Analysis

Opinion

Alberta separation no guarantee of success

David McLaughlin 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Alberta beware.

Ten years ago this month, the United Kingdom held its Brexit referendum. It voted by the narrowest of margins — 51.9 per cent to 48.1 per cent — to leave the European Union. The decade since has seen an economically stagnant Britain, struggling to regain lost financial ground. It has fallen behind its competitors in growth, trade and productivity.

The siren call of “freedom” proved sufficient for the Leave campaign to prevail. It has not proved sufficient to make Britain and its citizens richer and better off. Four different studies show the numbers and impacts. It’s not pretty.

The Office for Budget Responsibility, an independent government agency in the U.K., akin to Canada’s Parliamentary Budget Office, has conducted regular, updated analysis of Brexit’s impact on the British economy.

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Opinion

A PC member’s take on Daudrich’s disqualification

Thomas Rempel-Ong 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Those who pay attention to Manitoba politics will no doubt be aware of a little dust-up happening within the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba. In short, the party has decided to prevent Wally Daudrich from seeking the party’s nomination in the constituency of Turtle Mountain, close to where he lives.

Many supporters of Daudrich have taken to social media to criticize the decision. After all, he has spent months campaigning for this nomination and has sold countless memberships, thereby bringing more members to the PC Party. A common question within these complaints is, “Why is the party blocking Daudrich from becoming a PC Party candidate in a seat he is likely to win?”

Well, allow me to speculate on what, to me, is an obvious issue for Daudrich, the PC Party of Manitoba, and conservative politics in Manitoba more generally.

In February 2025 I attended one of Daudrich’s “meet and greet” events to hear from him during the PC Party leadership race.

Opinion

Sala fails budget test

Gage Haubrich 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

When you flunked a test in school, you could try to soften your parents’ reaction by pointing out that your classmates did worse.

Manitoba Finance Minister Adrien Sala can barely make that argument.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation just released its annual report cards for all provincial finance ministers. Sala is tied as the second-worst-performing finance minister in the country, based on his latest budget.

Sala received an overall grade of D- this year. That’s a slight improvement over the F he received last year, but still not good enough for taxpayers.

Opinion

Measuring public perception of police body cameras

Christopher J. Schneider 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

The Winnipeg Police Service is beginning its long-awaited body-worn camera (BWC) pilot project. The pilot will include 40 front-line officers who will wear the devices for the next six months.

Winnipeg police will be gathering community feedback through public forums and a public perception survey in order “to ensure that the pilot is informed by meaningful input.”

The public perception survey asks respondents to indicate their level of agreement with a series of statements, on a scale of strongly agree to strongly disagree — a frequent and familiar tool for surveys, known as a Likert scale. There is also an option to indicate no opinion. The survey of opinions about body cameras begins with five basic profile questions followed by 18 Likert scale statements and concludes with a short space for additional comments.

From a research standpoint, there are fundamental flaws with the survey that make it incapable of producing meaningful results that would inform a body camera pilot in Winnipeg.

Opinion

Middle Eastern wars: wait for September

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

Middle Eastern wars: wait for September

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump told journalists that the United States and Iran are “in the final throes of what will be a very, very good deal.”

On Wednesday, after an American helicopter gunship crashed in the Strait of Hormuz, presumably downed by Iranians, he declared angrily that “They’ve taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them, now they will have to pay the price!!!”

Later on the same day, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqai took on the role of ‘only grown-up in the room’, saying that the United States is “damaging the diplomatic process through the contradictory messages it sends, its repeated shifts in positions and demands, and, worst of all, through repeated violations of the ceasefire.”

The pattern is pretty clear by now. Trump oscillates between wild optimism and frustrated fury, while the Iranian negotiators keep their voices down, never shift their positions, and display performative patience. That enrages Trump even more, and I suspect the Iranians secretly enjoy it.

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

Education, reconciliation and Murray Sinclair

Sandy Nemeth 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

‘Education got us into this mess and education will get us out of it.”

With these familiar and powerful words, the late Justice Murray Sinclair, chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, pointed deliberately and necessarily to education as the key to reconciliation.

This journey of education and understanding is one all Canadians should take to truly understand a dark chapter of our country’s history, the impacts of which continue to reverberate through communities and families. In response, the TRC offered a clear plan for education to blaze the path needed for a better future.

Every school year, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit students are welcomed into classrooms throughout Louis Riel School Division. This is a sacred trust placed in the hands of school staff, senior staff and the school board.

