NDP launches 2026 federal leadership race, sets rules for candidates
Contestants face $100K in fees, strict diversity requirements, and a ranked-ballot vote ahead of March 29, 2026 convention.
Coverage of political parties at the federal and provincial levels, including their leadership, internal debates, policy platforms, campaign strategies, and their role in shaping public policy and electoral politics.
Contestants face $100K in fees, strict diversity requirements, and a ranked-ballot vote ahead of March 29, 2026 convention.
Elizabeth May's announcement that she will not lead the Green Party into the next election (Yahoo) is both a necessary step and a…
Pension Poilievre blew up a by-election so he can keep his taxpayer-funded mansion.
Jamil Jivani reignites debate over immigration and labour policy with bold proposal.
"If you can’t seriously say you’re going to form a government that can take on Trump, then get out of the way and let the only real contenders have at it."—Thomas Mulcair
Pierre Poilievre lost his seat, but kept the mansion. Now taxpayers are footing the bill for his lavish lifestyle.
Carney’s Cabinet Blinked—and It’s the Wrong Kind of Familiar
If the Conservatives want to be taken seriously, they’ll have to stop catering to the fringe and start acting like a party ready to govern.
If the NDP wants to reclaim its soul—it needs to show up, speak truth, and fight like hell. Because right now, it's not fighting for people like me. It's not even trying.
My reflections on the experience and what it says about Canadian politics.
In a sweeping policy reveal, the new Prime Minister shifts from carbon tax repeal to an ambitious housing plan that Canadians are starting to see as the first real solution in years.
The fringe party, born from the 2019 "Wexit" movement, is no longer registered to field candidates after an administrative lapse.