How much will Wynne's next budget cost Ontarians?
You have to wonder how much of our money Premier Kathleen Wynne is willing to spend to win re-election next year.
Lorrie Goldstein is Acting Comment Editor of the Toronto Sun. He joined the Sun in 1978, working as a general assignment reporter, feature writer, Toronto City Hall reporter, Queen's Park reporter, columnist and bureau chief, City Editor and Editorial Page Editor. His main focus is on Toronto, Ontario, Canadian and global politics, with a special interest in the many controversies surrounding the issue of global warming.
You have to wonder how much of our money Premier Kathleen Wynne is willing to spend to win re-election next year.
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and her cabinet ministers excel at alternative facts and fake news.
I have a question for the current and would-be leaders of the federal Conservatives, who have denounced Kellie Leitch’s proposal to screen potential immigrants for anti-Canadian values.
In a recent Huffington Post column, David Suzuki said while Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been meeting with the United Nations, the premiers and the leaders of the U.S. and Mexico to talk about climate change, he’s done nothing.
Premier Kathleen Wynne’s cap-and-trade carbon pricing scheme will subsidize major corporations at the expense of Ontario taxpayers.
Ontario Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner doesn’t have a seat in the legislature, which is unfortunate because he understands the flaws in Premier Kathleen Wynne’s carbon pricing plan better than most politicians.
What compels politicians like Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Barack Obama and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne to deny the reality that Islamist terrorism was a key part of the Orlando massacre?
Ontario Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk has condemned Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government for using taxpayers’ money to fund a 30-second commercial featuring David Suzuki.
Today let's consider the "apologies" Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made for acting like a dork in the House of Commons last week.
Every so often, a premier does something so hypocritical that it merits national public scorn.
No country in its right mind would need the premier of Alberta to explain to the federal cabinet why Canada needs pipelines to get our land-locked oil and natural gas resources to international markets.
The reason for the reported conversion of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the obvious conversion of Alberta Premier Rachel Notley to the value of oil pipelines is simple.
When then NDP leader Jack Layton died of cancer in August, 2011, one of the most genuine tributes to him came from someone who might surprise you. It was then Toronto mayor Rob Ford.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s failure to mention Jews in commemorating the Holocaust last week re-ignited a debate within Canada’s Jewish community.
Other than some laughably adoring portraits of “sexy” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the media, less than three months after the federal election, things are returning to normal in Canada.
With the environmental reputation of 150 world leaders, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, riding on the outcome, the United Nations’ climate conference scheduled to wrap up Friday in Paris will be declared a historic success.
In the 1950s, American politicians on the U.S. House Committee on unAmerican Activities saw a Communist hiding behind every tree.
Since we give them grief when they blow election calls, it’s only fair to note Canada’s major pollsters -- at least the ones I follow -- did a pretty good job of predicting the Oct. 19 election.
In the torrent of polls reporting different results about the federal election campaign, many of us in the media have either forgotten or never learned the most basic rule of interpreting data.
With her announcement Tuesday she now opposes the Keystone XL pipeline, Democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton executed a 180-degree backflip on the issue.