Opinion

Understanding the police HQ inquiry

Paul G. Thomas 7 minute read Preview

Understanding the police HQ inquiry

Paul G. Thomas 7 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Launching a public inquiry is always a political decision, which often happens in response to a scandal or a tragedy. I’d like to examine the inquiry launched by the Kinew government into the bribery and cost overruns involved with the Winnipeg Police Services headquarters. That inquiry just wrapped up its public hearings phase.

The headquarters project, which dates back to 2009, has been dogged with controversy, which has led to two external audits, two civil suits (for construction flaws in 2018 and for fraud in 2022); a five-year RCMP investigation which did not lead to criminal prosecutions, and a request from the city government to the Manitoba government that an inquiry be called.

The NDP promised an inquiry during its successful 2023 election campaign. Embarrassing the former Progressive Conservative government for its unwillingness to order an inquiry, holding former mayor Sam Katz and former chief administrative officer Phil Sheegl accountable for their alleged misconduct, preventing a recurrence of corruption and cost overruns in future infrastructure projects, and restoring lost public trust in city government were all goals of the inquiry.

Anxious to avoid a sprawling, prolonged and costly process, the Kinew government wrote terms of reference which restricted the inquiry to the HQ case (not other questionable development deals), set a total budget of $2 million, required a progress report, and set a deadline of early January 2027 for delivery of the final report.

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Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Opinion

Preserving experience by sharing it

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Preview

Preserving experience by sharing it

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Last fall, while walking through downtown Los Angeles, I found myself standing beneath Alexander Calder’s Four Arches, the monumental red steel sculpture that rises dramatically among the city’s office towers.

Like many of Calder’s large-scale stabiles, it’s not simply an object to be viewed. It is a structure people move around and through. It shapes space, influences movement, and creates relationships between people, architecture, and the public realm.

The sculpture itself is important, but so too is everything it makes possible.

Standing there on the plaza, I was reminded of a question that has become increasingly important to me over the years — and one that clients and colleagues often raise in our discussions.

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Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Opinion

AI data centres and public benefit

David Clement 4 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew recently rejected a proposed AI data centre near Winnipeg, citing concerns over water use, noise, and a perceived lack of public benefit.

The instinct to protect communities from unwanted development is understandable. But when the objections collapse under scrutiny, and when the stakes include Canada’s standing in the global AI economy, the decision deserves a harder look.

Critics of data centres frequently invoke water consumption, and there is genuine nuance worth discussing.

Large facilities do use water for evaporative cooling. But comparison matters. A typical 18-hole golf course uses approximately 300,000 gallons of water per day during summer months.

Opinion

Taxing billionaires — just like everyone else

Linda McQuaig and Neil Brooks 5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026

These days, billionaires act like they own the world — which they pretty much do.

So, it’s not surprising they’re facing an uprising coming from the struggling masses below.

That uprising, led by unionized health-care workers in California, has collected more than a million signatures with the goal of getting a wealth tax — aimed exclusively at billionaires — onto a statewide ballot. California voters would then decide whether to tax some of the world’s largest mega-fortunes in order to replace funds the Trump administration is taking out of health care.

The showdown in California could be a harbinger of what lies ahead in Canada.

Opinion

Hats off to Steven Guilbeault

Norman Brandson 5 minute read Preview

Hats off to Steven Guilbeault

Norman Brandson 5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026

Bye-bye, Steven Guilbeault. Having already suffered the fate of countless environmentalist environment ministers in federal and provincial governments — isolated in cabinet, disappointing their followers, shuffled out of the portfolio at the earliest convenience — he has, to his credit, taken the honourable way out; freeing himself from the chains of caucus solidarity to criticize the many less-than-environmentally-friendly government policies.

Of course, the current Liberal government is rhetorically environment-friendly. In fact, the Conservative Party of Canada stands apart from all other parties as appearing to be not overly concerned about the environment.

But it matters little. Neither the Trudeau government nor its successor has shown any inclination to take meaningful environmental action. Reducing Canada’s minor contribution to world greenhouse gas emissions, a carbon tax returned to the taxpayers, a few millions toward solving the billion-dollar Lake Winnipeg problem, no meaningful action on climate change adaptation; not exactly a green agenda.

As any former environment minister can tell you, no environmental decision escapes close economic scrutiny. It’s the economy, stupid. Well, at least the economy as defined by GDP, by budget deficits, by bond rating agencies, by cost-of-living index, interest rates, inflation and a host of other indicators that militate against addressing issues that are seen to detract from that definition.

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Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026

Opinion

More to Guilbeault than radicalism

Joel Trenaman 5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026

Since former federal environment minister Steven Guilbeault announced he was resigning as an MP, the reactions from all sides have been predictable.

Good riddance to his “rigid and dogmatic approach” that threatened national unity, some say, or perhaps his ouster represents a “people last” move “toward a literally scorched Earth.” Other commentators shrugged: it’s a “political divorce,” because “circumstances had changed.”

