Paul Wells remembers Herb Gray, the veteran MP who has passed away
Colby Cosh on the city’s failings, strengths, and an overlooked blind spot
Colby Cosh on Mark Warawa’s sex-selective abortion debate
Emma Teitel on freedom of expression at two very different universities
Emma Teitel takes on the FAIPOFS. Kelly McParland, Barbara Kay and Margaret Wente, she’s talking to you
Prof. Pettigrew rejects calls to be “more like California”
Last month I wrote about Iranian efforts to reach out to ex-pat Iranians and other Muslims in Canada, through its embassy, front organizations, student group, and funding a lavish “student conference” for those who belong to approved “cultural communities.”
Inflated expectations, not paycheques, are the problem
I almost never disagree with Chris Selley. Indeed, I am almost willing to make it a rule not to disagree with Chris Selley. But his analysis yesterday of Brad Trost’s groping for more backbencher power in Parliament is uncharacteristically superficial. Selley celebrates Trost’s public ruminating over his inability to spurn the party whip on polarizing issues; wouldn’t it be nice, he asks, if we had a Conservative Party more like the eclectic, dissent-tolerating one in old Westminster? Perhaps it would be. But there is an awkward plain fact staring us in the face.
Which means you probably shouldn’t drink soda pop with your dinner
Bet you didn’t know you were breaking the law if you ever had non-urgent mail delivered by a courier
The National Post endorses a Conservative majority.