Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Canada’s Politics and Government News Source Since 1989

Wednesday, February 18, 2026 | Latest Paper

Who’s lobbying who on the Trans Mountain pipeline?

The company behind the controversial Trans Mountain pipeline extension and other energy-related stakeholders are looking to the federal government for reassurance the pipeline will get built and a timeline for construction as legal and political wrangling plays out in the courts and on Parliament Hill. Parliamentarians who have been communicating with lobbyists from Kinder Morgan—which […]

Political realities will turn Notley against Trudeau

OAKVILLE, ONT.—The most improbable political alliance in Canadian history is coming to a predictably inglorious end. I’m talking, of course, about the “Entente Cordiale” that was forged between Alberta NDP Premier Rachel Notley and Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a once beautiful friendship that’s now unravelling before our eyes. Mind you, it’s something of a […]

Another approach to Canada’s bitumen quagmire

There will be both a significant financial and political cost no matter what decision is taken to resolve the current impasse on the Kinder Morgan pipeline project. Why not investigate an alternative? What if governments helped finance a refinery in Alberta to refine the bitumen to a state that it is less hazardous for transport? […]

Trans Mountain pipeline project is good politics, bad policy

Is it clear why Canadians—and even Albertans—should support the Trans Mountain pipeline project? I’m not so sure. The Senate is debating public bill S-245, the Trans Mountain Pipeline Project Act. It was drafted by my colleague, Senator Doug Black, and it seeks to declare that the Trans Mountain project is for the general advantage of […]

Parliamentary Centre celebrates 50 years with 300-person gala

The Parliamentary Centre started out to support the Canadian Parliament. Fifty years later, it’s expanded to help 120 legislatures in 45 countries better serve the people they represent. On the evening of April 23, the Ottawa-based non-governmental organization celebrated 50 years of promoting and supporting democracy around the world at a gala reception hosted at the […]

With fed-prov tension rising, court deals provinces another high card

OTTAWA—The fault lines in Canada’s federal-provincial arrangement never disappear; they just lie dormant from time to time. With the system already under renewed pressure from the Trans Mountain pipeline dispute between Alberta and British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada came down with its long-awaited decision in the so-called “free the beer” case, an epithet […]

Trans Mountain pits Alberta against British Columbia, it’s not right

Re: “Few options for peace on the Mountain,” (The Hill Times, April 16). This brouhaha over the Trans Mountain pipeline has pitted British Columbia and Alberta against one another, stirring up an angst-ridden debate over the future of our country. It seems to me that Canada is suffering more from a lack of vision and direction […]

First Nations need to be at Trans Mountain negotiating table, says Lorimer

Re: “Prime Minister Trudeau’s decision to interrupt his foreign trip to help resolve Trans Mountain pipeline expansion issue a step in the right direction,” (The Hill Times, April 16). While Prime Minister Justin Trudeau may have been right to interrupt his trip to bring B.C. Premier John Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley together to discuss […]