals are selling a new green-energy fiction in their 2025 platform — an East-West electricity grid — that will, no doubt, require them to impose additional disproportionate economic and social costs for a limited decrease in Canada's contribution to global emissions. This is a problem, given Canada's "lost decade" of growth and the Liberals' failure to admit policy mistakes over the last ten years. Read More
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Barbara Kay: Crucial case challenges defamatory accusations of Islamophobia designed to intimidate and silence

Islamism — defined most benignly as “the belief that Islam should influence political systems”— is, according to Joe Adam George, the Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s National Security Analyst, the “biggest existential threat to Canada within its borders.” Yet, in the English-language leaders’ election debate, when Bloc Québécois leader François Blanchet dangled the word “Islamism” for discussion, nobody took the bait. Read More
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