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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz says Berlin remains open to buying Canadian liquefied natural gas, calling it “highly welcome” as Germany works to permanently replace Russian energy. However, he admitted it’s unclear what cooperation with Ottawa would look like.

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Marc Patrone and former Liberal Party president Stephen LeDrew unpack Canada’s deepening economic strain, political shake-ups, and the growing disillusionment with Mark Carney’s leadership.

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In a blistering open letter addressed to the BC Conservative caucus, a coalition of grassroots leaders representing tri-cities riding associations has called for the immediate replacement of party leader John Rustad, accusing him of steering the party toward certain electoral oblivion.

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An Alberta NDP MLA is under fire for comparing the UCP government to Nazis during a legislative debate, a move former Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi defended despite outrage from United Conservative MLAs.

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During a fireside chat, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre addressed a crowd of hundreds of people, remarking on lessons learned from the last election, his opinions on how Canada should deal with its largest trading partner, and how he would manage Canada’s economy better than the Liberals.

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Prime Minister Mark Carney dismissed pipelines as “boring” in a Toronto speech, seemingly mocking concerns about new oil infrastructure while championing data centres and tech as the future of Canada’s economy.

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Hear the raw reactions on the street as we ask: Did d’Entremont betray his constituents, and should he pay back the money?

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Despite repeated promises that the government wouldn’t usher in a digital identification system, the Liberals appear to be moving ahead with one for Employment Insurance and Old Age Security benefit claimants.

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Canada’s unemployment rate dropped last month to 6.9 per cent, defying expert predictions thanks to a surge in retail and wholesale jobs. The economy added 67,000 positions in October.

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Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said those suffering from severe drug addiction in his province will no longer “have the right to determine how the rest of us are going to live in our society.”

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Sylvain Charlebois writes, “Canada is now facing one of the most severe chicken shortages in recent history, and consumers — not farmers or processors — are paying the price.”

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Alberta’s teacher strike exposes how schools are buckling under the weight of mass immigration and an overwhelming number of students who speak little or no English. Ontario, too, is facing the same pressure. Newcomer enrollment is surging far faster than staffing, language supports, or funding, leaving regular classroom teachers to absorb a growing wave of English-language learners with almost no systemic adaptation.

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Gage Haubrich writes “Consumers need the full information on the price of something before they can decide if it’s a good decision. The same goes for taxpayers and proposed government programs.”

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Alberta Finance Minister Nate Horner says it is “highly unlikely” his government would invoke the notwithstanding clause to end a potential strike by unionized nurses, urging the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees to return to the table with a “reasonable” proposal.

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Canada’s highest court has agreed to examine appeals in a high-profile dispute over Saskatchewan’s policy requiring parental consent for children under 16 to adopt new names or pronouns in school settings.

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