Canada is still thirsty for new pipelines to the coast despite renewed prospects for Keystone XL, explained Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr on Tuesday.
They were there alongside U.S. President Barack Obama, former president Bill Clinton, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, and many other world leaders who attended Peres's funeral on Friday.
Justin Trudeau's first speech to the United Nations General Assembly included some less-than-subtle references to the politics practiced by people like Donald Trump.
"Women and girls are less likely to get an education, more likely to be impoverished, and face greater risk of disease and poor health," Trudeau wrote in a letter released early Thursday morning.
The ill-fated oil pipeline is the only detailed reference to Canada in the 66-page document adopted by delegates to the convention in Cleveland which meets through Thursday.
Canada is promising more cash to Afghanistan — while some of its allies plan to keep troops in the country to help it deal with an escalating insurgency.
The numbers are staggering. There could be up to 51 times more annual gun-related deaths in the U.S. versus those in Canada, according to the most recent Canadian data.
The speech U.S. President Barack Obama delivered in Ottawa this week was rife with references to Canadian history and culture, including the fact that Canada long ago had a female head of government.
It's not every day that the crowd's reaction to a speech becomes a story — but that's what Canadian politicians might have achieved with their rapturous response to U.S. President Barack Obama.
He says the move is designed to show Canadian solidarity with NATO against Russia, which has annexed the Crimean Peninsula in Ukraine and backed pro-Russian separatist forces in that region.