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.
Alberta premier says Canadians need progressive climate change plan
"Ignoring climate change is no way to develop the energy industry," Rachel Notley warns.
Trudeau, first ministers, scientists to gather Nov. 23 to talk climate change
Trudeau invites provincial and territorial leaders to Ottawa to discuss Canada's climate change plans later this month before Paris climate talks begin.
Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre entered a sewer interceptor to inspect repairs
extent of the corrosion and rot of the arches supporting a major sewer interceptor convinced Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre that he made the right choice authorizing a massive waste dump.
New Democrats name critics as party fights to be 'progressive opposition'
Tom Mulcair will rely on veteran members of his team to help the NDP flex its muscles in Parliament after election night drubbing.
Bad move for Canada? TPP's rules on intellectual property pulled into spotlight
Warning sounded that intellectual-property rules favour the more-dominant United States and its companies that already own ideas - at expense of emerging entrepreneurs and innovation elsewhere.
Canadian Pacific: Broken rail caused oil train derailment in Watertown; defect not visible
More than a dozen cars jumped track on Sunday and punctured one car, spilling hundreds of gallons of oil and forcing the evacuation of a nearby neighbourhood.
The Liberals say the return of the long-form census will save money. Will it?
Trudeau Liberals, in one of their first acts in government, brought back the long-form census.
Montreal's raw sewage dump proceeding as planned, mayor says
Everything was proceeding as planned and the infrastructure repair work that necessitated the discharge remains on schedule.
Every day is Remembrance Day for those touched by war, Afghan veteran
For Master Cpl. Gary Barrett, memory of fallen comrades is never far away and in some cases the dull ache has become part of the fabric daily life.
Liberal party uses Remembrance Day to identify potential supporters, donors
Liberal party, flush from the Oct. 19 election victory, is using the solemn occasion to continue trying to accumulate information on potential supporters and donors.