ARTICLES
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Butt Dials, Board Schisms, and the BC Supreme Court: Inside the Rogers Communications Board Battle
At Rogers Communications, Canada’s largest telecom company, a rift has split the board of directors apart along with the Rogers family, creating turmoil in the midst of a $26 billion acquisition of Shaw Communications.

Trudeau was Reelected. Now What?
Back in September, Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government was elected once again as a minority government. Since then, much has happened in Trudeau’s third term.

Canada’s Canola Oil Shortage
The price for canola oil is increasing and alternatives are now being broadly used with some families unable to afford the high-priced commodity.

ANALYSIS: Series of Sexual Assaults at Western University Elevate Discussions of Campus Safety and Security
“We let our students and families down,” stated Western University President Alan Shepard during the release of Western University’s new sexual violence ‘Action Plan’ amid the panic of an ‘O-Week’ turned sinister.

Vexing Vancouver Granville
It is said that a compromise is a result that leaves every participant equally unhappy. If that is how a compromise is defined, then the parliamentary elections of 2021 were surely a compromise.

ANALYSIS: Singh For Me? A Look at the NDP Leader’s Use of TikTok
In the months leading up to September 2021’s federal election, Singh amassed nearly 850,000 followers and a cumulative 8.1 million likes on his official TikTok account, @thejagmeetsingh.

ANALYSIS: A Deeper Look at Canada’s 44th Election
17 million votes, 338 ridings, and $600 million. On September 20, Canadians headed to the polls, following a snap election called by the Prime Minister in mid-August.

Breaking Down the Diplomatic Breakdown Between The US, China, and Canada
For the past three years, Canada has been caught between two superpowers - China and the United States - and their jostling for supremacy in the case of Meng Wanzhou and the detention of the two Michaels.

ANALYSIS: The TRC’s 94 Calls to Action, Explained
The TRC has said that reconciliation cannot begin unless Canadians know the historical experiences of Indigenous People on the land that is now called Canada, and recognize the continuing impacts of genocidal institutions.

ANALYSIS: What is Reconciliation?
The word “reconciliation” means two groups coming to a truce after a time of conflict. In Canada, this refers to recognizing the truth about our history and working with Indigenous people to mend the consequences of these events to move forward together.

Canada’s New Holiday: A Step Towards Reconciliation
Parliament introduced this federal holiday in June 2021 to commemorate the history of residential schools and honour the Indigenous Peoples who were and remained deeply impacted by these schools.