Beyond — Page 42
Canada braces for U.S. tariffs on forced labour
Ottawa pledges new legislation after Trump administration targets Canada with 10% duty over supply-chain enforcement gaps.
Canada-U.S. trade talks resume with cautious optimism
Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc met with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and says he's hopeful after recommending the three...
U.S. scaling back NATO military support as allies step up
Trump administration reducing American forces available in a crisis, pushing Canada and Europe to fill the gap.
Quebec vacation budgets stalled as inflation erodes summer plans
The average Québecer plans to spend $2,095 this summer—unchanged for the first time in five years, as travel costs surge.
Provincial Liberals face historic collapse, but signs of recovery emerge
Once dominant across Canada, provincial Liberal governments have dwindled to just one. Recent polling suggests some momentum returning...
Tim Hortons ending credit card rewards program in October
The coffee chain is shutting down its three-year-old credit card program, citing a shift toward new value offerings.
Military police leadership blocks civilian oversight, watchdog warns
The Military Police Complaints Commission reports persistent barriers from the Office of the Provost Marshal, including document...
Rosemere pushes province to ban energy drinks for minors
The town council unanimously backed a ban following the 2024 death of 15-year-old Zachary Miron, who consumed an energy drink while...
Pancreatic cancer pill shows doubled survival in early trials
Toronto's Princess Margaret Cancer Centre plans to open clinical trials for daraxonrasib, a drug that extended survival from 6 months to...
First woman to appear in NHL game leads PWHL's Detroit expansion
Manon Rhéaume's groundbreaking career comes full circle as she takes on general manager role.
Tim Hortons shuts down Tims Rewards credit card this October
The coffee chain's three-year credit card experiment ends Oct. 1. Existing cardholders have other options.
B.C. retail sales rise on fuel spike, but core spending slips
Metro Vancouver sees continued weakness while gasoline prices push national numbers higher in March.