According to a study by the Fraser Institute, the Canadian oil business lost out on $20-billion in potential revenue, or nearly 1 per cent of Canada’s GDP.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chrystia Freeland is set to speak at an “invitation-only” event at a charity founded by the Aga Khan.
Harsh winters, foreclosed housing, and Burton Cummings. An ode to the city at the heart of the continent.
Handling of cases have gotten so bad that some disabled veterans are waiting well over a year to have their disability claims approved.
Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc plans to announce that it will sell solar panels and related equipment for up to 38 percent below the national average price, the New York Times reported today.
Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party received a confidential report in 2016 revealing how top officials at SNC-Lavalin were named in an illegal scheme to influence Canadian elections, according to a massive report by the CBC.
Ah yes, the Canadian cold. Why didn’t we figure it out sooner? People aren’t opting for comptetitors like McDonald’s or Starbucks, but are actually just staying home all together! Not drinking coffee, because of the cold.
The $10 bill is the official winner of the 2018 Bank Note of the Year Award.
The world’s most wanted terrorist leader has turned up on video for the first time in five years.
A Metro Vancouver vacuum store recently ran an interesting ad in local papers, telling readers to protect their floors with quality products, while Trudeau continues to protect jobs in Quebec.
In a brand new episode entitled “D’oh Canada,” The Simpsons took aim at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The Swedish music and podcast streaming giant has hit a tremendous milestone.
The only province to show a substantially different result was Alberta, with only 34% in favour of the legislation compared to 53% opposed.
A University of New Brunswick Professor went down a Twitter-hole yesterday, culminating in a message which suggests pro-free speech activists on campus should be hounded and lose their jobs
Opposition leader Andrew Scheer says “as prime minister” he would pull Canada’s quarter-billion-dollar investment from China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank over the communist state’s recent ban of canola and detainment of Canadian expats.