Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: April 9, 2025 - 18:01
Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Wed. April 9th, 2025
April 9, 2025

New data by Nanos Research has revealed Canada’s voting gameplan. It appears that 55 percent of Canadians have already made their final decision, but what about the remaining 45 percent? Well, 10 percent will be making up their minds on the final weekend, while another 10 percent plan to wait until Election Day to make the final call. Add it all up, and the final 72 hours of this election campaign could make all the difference. Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Laura Stephenson, an Associate Professor of Political Science at Western University. She studies political behaviour, voter attitudes, and political engagement. Meantime, as the Canada-U.S. trade war continues to play out, businesses are being hit in more ways than one. And if your business name has an American flavour to it, that might cause some unintended backlash. We deliver one example in Hour 2.
In the first 100-plus days of the second presidential term of Donald Trump, American television has fallen into a real rhythm when world leaders pay a call to Washington, D.C., as Prime Minister Mark Carney did on Tuesday.First, the President of the United States produces his own gonzo talk show featuring these international guests in the Oval Office – one shown live on all the news channels and live-streamed on the Internet. Then, later in the day, the late-night talk-show hosts dissect what happened in Trump’s broadcast and try to make jokes about it.
May 7, 2025 - 07:49 | Kelly Nestruck | The Globe and Mail
Set for release on May 13 with Sutherland House Books, Canada’s Main Street: The Epic Story of the Trans-Canada Highway by Craig Baird finally gives this nation-shaping infrastructure project its due. In this excerpt, Baird introduces the ambitious, messy and overlooked saga of the coast-to-coast highway that is the true spine of modern Canada.
The Trans-Canada Highway. We live by it. We drive on it. We depend on it for the goods we use. And yet, we barely think about it. Why?
Is it because, for most of us, the Trans-Canada Highway has always just been there? Something we take for...
May 7, 2025 - 07:00 | Special to National Post | National Post
Senior federal officials have been looking quietly for ways to bring together Canadians who don’t see eye to eye on the economy, immigration and social issues.With a general election looming, officials prepared to meet last November to brainstorm solutions to the problem of social fragmentation, according to an internal presentation drafted by the Department of Canadian Heritage.
May 7, 2025 - 06:55 | Jim Bronskill | The Globe and Mail
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