Source Feed: Walrus
Author: Various Contributors
Publication Date: January 1, 2026 - 06:30
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2025: The Must-Read Sovereignty Crisis Stories
January 1, 2026
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In a year that saw plenty of disruption, was there anything more unnerving than the abrupt end to the long, close alliance between Canada and the United States? The sovereignty crisis touched so many topics: fighter jets, critical minerals, and patriotism, naturally, but also music festivals, labour data, and whether you should skip that carton of orange juice. Think of this list as a cheat sheet for the destabilizing new reality:
The US Badly Needs Rare Minerals and Fresh Water. Guess Who Has Them? BY CHRISTOPHER POLLON As China tightens its grip on critical resources, Trump eyes Canada’s riches Trump Revives Talk of 51st State. It’s Not Funny Anymore BY WESLEY WARK The US doesn’t need tanks to take over Canada—just trade policy and chaos. Here’s how we fight back Canada’s Sovereignty Crisis Feels All Too Familiar to First Nations BY MICHELLE CYCA Indigenous voters matter. Does Mark Carney care? Buying the F-35 Could Be Canada’s Biggest Strategic Mistake BY PETER JONES With its tech largely under Pentagon control, the fighter jet would leave us at America’s mercy Who Owns Canada’s Labour Data? (Hint: Not Canada) BY VASS BEDNAR Outdated public tools leave policy makers stranded while private companies hold the real insights The Limits of True Patriot Love BY SARMISHTA SUBRAMANIAN It’s too easy to fall in line, wave the flag, and forget about the country’s problems Boycotts Be Damned: Why Canadian Money Keeps Flowing to the US BY DAVID MOSCROP Bell Canada, the Canada Pension Plan, and traders are making big-time investments in America Sorry, Trump. Americans Still See Canada as a Friend BY PHILIPPE J. FOURNIER It’s one of the rare things Democrats and Republicans agree on As Trump Pushes Tariff War, Ford’s Electricity Bluff Loses Voltage BY KUNAL CHAUDHARY Ontario’s threats to cut off American states are hollow. The province simply can’t afford to How Far Can “Buy Canadian” Really Go? BY RENÉE SYLVESTRE-WILLIAMS Boycotts work, but only if they don’t fizzle out The Walrus Talks Sovereign Canada BY THE WALRUS TALKS Seven speakers from seven different disciplines share expert perspectives on the policies, priorities, and possibilities shaping Canadian independence Amid Buy Canadian, Should We “Listen Canadian” Too? BY ERIN MACLEOD Rising tensions with the US have disrupted tours, festivals, and the economics of being a musician Canada Needs a Foreign Spy Agency BY WESLEY WARK For decades, Ottawa has let allies do the dirty work. But even former skeptics say it’s time to put agents in the field Frozen Frontiers: Canada, NATO, and the Defence of the North BY THE WALRUS LAB Are we doing enough to keep up with the shifting global landscape? The post 2025: The Must-Read Sovereignty Crisis Stories first appeared on The Walrus.
For years, there was a box on a back shelf of P’s house in Edmonton labelled “insurance.” (For reasons of privacy, we are using this initial only.) Her husband at the time thought it contained paperwork, but P had filled it with a different kind of insurance: a physical record of smashed phones, broken eyeglasses, and photographs of the bruises his violent episodes had left on her body. “I had a circle of blue bruises around my mouth because he would cover my mouth and smother me,” she told me.
Photographs, videos, and audio recordings are highly persuasive to judges and juries. When a...
January 23, 2026 - 06:30 | Linda Besner | Walrus
Good morning. In 2026, Canada resolves to be more pragmatic and clear-eyed. Parliament will return on Monday with that – and lots more – in mind. More on the country’s new outlook below, along with plans for AI regulation and Gaza’s ceasefire. But first: Today’s headlinesTrump’s Greenland deal could include U.S. sovereignty over military bases and mineral rightsCEO of Vancouver’s Hootsuite says ICE contract will stand as long as the agency honours its terms and conditionsQuebec puts the brakes on emissions targets citing economy and rollbacks
January 23, 2026 - 06:27 | Steven Chase | The Globe and Mail
An autopsy in Australia has determined that a young Canadian who was found dead on a beach this week was likely not killed by a pack of 10 dingoes.
January 23, 2026 - 06:22 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
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