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Reçu aujourd’hui — 23 juillet 2025National Post

‘Ridiculous’: Obama responds to Trump claim he was ‘ringleader’ in conspiracy to ‘rig’ 2016 election

23 juillet 2025 à 00:01
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump rehashed longstanding grievances over the Russia investigation that shadowed much of his first term, lashing out Tuesday following a new report from his intelligence director aimed at casting doubt on long-established findings about Moscow’s interference in the 2016 election. Read More
Reçu hier — 22 juillet 2025National Post

Chris Selley: Seven years for mischief, one day for terrorism — someone make it make sense

22 juillet 2025 à 21:42
On Monday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and deputy leader Melissa Lantsman publicly deplored the seven-year sentence that might be facing Tamara Lich and Chris Barber on Wednesday. They were key organizers and spokespeople for the 2022 Freedom Convoy that eventually parked itself in downtown Ottawa and didn’t leave for three weeks. Read More

Coca-Cola to release new Coke with sugar. Trump says it’s ‘better’ than corn syrup. Is it?

22 juillet 2025 à 18:59
Coke preferences can get pretty niche. People in Canada and the United States have long waxed lyrical about the Mexican version. (Though some claim Colombian Coke is even better.) One of the most common reasons fans give for seeking out the nostalgic, glass-bottled Mexican import comes down to the sweetener. Our southern-most North American neighbour uses sugar, while the Canadian and American versions contain high-fructose corn syrup. Read More

Jamie Sarkonak: Nanaimo, where complaining about feces-drenched drug zones is all you can do

22 juillet 2025 à 12:00
Nanaimo, B.C.'s downtown drug experiment has failed to stabilize its overdose rate. It has managed, however, to line the city’s oldest streets with feces, garbage, hit-and-runs, doorway fires and damaged property — a situation so bad that city council, just last week, considered fortifying its parking lot with a 1.8-metre fence. Read More

André Pratte: Dialogue key to decreasing tensions between Alberta and Quebec

22 juillet 2025 à 12:00
Seven years ago, Quebec Premier François Legault made a very unfortunate comment, calling oil from Alberta’s oil sands "dirty energy." “I am not embarrassed to refuse dirty energy while we are offering clean energy at a competitive price,” Legault said, rejecting the idea of a pipeline crossing Quebec’s territory to reach the port of Saint John, New Brunswick. Albertans were incensed, and rightfully so, considering that Quebec receives billions in equalization payments thanks, in part, to Alberta’s prosperity. Consider also that Quebecers consume millions of barrels of gas from the oil sands each year. Read More
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