Politics is driving oil prices now, but the correction is coming
Oil prices are being propped up by geopolitics for now but when that pressure fades, the correction will be brutal
Oil prices are being propped up by geopolitics for now but when that pressure fades, the correction will be brutal
Canada once carried real weight abroad. A decade of Liberal foreign policy failures stripped that away
Without new export routes to Asia, Canada risks weaker job growth, less money for public services and a higher cost of living
Middle power status is earned through strength and credibility, not speeches at Davos
Alberta talks up free enterprise, but its treatment of renewable energy tells a very different story
Bill 201 would have repeated the Notley-era minimum wage policy that led to declines in youth employment
Ontario is expanding private surgical care while hospitals struggle with staffing levels and patient loads
Fear of repercussions is driving people away from participating in public debate in Alberta
What looks like a far-off political mess is exposing how vulnerable Canada really is, especially on energy
The expanded GST credit offers short-term relief but not lasting food affordability
Sweden responded to public disorder with a policy change. Canada responds with political paralysis
For years, Canada relied on the U.S. to take its oil. Now that bet is coming back to haunt us
Scott Moe and Danielle Smith responded very differently to Mark Carney’s trade agreement with China