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Elections Canada posters on walls outside a building. Woman walking into building.

Ex-politicians and party activists spent a year or more organizing and selling memberships for nomination races in Calgary McKnight and Calgary Skyview. They never happened.


a welder at work

With housing costs having risen dramatically over the past decade, a Montreal developer says he’d like the next federal government to finally ‘treat it like a crisis.’


Here’s everything you need to know about how to register to vote and exercise your democratic right.


A stylized graphic of a man and a woman with a legal document between them.

On Thursday Chris Barber and Tamara Lich will find out if they are guilty for their roles in the February 2022 protests. Both pleaded not guilty to mischief, intimidation, obstruction and other charges.


Two women wearing salwar kameez stand next to a smiling man.

Harman Banga’s parents moved from India 20 years ago and made Canada their home. Now, she wonders if that immigrant dream is slipping away from her.


Don Patel, who was running for the federal Conservative Party in Etobicoke North, is shown here with Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.

A Conservative party candidate is out of the running after engaging with a comment on social media that suggested that some people should be deported to India and that Prime Minister Narendra Modi should “take care” of them.


Trump holds up chart

Canada didn’t get any new tariffs amid the plethora unveiled Wednesday by Donald Trump. That’s the good news. The bad news is previously announced tariffs are about to kick in, and things could get ugly.


President Donald Trump speaks during an event to announce new tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Washington.

U.S. President Donald Trump announced Wednesday his long-awaited plan to impose what he’s calling “retaliatory” tariffs on imports coming from dozens of countries, including a punishing 25 per cent levy on Canadian-made automobiles.


Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre gestures as he speaks at a campaign event in Toronto, Wednesday, April 2, 2025.

On the day U.S. President Donald Trump is poised to hit Canada with a slate of new tariffs that could torpedo cross-border trade, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre laid out his plan to take on the Americans and help this country get through what’s expected to be a tumultuous economic period.


A close up photo of a man in his 70s.