A common sentiment seems to be that although the “radical” environmentalist had his way for a while, as Tom Brodbeck argued in these pages, Guilbeault’s quest for “ideological purity” and inability to work within the system meant that he never had a chance. He couldn’t “compromise.”

All of the above narratives ignore what Guilbeault achieved working in government: actual steps down the road toward realistic sustainable development, built on the hard-fought idea of a national bargain and degrees of conciliation.

Opinion

Daudrich disqualification a mistake

Deveryn Ross 5 minute read Preview

Daudrich disqualification a mistake

Deveryn Ross 5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026

Wally Daudrich is a polarizing figure who holds controversial views on a number of issues, but it was a mistake for the Progressive Conservative Party to deny him the opportunity to compete for the party’s nomination in the Turtle Mountain constituency.

Daudrich received more votes than party leader Obby Khan in the party’s recent leadership contest, but narrowly lost the race due to a weighted-point system the party used for that contest. According to senior party sources, he received the overwhelming majority of leadership votes cast by party members in Turtle Mountain.

Given that reality, it is difficult to understand why the PC Party has disqualified Daudrich from seeking the nomination to run as the party’s candidate in the riding in the upcoming provincial general election. Party president Peter Smith told the Brandon Sun last week that Daudrich was barred from seeking the nomination after he failed to meet “certain conditions during the vetting process,” but that explanation glosses over the fact Daudrich had passed the party’s vetting process for the leadership contest last year.

The timing of the disqualification is also curious, given that the party had set a June 2 deadline for registration as a candidate for the nomination. As a result, the deadline for additional candidates has now passed and, with the rejection of Daudrich’s candidacy, the only other person seeking the nomination — Mark Custance, a councillor in the Municipality of Two Borders — appears poised to win the nomination by acclamation.

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Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026

Opinion

Banning YouTube is a bad call

Ann Evangelista 4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew may have good intentions in proposing restrictions on social media use in schools, but a blanket ban on platforms like YouTube risks doing more harm than good.

In the rush to address concerns about screen time, online addiction, and student distraction, we may be overlooking an important reality: digital tools, when used responsibly, have become an essential part of modern teaching and learning.

As an educator, I spend countless hours preparing materials for my classes.

Effective teaching is not simply standing at the front of a room and talking while students passively absorb information. It involves designing lessons that engage students with different abilities, interests, and learning styles.

Opinion

Deciphering Raúl Castro’s U.S. federal indictment

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Preview

Deciphering Raúl Castro’s U.S. federal indictment

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Monday, Jun. 8, 2026

Given its targeted audience, I wasn’t surprised at all by how gleeful the Miami Herald’s editorial was about the issuing of a multi-count murder indictment of 95-year-old former Cuban president Raúl Castro.

“This is a huge moment for Miami, 30 years in the making. That’s how long this community has waited — and waited — for justice in the Brothers to the Rescue attack,” the op-ed piece intoned. For good measure, it added the following: “The Raúl Castro indictment alone won’t accomplish true justice for the Cuban people. For that to happen, there must be serious steps that include a release of all political prisoners and a change in the country’s leadership to allow real democratic reforms.”

If that wasn’t enough, elements of the rabid anti-Castro Cuban-American community in Miami’s Little Havana could barely contain themselves.

“I’m glad there’s a reason to finally execute him because he executed many people,” said one Cuban immigrant. Another man, who left central Cuba in the 1990s, put it this way: “We have been waiting for our government to seek justice — even if it’s late, sooner or later justice will be served. We are really happy that he was indicted.”

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Monday, Jun. 8, 2026

Opinion

Alberta’s long-standing mentality of grievance

Allan Levine 6 minute read Preview

Alberta’s long-standing mentality of grievance

Allan Levine 6 minute read Monday, Jun. 8, 2026

In October, Albertans will vote in a referendum about a referendum. They will be asked if they support another future “binding” referendum on whether Alberta should separate from Canada.

My prediction: the results of the October referendum will be about 70 per cent against separation. Based on recent polls, at most 27 per cent of Alberta voters support such drastic action.

Alberta separation, like Quebec separation, makes little sense. Politically, economically, geographically, and logistically it is pretty much an impractical and impossible scenario to conceive. Not to mention, it would impact Alberta’s Indigenous population’s long-held treaty rights.

A recent court ruling by a justice of the Alberta Court of King’s Bench declared that a pro-separation citizen-initiated petition, which would have forced the province to hold a referendum on Alberta independence, was unconstitutional because the government did not first consult with First Nations.

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Monday, Jun. 8, 2026

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