Politicians have no place telling police how to do their jobs | Page 890 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Marcus Gee
Publication Date: January 17, 2026 - 06:00

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Politicians have no place telling police how to do their jobs

January 17, 2026

The provincial government and the Toronto police are butting heads. The subject is how to manage pro-Palestinian protests in the city. The province says that the police are not doing enough. The police say they are doing everything they can within the law. The police, in this case, are right.

The clash comes against a background of rising antisemitism across Canada. The Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, massacre in Israel and the ugly war in Gaza that followed were the match that lit the tinder.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Canada doesn’t talk about the Avro Arrow because it’s nostalgic. It talks about the Arrow because it’s unfinished business. Every time Ottawa finds itself boxed in on defence procurement, every time the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) tries to remind Canada who it thinks really owns North American air power, the Arrow reappears. It doesn’t show up as an engineering debate or a budget line. It shows up as a question of sovereignty. Who decides what flies over Canada, who maintains it, who upgrades it, and who gets the final say when politics intrudes on defence? Right now...
February 11, 2026 - 13:43 | Wes O'Donnell | Walrus
Carney was due to travel to the Munich Security Conference on Wednesday evening after announcing his government's defence industrial strategy at an event in Halifax. 
February 11, 2026 - 13:43 | Sean Boynton | Global News - Canada