OttawaOttawa’s no good, terrible, very bad year Shootings. Gropings. Abuse of the public trust. How can we keep trudging through federal politics’ fog of despair?
OttawaThe tricky politics of language on Parliament HillJust days after the Ottawa shootings, the leaders use ‘terror’ to define the party line
SocietyThe lights of the livingIn the place where trench warfare began, grim reminders and haunting questions still linger
SocietyWhat war memorials say about usThe meaning of Remembrance Day and how Canada views its war memorials changes over time
CanadaUncovering a killer: Addict, drifter, walking contradictionHow Michael Zehaf-Bibeau’s life spiralled from privilege to petty crime and drugs to, eventually, deadly extremism. The story of a desperate madman.
OttawaTime for an informed debate over policing powers A sweeping assessment of how Ottawa confronts terrorist threats is overdue, says one observer
OttawaThe Editorial: Canada’s freedoms cannot waverAs MPs debate new legislation in the wake of the Ottawa shootings, Canada will and must carry on—always glorious and ever free.
CanadaThe final homecoming of Cpl. Nathan CirilloRachel Browne was in Hamilton for the return of a fallen soldier
CanadaOttawa shooting: In the shadow of the Toronto 18Ottawa has a long history as a stage for militants—and lessons of past breaches haven’t always been learned
OttawaParliament Hill under siege’Anything could happen. This morning, it did.’ Paul Wells on the Ottawa shooting.