Why Donald Trump can be charged with obstructionLaurence H. Tribe: The president is not immune from prosecution when performing his constitutionally authorized duties
Neo-Nazis are no joke—they just want you to think they areA style guide for a neo-Nazi publication reveals what should be obvious, writes Tabatha Southey: darkness lurks behind their self-parodying ’humour’
Black voters saved Alabama—despite efforts to keep them downOpinion: Doug Jones may have defeated Roy Moore in their Senate race, but Alabama’s electoral history is still marked by efforts to frustrate the Black vote
Why Donald Trump can’t be charged with obstructionAlan M. Dershowitz: The president is immune from prosecution when performing his constitutionally authorized duties
Fascism’s return and Trump’s war on youthOpinion: Trump’s mode of fascism is a unique product of our times, our commercial culture and a corporate-controlled media
Alabama should be a wake up call for the Democrats—they have work to doScott Gilmore on how if the party wants to win again, it needs to bring a much better ground game and a bigger knife
Jennifer Keesmaat: It’s time to rethink Canada’s housing systemOpinion: What the federal housing strategy is missing—and why Vancouver’s new affordable housing strategy is leading the way
Politicians need to learn how to show, not tellFrom Justin Trudeau to John Horgan, Canadian politicians are failing to take action to back up their talk, writes Andray Domise
Richard Wagner is the right choice to be Supreme Court chief justiceOpinion: Emmett Macfarlane on the Quebec jurist who will succeed Beverley McLachlin, and the challenges ahead for the court he will lead
A reality check on the debate over regulating food marketing to kidsOpinion: As a bill wends its way through the House of Commons to regulate food advertising to children, a doctor debunks some arguments against it