Research Co. survey reveals growing affinity with Pacific Northwest neighbours, skepticism about Canada’s future ...
Less than 24 hours after Mark Carney’s launch, Chrystia Freeland announced her bid to be the next Liberal party leader of ...
Gov. Gianforte names new Department of Agriculture director. Montana's DEQ to develop emissions reduction roadmap ...
His chief competitor to be Liberal leader seems to be Chrystia Freeland, 56, an Alberta-born Rhodes scholar, former journalist and one-time finance minister who is yoked to Trudeau’s legacy in the ...
Leadership hopefuls have until Jan. 23 to announce their candidacy. But the field for Liberal leadership race seems to be getting narrower.
Former B.C. Premier Christy Clark and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne said they won’t be candidates for the federal Liberal leadership.
The pool of potential candidates to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau continues to dwindle with both former B.C. premier ...
The race to succeed Justin Trudeau as Canada’s prime minister is increasingly looking like a two-way battle between former finance minister Chrystia Freeland and ex-central banker Mark Carney.
The worst kind of politics. That is: the meanest, lowest, most graceless. And poorly calculated to boot. That tweet made one ...
On Tuesday, former B.C. premier Christy Clark plopped out of the federal Liberal leadership race with the usual brusque ...
Carney had the support of 27 per cent of Liberal voters, while Chrystia Freeland was second with 21 per cent and Clark was a distant third at six per cent. Carney and Freeland were almost tied among ...
Former B.C. premier Christy Clark says she has decided not to seek the federal Liberal leadership.In a letter, Clark says there isn't enough time to mount a successful campaignand to connect with ...