The U.K. election: Six things to help make sense of the outcomeFrom the surge in young voters to what the results means for Brexit to Boris Johnson’s next move, here are the key takeaways
The people left behind by Trudeau’s promised nation-to-nation relationshipThe feds’ talk around Bill S-3 reveals Indigenous women and children are being ignored in discussions on Indian status
Fit in, or be excluded: The root of immigrants’ impulse to assimilateConcerns about ostracism can lead some immigrants—particularly first-generation ones—to deny racial and cultural issues
How Theresa May doomed her campaignBritish Prime Minister Theresa May called it the most important election in a generation but campaigned like she didn’t care. Voters noticed.
Bill Cosby’s own words: how he viewed his alleged sex assaultsIn interviews produced at his trial, he painted himself as a seducer, a provider of relaxing drugs and a tester of women’s boundaries. But he claimed he never acted without consent.
Theresa May loses, even when she winsTheresa May’s Conservatives led in the polls, and were on course for a strong majority. They were a sure bet – until they weren’t.
Jeremy Corbyn wins, even when he losesLabour did not win the U.K. election, but its leader, Jeremy Corbyn, owned the night
One day in Washington, two nationsWhile James Comey testified, Donald Trump preached. In both places talk turned to lies, obstruction and the fight ahead.
In defence of NickelbackNickelback is seen by many as a punchline. So why are they so popular? The answer is in Canada’s cultural context—and the music itself
The unstitching of the PresidentThe empty spaces in James Comey’s testimony form the outline of the most damning picture of Trump yet