Juno Jump Start | B.C. keeps renaming landmarks in languages spoken by only a handful of people
British Columbia continues to rename streets, provincial parks and even entire cities in Indigenous languages, Quebec’s government projected to lose all seats in 2026, and more.
B.C. keeps renaming landmarks in languages spoken by only a handful of people
British Columbia continues to rename streets, provincial parks and even entire cities in Indigenous languages that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization classifies as “critically endangered.”
Quebec’s government projected to lose all seats in 2026 after separatist byelection win
A new 338Canada projection shows the governing Coalition Avenir Québec would be wiped out in the October 2026 provincial election, losing all 86 seats it currently holds in the National Assembly.
Majority of Canadians oppose criminalizing residential school denialism
Four years after the unsubstantiated claims that hundreds of children were buried beneath a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C. were first made, Canadians are now pushing back on the notion of criminalizing “denialism.”
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U.S. State Department takes aim at Canada’s Online News Act
The U.S. State Department is taking aim at Canada’s Online News Act in a new human rights report, warning that it undermines press freedom as hundreds of news organizations across the country have begun receiving funding under the law.
Constitutional rights group challenges Nova Scotia woods ban
An advocacy group for constitutional rights is seeking an immediate judicial review to challenge Nova Scotia’s province-wide travel ban on entering the woods amid threats of potential wildfires.
Feds spend over $14M to push youth in “tackling climate change”
The Liberals announced they will spend more than $14.4 million from their Environmental Damages Fund to encourage young people to start playing “a big part in tackling climate change.”
Off the Record | Gen Z and Millennials want children but can’t afford them: survey
Most Gen Z and Millennial Canadians want to have children but say the rising cost of living is making it financially out of reach, according to a new survey from BMO.
The Alberta Roundup | Alberta sovereigntists draw big Edmonton crowd
The Alberta Prosperity Project brought hundreds to its Edmonton town hall this week as part of its provincewide push for independence. Two days later, the group was in court over its referendum question, with the judge keeping the case alive, but on hold.
Canadians divided on First Nations’ power over infrastructure projects
Canadians are divided on how much power Indigenous communities should have over national infrastructure projects, with 40 per cent believing that the government should have the “final say.”
Environmental, social and governance scores “meaningless” without clarity: Fraser Institute
A new Fraser Institute report warns Canadian investment managers that relying on environmental, social and governance scores without clear standards could open the door to lawsuits and regulatory trouble.
Poll: Canadians’ support ‘elbows up’ approach has softened
Canadians are increasingly skeptical of the Carney government's “elbows up” approach to U.S. trade disputes, with new polling suggesting the dollar-for-dollar tariff response is losing its appeal.
Gen Z and Millennials want children but can’t afford them: survey
Most Gen Z and Millennial Canadians want to have children but say the rising cost of living is making it financially out of reach, according to a new survey from BMO.
That is because we are intelligent enough to learn other languages.