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Christopher Nardi

Montreal, Ottawa

Parliamentary Reporter at National Post

Journaliste parlementaire @NationalPost parliamentary reporter. Alternatively witting, semi-witting and unwitting. cnardi(AT)https://t.co/Bf2yudjWeA Tweets🗑regularly

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Articles

  • 2 days ago | nationalpost.com | Christopher Nardi

    Advertisement 1The new target was the product of significant pressure by U.S. President Donald TrumpArticle contentOTTAWA — Even before it hits the 2014 NATO target of two per cent, Canada is committing to a new NATO target of boosting its defence and military spending to five per cent of its GDP — or $150 billion each year in total — within ten years.

  • 2 days ago | ca.news.yahoo.com | Christopher Nardi

    OTTAWA — Even before it hits the 2014 NATO target of two per cent, Canada is committing to a new NATO target of boosting its defence and military spending to five per cent of its GDP — or $150 billion each year in total — within 10 years.

  • 3 days ago | thesudburystar.com | Christopher Nardi

    The new target was the product of significant pressure by U.S. President Donald TrumpPublished Jun 25, 2025  •  Last updated 11 minutes ago  •  4 minute readFrance's President Emmanuel Macron (R) shakes hands with Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney (L) as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer (C) looks on before the start of the North Atlantic Council plenary meeting at the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) summit in The Hague on June 25, 2025.

  • 3 days ago | calgaryherald.com | Christopher Nardi

    Advertisement 1The new target was the product of significant pressure by U.S. President Donald TrumpArticle contentOTTAWA — Even before it hits the 2014 NATO target of two per cent, Canada is committing to a new target of boosting its defence and military spending to five per cent of its GDP — or $150 billion each year — within 10 years.

  • 1 week ago | nationalpost.com | Christopher Nardi

    Advertisement 1At the time of the 2024 ruling, there were 75 judge positions waiting to be filled, an unusually high number. The judge said the long delay was 'failing' CanadiansArticle contentCALGARY — The Federal Court overstepped its authority when it ordered the government to fill an “unacceptably high” number of judicial vacancies within a “reasonable time,” the Federal Court of Appeal ruled Wednesday.

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Christopher Nardi
Christopher Nardi @ChrisGNardi
28 May 25

RT @MercedesGlobal: Exclusive from our @StewGlobal Owner of Toronto company arrested for allegedly violating sanctions on Russia - Nation…

Christopher Nardi
Christopher Nardi @ChrisGNardi
27 May 25

RT @MickeyDjuric: Spotted: Adidas Gazelle in collegiate green #cdnpolisnkrs

Christopher Nardi
Christopher Nardi @ChrisGNardi
27 May 25

Government House Leader @stevenmackinnon tells the House of Commons that debate on today's throne speech will last six days, with a vote scheduled for Wed. June 4. That will presumably be the first confidence vote for the Carney Liberals.