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‘You’re welcome, Canada’: The imagined thoughts of Justin Trudeau

Friday marked the final day of the premiership of Justin Trudeau. He leaves under a cloud of near-unprecedented personal unpopularity. And, despite a smattering of early successes, such as legalized marijuana, his nine-year tenure saw a noticeable worsening of everything from crime to productivity to rent to health-care wait times. “This may be my last day here in this office, but I will always be boldly and unapologetically Canadian. My only ask is that no matter what the world throws at us, you always be the same," he said in his last address as prime minister. Read More
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Vivian Bercovici: Hamas terrorists have no interest in ceasefire

TEL AVIV — On Friday, Hamas announced that Israeli-American Edan Alexander, a 21-year-old IDF soldier, along with the remains of four other dual American-Israelis, will be released imminently. The terrorist group also rejected the most recent proposal for an extended ceasefire and hostage release presented by U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff. Read More
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Conrad Black: We must throw Carney out of office at first chance

I recently received the following series of rhetorical exhortations from a friend who, like many Canadians, is unable to discuss President Donald Trump rationally. He wrote: “Imagine America deporting an academic from Columbia University for criticizing Israel. Imagine a President who repeats every morning that he is at war with Canada with the intent to achieve Anschluss. Imagine an American population that stands meekly by as its president acts as a dictator, internally and globally, no check, no balance, no accountability. Compare the quality of leadership in America with that of Russia and China these days.” Read More
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Amid measles outbreak in Ontario, RFK Jr.’s advice has Canadian experts alarmed

Measles cases are rising in Canada, the country's chief public health officer is urging people to get vaccinated, and Ontario is dealing with an ongoing "multi-jurisdictional outbreak." As of March 12, a total of 372 cases (277 confirmed, 95 probable) from 11 public health units have been reported in Ontario that are associated with an outbreak that began last October. Thirty-one people required hospitalization. Thirty were unvaccinated, 27 of whom were children, including one child who needed intensive care, Public Health Ontario reported Thursday. Read More
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Terry Newman: Mark Carney’s cabinet-shrinking ruse

Friday morning in Ottawa, long-Liberal-wooed Mark Carney was finally sworn in as prime minister. Before the ceremony began, his X account posted: "Today, we’re building a government that meets the moment. Canadians expect action — and that’s what this team will deliver. A smaller, experienced cabinet that moves faster, secures our economy, and protects Canada’s future." Read More
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Chris Selley: Mark Carney’s cabinet is more of the same, only weirder

Mark Carney is prime minister of Canada. If newspapers ran emojis, I would insert the “man shrugging” one here. Nothing else makes much sense nowadays, so why not? But thus far, and it’s admittedly early hours — hours that everyone will likely forget once the election campaign begins anyway — the Mark Carney era is a baffling mixture of constancy and inscrutable change. Read More
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Freeland’s in, Gould is out: Here’s the complete list of PM Mark Carney’s first cabinet

Mark Carney is officially Canada’s 24th prime minister. About an hour after Justin Trudeau officially resigned on Friday, Carney's first cabinet was sworn in alongside him at a ceremony at Rideau Hall. The new Liberal government has 24 ministers — 13 men and 11 women, including Carney — and no deputy prime minister. It maintains Trudeau's core team that has been dealing with the trade war with U.S. President Donald Trump, but drops 18 members of the former prime minister's cabinet. Read More
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