Why is Canada playing in the 2022 Beijing Olympics?The 2022 Winter Games are set to open in Beijing, but many Canadians believe our athletes should not be going
Canadian politicians won’t be able to ignore climate change in 2022In a year that will see more wildfires, deadly heat waves and drought, climate change policy will dominate the federal government’s agenda
Takeaways from the release of the two MichaelsPolitics Insider for Sept. 27, 2021: Michael Kovrig thanks Canadians; the pressure is on Erin O’Toole; cabinet making time
Auf Wiedersehen, Angela Merkel. Goodbye.Image of the Week: Germany’s unflappable, long-serving chancellor departs the political stage with a rare show of vulnerability
In Afghanistan, the signs of our failure were everywherePaul Wells: How did the West get things so terribly wrong?
What the winner of this election must do about China, Meng and the two MichaelsTerry Glavin: A thousand days after Kovrig and Spavor were imprisoned, we’re in desperate need of moral clarity in Ottawa
The folly of China’s claim that Canada violated its sovereigntyShannon Gormley: When Canada and other Western nations slapped sanctions on a small number of Chinese officials, they weren’t violating China’s sovereignty—they were asserting their own
Prince Philip dead at 99: ‘He has been my strength all these years’He was at Queen Elizabeth’s side through a tumultuous reign, with a protective focus on duty, responsibility and loyalty
Year One: The untold story of the pandemic in CanadaA comprehensive report on the country’s mishandling of the crisis of the century
How Ottawa can fight for the rights of Hong Kong-CanadiansCanada has a duty to stand up for dual citizens being targeted as China works to cleanse Hong Kong of pro-democracy voices