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Charles Lammam: As government jobs in Canada multiply, productivity falls

Statistics Canada will soon release the February labour force survey. When it arrives next Friday, headlines will focus on the unemployment rate and net job creation. Those numbers will matter, particularly as the economy contracted 0.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2025 and posted just 1.7 per cent growth for the full year, the weakest since the pandemic. Read More
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Adam Pankratz: Hey Liberals, an oil pipeline would have been good right about now

The folly of Canada’s last decade of energy policy is a never-ending saga for which the costs to Canadians and Canadian industry seem only to rise. As the price of a barrel of oil and LNG skyrocket due to American and Israel military action in Iran and its fallout, Canada should be sitting on a massive opportunity to benefit from soaring prices. However, a decade of neglect and underinvestment in pipelines and egress capacity sees us looking wistfully on as other nations, such as the Untied States benefit while we toil away for little gain. Read More
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What we’ve lost (6): Nationalism

The last 10 or 15 years have not been kind to Canada. Along with a decline in prosperity has come an erosion of the things that made our society great, a decline of what held us together and made us the envy of the world: things like resilience, friendship and service. In this series, National Post writers consider What We’ve Lost. Read More
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Conservatives want to stop ‘abuse’ of asylum system: Michelle Rempel Garner

There's been much focus on - and debate around - the problems in Canada's immigration system and whether the prime minister is prepared to seriously address the mess left by his predecessor. Although overall immigration levels have come down, there are still significant pressures on the system, notably when it comes to asylum claims. The opposition Conservatives are pressing the government to crack down on those whose claims have been found to be bogus and to limit government benefits to those who remain in Canada despite rejected claims. Rob Breakenridge speaks with Conservative MP and Shadow Minister for Citizenship and Immigration Michelle Rempel-Garner. Read More
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Add a pop of Pucci into your home

Eye-popping colours, carefree swirls and fluid fabrics — Pucci prints defined the summer of 2025, endorsed by It girls such as Hailey Bieber and Amelia Gray Hamlin. Online searches for Pucci fashions were at an all-time high, according to Google Trends, and social media was awash in the psychedelic pattern. Read More
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Jonathan Milevsky: My synagogue was hit with a spray of bullets

It happened. Shots were fired Friday night at my synagogue, Shaarei Shomayim. To be honest, I have been expecting this. It is not as if this area, like every other Jewish neighbourhood, has not had an increased police presence for over two years. Indeed, I wonder if the increased presence of security personnel may have made this neighbourhood seem like more of a target. Read More
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Joel Kotkin: When the AI revolution is over, trades may be the only jobs left

The biggest long-range danger looming over the remaining liberal democracies does not come from U.S. President Donald Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin or the nutty mullahs in Iran now being pummelled. Instead, it comes from the seemingly inexorable force of technology that increasingly threatens not just to aid humanity, but replace it. Read More
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