Contributor's
America, Then and Now America’s Founders were inspired by the set of ideals we now call liberal...
January 20, 2025
I recently heard someone compare our current times with the Gilded Age, a time known for rising...
January 1, 2025
Inquiry Commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue’s report “cited intelligence suggesting a proxy agent of the...
October 30, 2024
We note with great sadness the closing of the Domtar Espanola mill by Domtar's new owner, Paper...
November 2, 2023
In Saturday’s op-ed we sketched the connection between Domtar’s owner, Paper Excellence and Asia...
September 21, 2023
After the Sept. 6 announcement that Espanola’s Domtar pulp and paper mill is closing, questions...
September 16, 2023
Comments by Guy Talevi
This is quite possible and there is another precedent! Formed in 1912 by Teddy Roosevelt after splitting from the Republican Party, the Progressive Party (nicknamed the Bull Moose Party) ran on a platform of progressive legislation. Roosevelt was shot during the campaign, but went ahead with his speech anyway, referring to the bullet he carried: “It takes more than that to kill a Bull Moose”. But the split did kill the Republican Party’s chances of victory, allowing the Democrats under Woodrow Wilson to win the 1912 election.
I voted: NoOn the contrary, this is the closest we come to true coalition government, where other parties take seats in Cabinet. I care less whether NDP support for the Liberal government benefits the NDP than that it results in policies (dental care, pharmacare) of benefit to the country.