Jim Bronskill
Reporter for The Canadian Press
About Jim Bronskill
From pepper spray to profiling: A look at how protests have been policed in Canada
The G20 summit of international leaders in Toronto a decade ago saw the largest mass arrests in Canadian history. More recently, controversies have erupted over how police and security agencies have handled anti-energy protests.
Conservatives press Trudeau on China's alleged role in data hack
The Conservatives want to know what federal officials are doing about China's alleged involvement in stealing data from thousands of Canadians.
Spied on by mistake
The national cyberspying agency monitored a Canadian citizen, contrary to policy, for several years due to a series of internal mistakes, a newly released watchdog report says.
How Canadians grappled with a growing threat
Canadian security officials have been grappling not only with how to address the growing threat of right-wing extremism, but also the best means of defining the phenomenon and explaining it to the public, newly released documents show.
Canada ready to strike back at malicious cyberactors
Canada will work with allies to strike back at foreign cyberattackers and "impose costs" that make them understand the price of their wrongdoing, advisers have told Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
SNC-Lavalin drops court challenge to block criminal proceedings
Montreal-based engineering firm SNC-Lavalin has ended its court challenge of the federal prosecution service's decision to deny it a special agreement to avoid criminal proceedings on corruption and fraud charges.
Have federal political parties abused data?
Canada's competition watchdog is looking into a complaint about the data-harvesting practices of the main federal political parties.
Canada's nuclear watchdog learns from Boeing 737 Max air crashes
Canada's nuclear safety regulator is looking to draw valuable lessons from an unexpected source — the recent Boeing 737 Max airplane accidents.
Mounties defend social-media profiling of protesters
The RCMP is defending its practice of profiling people by scouring their social-media postings, saying the police force lawfully obtains information with the aim of protecting Canadians.
PM says he 'welcomed' outcome in SNC-Lavalin case
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government might have acted differently had it known the criminal case against SNC-Lavalin would be resolved without crippling the company or throwing thousands of its employees out of work.