
Claude Vaillancourt
Articles
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Jun 15, 2024 |
ledevoir.com | Claude Vaillancourt
L’avancée de l’extrême droite lors des dernières élections européennes, plus particulièrement en France, n’annonce rien de bon. Même si ses victoires n’ont pas été aussi grandes qu’on l’avait annoncé, le mouvement gagne en popularité et en profondeur. Un regard vers l’avenir ne nous permet pas d’être optimistes : l’extrême droite pourrait remporter d’autres scrutins et s’imposer comme obstacle à la démocratie. Imaginons le pire.
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Apr 23, 2024 |
pressegauche.org | Claude Vaillancourt
avec l’aimable permission de l’auteurPar Claude Vaillancourt -10 avril 2024https://alter.quebec/23749-2/Salis libérée de ses chaînes - illustration tirée de la vidéo réalisée par le média public italien RaiClaude VaillancourtCes personnes veulent se confronter à des néonazis qui célèbrent la Fête de l’honneur, commémorant le soi-disant héroïsme d’un bataillon nazi contre l’Armée rouge pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
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Apr 16, 2024 |
monitormag.ca | Jon Milton |Randy Robinson |Claude Vaillancourt |Catherine McKenney
The federal government’s 2024 budget includes generational investments on housing affordability and runs a victory lap on health care expansion, but it is quiet on key issues such as climate. This year’s federal budget sends strong signals that the governing party is gearing up for a fight in the coming year and is trying to change Canadians’ perceptions of its legacy—especially on hot button issues such as housing and affordability.
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Apr 11, 2024 |
monitormag.ca | Randy Robinson |Stuart Trew |Claude Vaillancourt |Catherine McKenney
Financial Accountability Office paper is essential reading for every Ontarian When it comes to paying for the services people depend on, Ontario is utterly out of step with the rest of the country. That’s an obvious conclusion to draw from the latest report by the Financial Accountability Office (FAO), released April 10. At 15 pages, the FAO’s 2022-23 Interprovincial Budget Comparison is a quick read.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
monitormag.ca | Stuart Trew |Claude Vaillancourt |Catherine McKenney |Neil Saravanamuttoo
Gabriel Attal and Justin Trudeau will have much to talk about during the French prime minister’s trip to Ottawa this week. Though their agenda covers a number of issues, the French Senate's awkward rejection of CETA—the Canada–European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement—on March 21 will be prominent. These two great defenders of the agreement will no doubt ask themselves what it all means, and how CETA’s survival might be salvaged. Should we care about the French vote?
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