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Thursday, November 21, 2024
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Thursday, November 21, 2024 | Latest Paper

Roy Norton

Canada rolls the dice and engages Congress on subsidies for zero-emission vehicles

Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
During a November trip to Washington, D.C., a Canadian delegation that including Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, left, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and International Trade Minister Mary Ng met with members of the U.S. Congress to push their opposition to provisions in the Biden Build Back Better legislation. Photograph courtesy of Twitter/Mary_Ng
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
During a November trip to Washington, D.C., a Canadian delegation that including Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, left, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and International Trade Minister Mary Ng met with members of the U.S. Congress to push their opposition to provisions in the Biden Build Back Better legislation. Photograph courtesy of Twitter/Mary_Ng
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
During a November trip to Washington, D.C., a Canadian delegation that including Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, left, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and International Trade Minister Mary Ng met with members of the U.S. Congress to push their opposition to provisions in the Biden Build Back Better legislation. Photograph courtesy of Twitter/Mary_Ng
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | January 4, 2022
During a November trip to Washington, D.C., a Canadian delegation that including Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, left, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and International Trade Minister Mary Ng met with members of the U.S. Congress to push their opposition to provisions in the Biden Build Back Better legislation. Photograph courtesy of Twitter/Mary_Ng
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | November 18, 2020
The stakes are high, the window for constructive Canadian leadership won’t be open for long, and failure to achieve institutional reforms could, ultimately, resuscitate populist, nationalist, grievance-driven policies that so damaged the international order under Donald Trump, writes Roy Norton. Flickr photograph by Gage Skidmore
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | November 18, 2020
Opinion | BY ROY NORTON | November 18, 2020
The stakes are high, the window for constructive Canadian leadership won’t be open for long, and failure to achieve institutional reforms could, ultimately, resuscitate populist, nationalist, grievance-driven policies that so damaged the international order under Donald Trump, writes Roy Norton. Flickr photograph by Gage Skidmore