Stephanie Taylor
About Stephanie Taylor
Reporter with The Canadian Press
Canadians want Ottawa to keep funding Ukraine in war with Russia, survey suggests
A new survey suggests more Canadians want Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to maintain Canada's current level of spending on helping Ukraine fight Russia's ongoing invasion, rather than boosting financial support.
The Conservative push to rebuild trust within Muslim communities
When Pierre Poilievre pitches the Conservative party to Muslim Canadians, he talks about "faith, family and freedom."
Saskatchewan threatens notwithstanding clause over school pronoun debate
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe is ready to use the notwithstanding clause to protect a new rule requiring parental permission for transgender and nonbinary students to use different names or pronouns at school.
Pierre Poilievre to give inaugural speech as leader at Conservative convention
Conservatives gathered for the federal party's national policy convention in Quebec City today will hear not only from their leader later, but from a man who at one time wanted that job himself.
Will Tory support hold? Conservatives meet as polls show support rising
For Emily Brown, it feels pretty good to be Conservative.
Ottawa police to testify at 'Freedom Convoy' trial
A court in Ottawa is expected to hear from additional members of city's police service today on the second day of the trial of two key 'Freedom Convoy' organizers.
Poilievre's base demanding he speak up on gender, schools, children
As conservative premiers change the rules around pronoun use in schools, members of the federal Conservative grassroots want Pierre Poilievre to wade further into the debate around gender expression.
AFN blamed for delays, slow progress on First Nations policing bill: documents
Federal officials worried long-promised legislation declaring First Nations policing an essential service was being delayed by Assembly of First Nations hesitations about the bill, newly released internal documents show.
Poilievre ads on rebuilding a 'broken' Canada aim to soften his image
A pile of puzzle pieces spills onto a table.
Former justice minister Lametti advanced cause of wrongfully convicted
When David Lametti met David Milgaard in his office a few years back, he pulled a copy of The Tragically Hip's "Fully Completely" off a shelf and asked Milgaard to sign his record.