Canada
Canada's fight against transnational crime, Jamie Ferrill
The Trudeau government claims it will reduce immigration, but how serious is it really?: Michael Barutciski in the Hub

After a week of jaw-dropping accusations, the quaint world of 2015 seems far away [Video]

Categories
Canadian National News

Nine years ago this fall, the leaders of the three major federal parties at the time gathered on a stage in Toronto for a debate on foreign policy. The resulting discussion seems a bit quaint now.

The topics covered — Canada’s contribution to the fight against the Islamic State, a refugee crisis in Syria, the Conservative government’s anti-terror laws — were not exactly trifling. But India received only a glancing reference. Donald Trump, who had announced his candidacy for president of the United States four months earlier, wasn’t mentioned at all. Neither was China.

Literally and figuratively, it was a different time.

Canada’s relationship with China was defined by “panda diplomacy,” not “hostage diplomacy.” “Foreign interference” had not yet entered the popular lexicon. And there was no reason to ask the party leaders how they would respond if they learned of accusationsthat a nominal ally had propagated a campaign of violence and extortion against Canadian citizens on …

The cultural realignment in Canadian politics / Peter Copeland and Eric Kaufmann
The cultural realignment in Canadian politics / Peter Copeland and Eric Kaufmann
Fixing immigration and fixing the economy are two sides of the same coin: Chris Alexander in the Hub