You are only seeing posts authors requested be public.
Register and Login to participate in discussions with colleagues.
CBC Canadian News
Poilievre accuses Trudeau of sowing 'divisions' that led to Brampton's violent temple clash
In a testy exchange in the House of Commons on Tuesday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of sowing the divisions that led to the violent clash between Sikh separatists and Hindu worshippers outside a Hindu temple in Brampton on the weekend.
'Hug your loved ones': Windsor and Detroit watch and wait as the U.S. votes for a new president
Auto industry and cross-border trade - important for both sides of the river - are issues in this election.
B.C.'s chief electoral officer defends election integrity as premier proposes all-party review into counting
B.C.'s chief electoral officer says "extremely challenging weather conditions" and a new voting system factored into human errors that saw hundreds of ballots go uncounted in the provincial election — though none were large enough to change results.
BCE to buy U.S. internet provider Ziply for $5B, in part with funds from MLSE sale
BCE has signed a deal to buy U.S. fibre internet provider Ziply Fiber for about $5 billion in cash, using in part the profits from the high-profile sale of the company’s stake in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment earlier this fall.
Conservative MPs want Tom Clark to answer more questions about $9M condo purchase
Conservative MPs want New York Consul General Tom Clark to appear again before a parliamentary committee after the release of documents that show he expressed concerns about the suitability of his official residence in the city.
Canada Post says strike threat is already affecting revenue
Canada Post says the threat of a strike is “rapidly impacting” its revenue as customers who worry about their holiday packages not arriving in time switch delivery services.
Paul Bernardo goes back before parole board later this month
Paul Bernado, the killer behind some of the most disturbing murders in modern Canadian history, will be back before the parole board later this month.
Butter stolen from another Ontario grocery store — this time $1,200 worth in Brantford, police say
The theft happened on Oct. 29 at about 8:25 p.m. from a grocery store at Lynden Road and Wayne Gretzky Parkway, Brantford Police Service say.
Peter Nygard's lawyers say judge 'unfairly discounted' medical report, ask Ontario court to review bail denial
Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard's legal team has asked an Ontario court to review a decision to deny him bail as he appeals his sexual assault convictions and sentence.
B.C. ports are frozen amid a labour dispute. What does this mean for Canadians?
A major trade artery was shut down on Monday when employers locked out more than 700 foremen at ports across British Columbia. But what does this mean for Canada’s supply chain and for consumers?
Dan Smoke, elder and co-host of longest running Indigenous radio program, dies
A man who spent his life bringing Indigenous stories and teachings to the forefront through radio broadcasts and the written word died Monday in London, Ont.
N.L. hockey player suspended after repeatedly punching fan who taunted him
The launch of a new Avalon East Senior Hockey League season has been marred by an off-ice altercation between a player and fan in Harbour Grace, with the town council promising consequences.
We finally know what the mystery blobs washing up on Newfoundland's beaches are
Throughout the fall, unusual white blobs have been washing ashore on beaches in eastern Newfoundland. A Memorial University chemist says the substance is a type of pollution that shouldn't have been in the ocean in the first place.
A night searching for Ottawa's hardest-to-reach homeless
The Salvation Army found more than 125 people sleeping outside during one 24-hour period last month. CBC followed one of the teams.
After fleeing Taliban and abuse, Afghan woman in Canada for 8 years told she's being deported soon
Frozan Hassan Zai has spent eight years building a community in Canada after escaping the Netherlands with her two children. Now, because Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada has deemed her marriage false, she received deportation orders Tuesday saying she must leave by the first week of December. "In this big world, there is no place we can call home," she says.
How Canada's auto industry is 'on the ballot' in today's U.S. presidential election
As voters decide who will take over the White House, there's a feeling the person who becomes U.S. president will bring in policies that could shift Canada's role in the automotive industry. There are "two completely different visions for the future of the industry" as pitched by the two candidates, says Patrick Anderson, who runs a consultant firm in Michigan that works with manufacturers on both sides of the border.
Three years of roaring oil prices could be coming to an end
The days of oil companies being compared to broken cash machines are likely over.
Nunavut MLAs set to vote Wednesday on whether to oust Premier P.J. Akeeagok
Aivilik MLA Solomon Malliki issued a notice of a motion during Monday's sitting of the Nunavut Legislative Assembly that he plans to bring a motion to have Akeeagok removed from his position.
Jacques Villeneuve calls thieves of late father's bronze monument 'soulless idiots'
Jacques Villeneuve, the son of late Canadian Formula One driver Gilles Villeneuve, is lashing out at thieves who stole a bronze statue of his father from outside a Quebec museum in his honour, calling them "idiots."
How a McMaster University class ring, lost in 1977 in the Atlantic Ocean off Barbados, made it home
In 1977, Morgan Perigo, a graduate of Hamilton's McMaster University, lost his class ring in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Barbados. Last month, free diver Alex Davis found it buried in the sand.