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Phillip Day

Phillip Day is a veteran Canadian journalist who has worked in Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Singapore before his current posting in Manila. He was an editor at Bloomberg and a deputy bureau chief at The Wall Street Journal before setting up and running Asia operations for Market News International, a financial wire service. He spent the Mulroney years as a reporter at The Canadian Press in Ottawa.

Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 18, 2017
U.S. President Donald Trump's 'America First' policies are another. There have been few concrete measures taken by the Trump administration to restrict offshoring by U.S. companies, but that isn’t to say Trump won’t wake up one morning and start flailing away at the issue. Photograph courtesy of Gage Skidmore
Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 18, 2017
Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 18, 2017
U.S. President Donald Trump's 'America First' policies are another. There have been few concrete measures taken by the Trump administration to restrict offshoring by U.S. companies, but that isn’t to say Trump won’t wake up one morning and start flailing away at the issue. Photograph courtesy of Gage Skidmore
Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 11, 2017
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, pictured in this file photo on the Hill, was in China last week. A trade deal would be a boon for the Canadian economy but the Canadian government, and consumers as well, would have to be vigilant as more Chinese investment flowed into the country. Chinese companies would need to be watched closely, closer perhaps than the U.S.-based companies we now know served as a conduit for U.S. spying, writes Phillip Day. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 11, 2017
Opinion | BY PHILLIP DAY | December 11, 2017
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, pictured in this file photo on the Hill, was in China last week. A trade deal would be a boon for the Canadian economy but the Canadian government, and consumers as well, would have to be vigilant as more Chinese investment flowed into the country. Chinese companies would need to be watched closely, closer perhaps than the U.S.-based companies we now know served as a conduit for U.S. spying, writes Phillip Day. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade