The Canadian Press
About The Canadian Press
The Canadian Press has been Canada's trusted national news agency for more than 100 years, a news source and leader in providing real-time, bilingual multimedia stories across print, broadcast and digital platforms. Through words, photos, graphics, audio and video, more than 180 journalists cover news stories that impact Canadians with fairness, compassion, accuracy and taste. CP, a for-profit enterprise owned jointly by three of Canada's largest media companies, gives Canadians an authentic, unbiased source, driven by truth, accuracy and timeliness. More details about CP's news principles are available here. CP is a Trust Project News Partner.
$4.3 billion TPP compensation for dairy industry under review: Freeland
$4.3-billion compensation package the previous Conservative government made to dairy farmers to counter any ill effects of the Trans-Pacific Partnership is not a done deal.
Pipeline application reviews continue despite National Energy Board changes
Focus on Energy East and Trans Mountain pipelines has intensified in the wake of President Barack Obama's refusal of Keystone XL.
Wall says 50 per cent of Saskatchewan power to come from renewables by 2030
Wall slipped in the details while answering questions in the legislature about the province's position on climate change.
No need to raise threat level here in wake of Paris attacks: Goodale
No Canadian links to the Paris terror attacks have been found after terrorists from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant killed 129 people in the French capital last week.
Canada will increase Iraqi trainers, fight climate change with Obama: Trudeau
Trudeau will hold a key bilateral meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama at the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation Summit - with refugees and climate change top priorities.
As warming leads to more Bering Strait vessel traffic, Coast Guard studies shipping lanes
Coast Guard is taking steps to plot a shipping route that will help the ships safely navigate the 53-mile wide waterway separating Russia and Alaska.
A dozen U.S. states want door slammed on refugees, as political rift deepens
Right-wingers are demanding that western governments slam the door on refugees after Paris attacks.
Sen. Mike Duffy to star in the last chapter of his long trial
"Canadians know me as an honest guy," says senator facing 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust, and bribery.
Trudeau's Syrian refugee plans are raising concerns among provinces
Liberal plan to bring in 25,000 Syrian refugees by year-end — even amid heightened security concerns around the world — has made several provinces nervous about security
Trudeau pushes youth, growth, but not terrorism in debut at G20 summit
PM reaffirmed Canada's commitment to accept 25,000 Syrian asylum seekers and stressed that Canada is a country that defined by shared values - not cultural differences.