Opinion

Opinion

Letters, April 20

8 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

A place for garbage

Re: Spruce-up spree sweeps through downtown (April 15)

Much is being said about the garbage and dirt that is visible on Winnipeg’s streets now that the snow is gone. I am glad to see that efforts are being made to clean up what has been revealed.

However, some of that garbage would not be on the streets had there been receptacles for it.

Opinion

It’s RRSP season again — is it worth additions amid other ways to save?

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Preview

It’s RRSP season again — is it worth additions amid other ways to save?

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026

Canadians have great tools to save tax-deferred or tax-free for the future — and the granddaddy of them all is the registered retirement savings plan.

The calendar now turned to February, RRSPs are on the minds of many, with the March 2 deadline looming for the last contributions for 2025.

Yet in the context of the other ways to save — the tax-free savings account (TFSA) and the newer, first home savings account (FHSA) — the RRSP is not always the most attractive place to park, invest and grow money.

The ideal is to fund all of these savings vehicles, based on need, to their annual maximums.

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Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026

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Opinion

Harper paints picture of united Canada in face of danger

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Preview

Harper paints picture of united Canada in face of danger

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026

There are moments in Canadian politics when a message is so pointed, so carefully chosen, it’s impossible to pretend it was meant only for the people in the room.

The unveiling of former prime minister Stephen Harper’s official portrait on Tuesday in Ottawa was one of those moments.

On paper, it was a ceremony steeped in tradition — a gathering of ministers, former MPs and dignitaries in the Sir John A. Macdonald Building, the sort of Ottawa event where the words are usually polite and the stakes are low.

But Harper’s remarks were anything but ceremonial filler. They were not the safe, soft platitudes of a retired leader content to be politely applauded and quietly shelved into history.

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Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026

Opinion

The beautiful promise of the Pantages project

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Preview

The beautiful promise of the Pantages project

Stephen Borys 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Last Saturday evening at Philips Square, I was reminded how profoundly the space in which we experience music shapes what we hear.

We welcomed friends and patrons of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra — alongside eight extraordinary musicians — for an evening of chamber music. It was part of the WSO’s Concertmaster’s Bow series: intimate salon-style gatherings where music is not just heard, but fully experienced.

In a beautifully restored space, with exceptional acoustics and a warmth that most concert halls rarely achieve, we listened. Mendelssohn’s String Octet — famously virtuosic, exuberant, and demanding — filled the room. Eight musicians playing as one, just feet from the audience.

No distance. No barrier. Just music, unfolding in real time.

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2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

Carney’s unremarkable successes seem larger

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Carney’s unremarkable successes seem larger

Editorial 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

As it turns out, in politics there’s a lot to be said for being — or, at very least, sounding and acting — competent.

During his first year in office, Prime Minister Mark Carney has calmly and deliberately established himself as a voice-of-reason presence, in a moment when the national and global political conversation has been steered toward hyperbole, histrionics, polarized incivility and outright lies.

During less unhinged times, what Carney has accomplished in the 13 months since being sworn in would be regarded as wholly unremarkable.

But in the current climate, with the serial provocations of U.S. President Donald Trump having upended traditional trade relations, wilfully accelerated the demise of civil discourse and initiated — arguably as a distraction from a decades-deep scandal from which he cannot escape — a Middle Eastern conflict that has set the world’s economy in a downward spin, simply behaving in a reasonable, courteous manner has afforded Canada’s leader something approaching statesmanlike status.

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2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

The best hockey I knew was the first

Robert Milan 6 minute read Preview

The best hockey I knew was the first

Robert Milan 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

“Nothing is as good as it used to be and it never was. The ‘golden age of sports,’ the golden age of anything, is the is the age of everyone’s childhood.” — Ken Dryden

I grew up in Winnipeg, in a small suburban enclave called Morse Place. Not exactly the centre of the hockey universe, but it was home. A little working-class pocket in the north part of the city. Terry Sawchuk, the great Detroit goaltender was probably our best known hockey export.

Dad worked in an iron foundry, and mom ran the house like a general. My older sister excelled at school and her choir singing. We weren’t poor, but let’s just say there was very little money left over after dad brought home the paycheque.

We didn’t have much, but we, or rather I, had the rink. The community club had one glorious sheet of outdoor ice with real boards, an old streetcar converted into a clubhouse, and a pot-bellied stove that tried to keep your toes from freezing. And yet … it was magic.

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2:00 AM CDT

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Opinion

Speaking English badly

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

It is a matter of chronic surprise that politicians, otherwise well-trained in saying just the right thing for the audience they are addressing, forget that whatever they say can be heard everywhere. Right away. By anybody who cares to listen, including journalists always hungry for the next story.

So it is with Kenya’s President William Ruto, who was in Italy last week talking up his country’s virtues. One of his claims was that Kenyans speak “some of the best English in the world” — and then, noticing that the audience was dozing off and in need of a joke, he went on to say that Nigerian-accented English, by contrast, was incomprehensible.

He got such a big laugh (most of the audience were Kenyans living in Italy) that he kept going. “If you listen to a Nigerian speaking, you don’t know what they are saying — you need a translator.” Another big laugh — and then social media all over Africa lit up with protests.

How dare Ruto mock fellow Africans? Why should Africans be speaking a colonial language like English anyway? And who the hell did he think he was to judge the quality of Nigerian English? He was thoroughly spanked and sent to bed without supper by the media — but it does open some interesting questions.

Opinion

No quick resolution for CUSMA trade deal

Deveryn Ross 5 minute read Preview

No quick resolution for CUSMA trade deal

Deveryn Ross 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

A few days ago, a reporter asked an adviser to Prime Minister Mark Carney to summarize Canada’s strategy regarding the upcoming Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) negotiations. He declined, saying it would undermine our interests to reveal our strategy in advance of the talks.

It was the right response, but the strategy is obvious to those who are paying attention.

Contrary to what some politicians and pundits have suggested, the free trade agreement is not due to expire any time soon. Rather, it faces a mandatory review beginning on July 1, nine weeks from today.

The agreement is scheduled to expire in 2036, but this year’s review gives the parties the opportunity to renegotiate or potentially end the agreement if a 16-year extension (to 2042) is not agreed to. That said, any party can withdraw from the agreement by giving six months’ notice of its intention to do so.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Opinion

What about health workers who fill gaps and cost less?

Steven Piotrowski 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

There is a lot to like in Budget 2026’s health-care chapter. Building and expanding emergency departments, investing in home care and increasing health workforce training positions are just a few examples. The Kinew government deserves credit for listening to the concerns of Manitobans and putting real money into a struggling health-care system.

But buried in the highlights are two lines worth examining: $223 million for more doctors and an additional $6.3 million to recruit more doctors to rural Manitoba.

There is no question, Manitoba needs more doctors. However, a question the budget doesn’t answer, and frankly, one nobody in the legislature seems to be asking is: why are we spending $229.3 million exclusively on physicians when that same investment could fund more than 1,700 physician assistants — and get patients seen faster, in more communities, starting now?

This is not a rhetorical question. The “math isn’t mathing.”

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