In the spirit of The Times’s global 52 Places to Go in 2019 list, we present some travel tips from Canada Letter readers.
Author: IAN AUSTEN
Canada Letter: The 2 Canadian Stops on Our 52 Places to Go List
The Times’s travel editor discusses how ice caves near Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and the city of Calgary landed on this year’s list of destinations
Double-Decker Bus Crashes in Ottawa Station, Killing 3 and Injuring 25
At least 14 of the injured arrived at hospitals in critical condition. It was the second deadly accident involving a double-decker bus in less than six years.
Driver of Truck That Killed Canada Hockey Players Barreled Through Stop Sign at 60 M.P.H.
The driver ignored four warning signs and an oversized stop sign in an April crash that killed 16 Humboldt Broncos and staff and left Canada grieving.
Canada Letter: Can Justin Trudeau Make It Two in a Row?
The Liberals will seek a second mandate in Canada’s next federal election in October. That result is not a certainty.
Caught Between Feuding Giants, Canada Fears Consequences
Fulfilling an extradition request from its ally and neighbor has left Canada vulnerable to actions by China, an increasingly important export market.
Canada Letter: Justin Trudeau Is Facing a Carbon Tax Backlash. He’s Not Alone.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has made carbon pricing a keystone of his political program for Canada, but critics are multiplying, at home and abroad
Justin Trudeau’s Carbon Tax Push Finds Critics on All Sides
A conservative shift in Canada’s provinces has opened a new battle over carbon pricing, threatening one of the prime minister’s goals. But that is not the only source of criticism.
Canada Letter: Canada Faces a New Challenge as a Century of Automaking Ends
Both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Premier Doug Ford of Ontario pledged to help jobless G.M. workers in Canada. But what aid they can truly offer is unclear.
Pain and Sense of Betrayal as Canada G.M. Factory Closes After a Century
“Just as you’re getting older to know that you don’t have a job, it’s really heart wrenching,” said a worker at the vast complex in Oshawa, Ontario, where families worked for G.M. for generations.