Vue lecture
Peter MacKinnon: Statute of Westminster a nation-building moment
Dec. 11 is the anniversary of the Statute of Westminster. Other than the reappearance of the Union Jack on a few of the country’s flagpoles, the day will pass unheralded, largely unnoticed, by Canada’s leaders and 40 million citizens. Read More
‘It’s just too easy to harm women’ — What the numbers tell us about ‘femicide’ in Canada
When police kicked down the front door of a London, Ont. townhouse in July 2024, a trail of blood on the floor and walls led them to an upstairs bedroom, where they found the near-lifeless body of Breanna Broadfoot. Read More
New defence bank aimed at increasing NATO military spending could bring 3,500 jobs to a Canadian city
At least five Canadian cities are vying to host a new defence-oriented world bank that could create up to 3,500 jobs, the National Post has learned. Read More
Esteban Crespo Polo: Don’t undermine Ecuador’s war on narco-terrorism
Ecuador is today confronting one of the most difficult internal battles in its modern history: the fight against powerful narco-terrorist organizations that, for more than a decade, infiltrated ports, prisons and parts of the national economy. Under President Daniel Noboa, the country has undertaken the most forceful and comprehensive effort yet to dismantle these criminal structures. That essential context has been missing in some recent reporting, including suggestions that organized crime networks once infiltrated commercial containers related to a banana exporter owned by the president’s family. Read More
John Ivison: How I changed my mind about the Liberals ending religious exemptions for hate speech
It is a rare thing to have one’s mind changed by a politician. In the words of the late prime minister Pierre Trudeau, MPs are “nobodies…like pawns in a chess game.” Read More
Christopher Dummitt: Dec. 11 is the day Canada gained autonomy. Progressives want us to forget
Canada has an abysmal record of distorting and then forgetting its own history. The worst part is that this erasure wasn’t accidental. It was done deliberately — ostensibly with the best of intentions. Read More
Terry Glavin: From playing war profiteer to playing both sides in the Ukraine war, Trump rattles NATO
As Vladimir Putin’s multiple-front “special military operation” in Ukraine approaches its bloody fourth anniversary and the United States retreats further from traditional American ideals into the backwaters of transactional cynicism, there’s a hard lesson to be drawn from the ongoing dissolution of the transatlantic alliance. Read More
Terry Newman: Pro-terror group steps forward as contributor to ‘Nakba’ exhibit
Since its announcement, questions have been swirling about whether Canadian Museum for Human Rights' upcoming exhibit, "Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present," will be grounded in historical fact, and the mysterious group whose expertise and support are backing it — the Palestinian Content Advisory Network. Unsurprisingly, an organization with a history of antisemitism and support for terrorism has come forward as one of the contributors. Read More
‘Canada can do what it wants on the F-35,’ says U.S. ambassador, who says debate does ‘irritate’ him
OTTAWA— While U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra says Prime Minister Mark Carney's government is free to do as it wants with its review of purchasing the F-35, he says the debate is nevertheless irritating. Read More
Netflix, Paramount fight for Warner Bros. merger aligns with political divides across U.S.
The battle for Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. has already lit a fire in Hollywood, with unions decrying the potential job losses, theatres sounding an alarm about the future of film releases and actors worrying about free speech. Read More
Venezuela condemns ‘act of piracy’ after U.S. seizes sanctioned oil tanker off its coast
U.S. forces intercepted and seized a sanctioned oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela, marking a serious escalation of tensions between the two countries. Read More
U.S. commentator Glenn Beck offers to pay for surgery to save Canadian approved for MAID
A Canadian woman who got approved for a medically assisted death because of a years-long wait to receive surgery for her chronically painful condition may finally get treated. American conservative commentator Glenn Beck has offered to pay for her to have surgery in the United States. Read More
Robert Munsch says he has written dozens more children’s books that will be released after he dies by MAID
Bestselling Canadian children’s author Robert Munsch says readers can look forward to more of his stories after his death. Read More
U.S. House to vote on pro-Europe defence bill that would counter Trump’s anti-Europe security strategy
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. lawmakers are set to vote Wednesday on a sweeping annual defence bill bolstering European security, in a direct rebuke of President Donald Trump's threats to walk away from the continent and his statements casting doubt on NATO's future. Read More
Chris Selley: Liberals’ misleading ‘femicide’ bill is cynical even for them
Let no one say the federal Liberals didn’t keep their promise. And let no one say Prime Minister Mark Carney has abandoned Justin Trudeau’s feminism, despite declining to attach the F-word to his foreign policy. The Liberals’ 2025 election campaign platform promised to “protect victims of sexual violence and intimate partner violence by making murder motivated by hate a … first-degree offence, including femicide." (“Including femicide” is a strangely tacked-on phrase that might have indicated just how seriously they were considering demands that murdering women be established as a whole separate crime.) Read More
‘Not the idea of the century’: Opposition parties howl about Carney’s rumoured pick for U.S. envoy
OTTAWA — Business executive Mark Wiseman has not yet been confirmed as Canada’s ambassador in the U.S. but early signs point to a chilly reception from opposition parties — especially Quebec MPs — because of past comments on immigration and supply management. Read More
‘The Engler bus is coming’: Activist vows to fight on after getting rejected from NDP leadership race
OTTAWA — Activist Yves Engler says he has no plans to step aside after the NDP rejected his bid to join the party's ongoing leadership race. Read More
Randall Denley: Ontario’s education minister scorns the system but offers no fixes
Ontario Education Minister Paul Calandra has talked himself into a rather uncomfortable spot. Calandra has raised serious doubts about the future of school trustees, the effectiveness of the provincial curriculum, the design of standardized tests, and the level of student achievement those tests reveal. Read More
Baby formula stashed away ‘deliberately’ by Hamas during Gaza hunger crisis, Palestinian activist says
Baby formula was stashed away "deliberately" by Hamas during "the worst of the days of the hunger crisis in Gaza in the past six months," a Palestinian-American activist says. It was stored in "clandestine warehouses belonging to the Gaza Ministry of Health," which is run by Hamas, said Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib in a post on X on Monday. Read More
Canadian permanent residents may need to reveal 5 years of social media history to enter U.S.
A new rule proposed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) could require Canadian residents who are not citizens of Canada to divulge their social media history before they can enter the United States. Read More
Justice minister says he will ‘personally’ try to understand concerns over religious defences removal in anti-hate bill
OTTAWA — The federal justice minister says he will personally be involved in trying to understand concerns religious groups are expressing over the removal of religious defences from a section of the Criminal Code on hate speech. Read More