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Chris Selley: Electoral reform rears its head again. This time, we should welcome it

On Sunday, aspiring federal NDP leader Avi Lewis promised that “under my leadership, the next time the NDP holds the balance of power in parliament, we’ll have one demand: proportional representation.” Which is a bit weird, right? Lewis seems to be conceding that the balance of power (which is basically something a party lucks into, rather than plans for) is the best the NDP can hope for. And that, if he had it, he would for some reason proactively limit himself to a single demand; and that he would insist on that demand being proportional representation (PR) as opposed to something that might help people (more dental coverage, day care, school lunches, what have you). Read More
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Terry Newman: Keir Starmer goes on a witch hunt against Elon Musk

Over the weekend, news broke that the British government was attempting to rally international support to take on Elon Musk's social media platform X over its AI tool's ability to create explicit deepfake images, raising fears about the sexual exploitation of women and children. According to the Telegraph, Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has threatened to ban the site, held talks with "like-minded" countries, which potentially include Australia and Canada. Read More
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Tasha Kheiriddin: The Liberals are well aware gun-grab is all for show — that’s the point

Twenty-five guns. That’s all the federal government collected in a recent pilot project in Nova Scotia for its new “buyback” (a.k.a. expropriation) program for prohibited firearms. “A total of 25 prohibited firearms, turned in by 16 participants, were destroyed,” spokesperson Noémie Allard said Friday. “The total compensation paid to pilot participants is $26,535.” Read More
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Report finds 7,000 Canadian restaurants closed last year amid rising costs, softening demand and declining alcohol sales

Already a notoriously tough industry, Canadian restaurants are expected to be under pressure in 2026. After a "bloodbath" saw 7,000 restaurants shutter in 2025, a forecast from Dalhousie University's Agri-Food Analytics Lab (AAL) predicts that Canada will lose 4,000 restaurants on a net basis this year, with closures outpacing openings due to rising costs, reduced demand and falling alcohol sales. Read More
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