Trudeau's 'independent' Senate is a sham
English Tasha Kheiriddin English Tasha Kheiriddin

Trudeau's 'independent' Senate is a sham

Who knew Canadians cared so much about the Senate? Congratulate an old friend on his appointment to the Upper House, as I did to veteran broadcaster and newly named Senator Charles Adler, and you unleash a volley of cheers — and a torrent of vitriol. The most recurrent slurs were “Liberal” and “hypocrite,” referencing Adler’s trenchant criticism of the Conservatives, anti-vaxxers, and the institution he is now joining. The implication is that appointees must curry favour with the prime minister, and that if you say a bad word about the Red Chamber, you shouldn’t accept an appointment there.

 

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J.D. Vance heralds a tsunami of North American populism
English Tasha Kheiriddin English Tasha Kheiriddin

J.D. Vance heralds a tsunami of North American populism

Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump had a hell of a weekend. Over the course of 48 hours, he survived an assassination attempt, saw a federal judge dismiss another criminal case against him, and picked a Vice-Presidential running mate who once compared him to Hitler. Netflix couldn’t script a wilder political rollercoaster, one which will profoundly impact not only American politics, but Canadian politics as well.

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Liberals put all their bets on campaigning against ... Donald Trump
English Tasha Kheiriddin English Tasha Kheiriddin

Liberals put all their bets on campaigning against ... Donald Trump

It’s retreat week for two of Canada’s top three political parties. The Liberal cabinet is hunkered down in Montreal, talking housing, cost of living, and Donald Trump. The NDP caucus is assembled in Edmonton, strategizing on how to squeeze their priorities into the Liberals’ upcoming spring budget. And the Conservatives? They’re just sitting pretty...

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Shadows of elitism, luxury vacations haunt Liberals into 2024
English Tasha Kheiriddin English Tasha Kheiriddin

Shadows of elitism, luxury vacations haunt Liberals into 2024

Settle in, voters of Canada: the next federal election likely won’t be until 2025. That’s an eon away in political terms, and anything — literally anything — can happen in that time. If you had said in January 2023 that one year later, the Middle East would be a warzone, the federal government would...

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