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.
Bank of Canada's lower growth forecast puts pressure on pricey Liberal vows
Revised projections come as fallout from persistently low commodity prices continues to hog-tie business investment and resource exports, says bank.
Canada mid-pack in G7 nations on coal phase-out policies as Paris nears: report
Japan shown up as the clear laggard because of its plans to add significant coal generating capacity.
Who will lead the Conservative Party?
Names fly as the Tories search for a contender to replace Stephen Harper.
Here's what happened to the Bloc last night
Leader Gilles Duceppe lost his Montreal riding of Laurier-Sainte-Marie for the second straight election, and the Bloc fell short of official party status.
Trudeau, fresh from majority Liberal win, now must turn to implementing plan
Climate change, Middle East military mission, and ongoing refugee crisis are new PM's most pressing issues.
Series of international summits gives Trudeau little time to settle in as PM
Canada's incoming 23rd prime minister faces a packed schedule - including the Conference of Parties 21 climtae talks in Paris.
Harper denounces Liberals in final campaign stop
Prime Minister Harper did not talk about whether he would step down if the Conservatives won, but said it has been an "honour" to lead Canada for the last nine years.
Campaign 2015 is all but over, parties now work to get out the vote
Many questions remain unanswered in the final hours of the 2015 federal election campaign.