All entries by this author
Mar 28th, 2020 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Andrew Cohen’s “Why Canada’s response to COVID-19 is so different from that of the US,” from the Ottawa Citizen this past week, won applause from many Canadians. Zach Carter’s “Coronavirus Is A Defining Test And American Government Is Failing It … It’s not just Trump. Our politics are unfit for this calamity,” from Huffington Post, […]
Tags: Andrew Cohen, Canada-US on COVID-19, Canadian pandemic dollar, COVID-19 in New York City, Edward Luttwak, Gallup poll on Trump, Justin Trudeau and COVID-19, Recession in G20 over COVID-19, Trump on COVID-19, Zach Carter Posted in In Brief |
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Mar 12th, 2020 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
[UPDATED MARCH 13, 17]. 3/12/2020. TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA [all Indigenous North American words]. I awoke this northern morning to the wisdom of Kriti Gupta from New York on our local Bloomberg Business News, explaining the latest stock market meltdown in the wake of the coronavirus, low oil prices, and on and on. (Ms Gupta succinctly […]
Tags: beating Trump like a drum, Bernie Sanders, Biden takes states he made no effort in, coronavirus pandemic, Democratic primaries in US, Joe Biden, Kriti Gupta, Trump and Biden brands compared Posted in In Brief |
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Jan 18th, 2020 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
From a Canadian point of view, it probably does make some kind of sense that, as the Queen has recently informed us, Harry and Meghan will be going through “a period of transition in which” they “will spend time in Canada and the UK.” As suggested by Philippe Lagassé, described in the New York Times […]
Tags: Andrew Cohen, Angus Reid poll on monarchy in Canada, Canadian republic, Dart and Maru/Blue Voice Canada poll, Governor General of Canada, Harry and Meghan, Monarchy in Canada, Philippe Lagassé Posted in In Brief |
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Dec 31st, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: Heritage Now
The middle of the summer of 1977 was not quite nine months after René Lévesque’s unsettling PQ victory in the November 1976 Quebec provincial election. And it was at this point that the Anglo-American economist and philosopher Kenneth Boulding told the 44th annual Couchiching Conference in Ontario : Canada is an “absurd country straight out […]
Tags: Aboriginal rights Canada, Brian Mulroney, Canada-US free trade, Canadian economy, Canadian republic, Charlottetown Accord, Citizenship Act 1977, Constitution Act 1982, diversity in Canada, Ed Broadbent, Eugene Forsey and monarchy, Gang of Eight, Jim Coutts, Joe Clark, John Diefenbaker, Keith Davey, Kenneth Boulding, Meech Lake Accord, Metis peoples of Canada, NAFTA, patriation, Pierre Trudeau, René Lévesque, Supreme Court of Canada Posted in Heritage Now |
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Dec 19th, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
It is a kind of Rachel Maddow moment. The best beginning may just be to quote her : “This is really happening. This is your life. This is our country in our time … It is Wednesday, the 18th of December in the year 2019 and President Donald Trump is impeached.” Like my counterweights colleague […]
Tags: Adam Schiff, Bess Levin, Donald Trump impeachment, Emerson College poll on 2020, Jerry Nadler, Jill Lepore, Josh Jordan, Nancy Pelosi, Rachel Maddow, Robert Benzie Posted in In Brief |
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Nov 25th, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Just before the November 20, 2019 swearing-in of the new Trudeau Liberal minority cabinet – in the “Tent Room” at Rideau Hall in Ottawa – the counterweights editors brought a piece I did on the swearing-in of the first Justin Trudeau cabinet four years ago to my attention. It was posted on November 7, 2015, […]
Tags: Bardish Chagger, Canada’s Texas, Chrystia Freeland, Jim Carr, Jody Wilson-Raybould, Jonathan Wilkinson and Catherine McKenna, Joyce Murray, Justin Trudeau cabinet 2015 and 2019, Mona Fortier, Tent Room Posted in In Brief |
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Oct 30th, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Yesterday the media watching PM Justin Trudeau in the wake of the October 21 federal election reported that “Trudeau turns to two political veterans for advice on forming his minority government,” and “Trudeau taps French ambassador, Anne McLellan to aide in transition.” (Canada’s ambassador to France, in case you are wondering, is Isabelle Hudon, not […]
Tags: Anne McLellan, Duke of Windsor, Four in Hand knot, George V, Isabelle Hudon, Julie Payette, Justin Trudeau minority government in Canada, Windsor knot Posted in In Brief |
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Sep 22nd, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
I want to quickly say something about why I will still be voting for the Justin Trudeau Liberals in the October 21, 2019 Canadian election, despite the prime minister’s latest self-inflicted wounds. The most apt summary of the background I’ve run across has come from Lauren O’Neil at blogTO : “Canada’s political sphere is reeling […]
Tags: Bill Maher on Justin Trudeau, Charles Roach, cultural diversity in Toronto today, Justin Trudeau blackface stupidity, racism in Canada today, wokeness and Justin Trudeau Posted in In Brief |
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Sep 6th, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
Bruce Anderson and David Coletto at Abacus Data have come up with (I think) an especially helpful and interesting take on the October 21 Canadian federal election, in reporting on their latest “national survey of 4,549 Canadians, completed on August 28.” (The Anderson and Coletto report is dated September 5.) They start by noting that, […]
Tags: Abacus Data, Bruce Anderson, Canadian election 2019, David Coletto, regionalism in Canada, Tale of Two Races Canadian election Posted in In Brief |
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Sep 4th, 2019 |
By Randall White |
Category: In Brief
[UPDATED 12:10 AM ET, SEPTEMBER 11, 2019]. There was a time not too long ago (late September 2017?) when newly elected Manitoba NDP leader Wab Kinew seemed likely enough to become the first Indigenous premier of a modern Canadian province. And this milestone would fit nicely with the past of a democratic political community that […]
Tags: Brian Pallister, Dan Lett, Dougald Lamont, Fixed date elections in Manitoba, James Beddome, Manitoba election 2019, Steve Lambert, Wab Kinew Posted in In Brief |
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