| It seems only the best will do for International Development Minister Bev Oda, who refused to stay at one five-star hotel in London, England, last year and rebooked at a swanky establishment for more than double the cost. BLOG POSTS | Steve Lafleur: The Real Choice Facing Alberta Voters Today, Albertans essentially have a choice between two directions. The choice isn't big government versus small government, as some commentators have argued. Neither of the front running parties has any plans to reduce the size or scope of government. The choice is between centralization and subsidiarity. The principle of subsidiarity holds that decision making ought to be made at the lowest level practical. The goal is to empower local decision makers, while introducing an element of competition into service delivery. So more centralization or more subsidiarity? That is the choice. | | David Frum: You Wrote a What?! "As some things are too strange for fiction, others are too true for journalism." The idea behind that quip explains why I turned to fiction to try to describe what has happened in Washington. I could tell you. Or I can show you. Read part one of my new novel Patriots here. | | Andrew Cooper: Does it Even Matter What Celebs Think About Politics? When celebrities say silly things, commonly with respect to some form of conspiracy theory involving international relations, they grab attention for themselves, but not for the issue they are talking about. | | Cameron Fenton: Our Generation's Awakening Must Be Green and Red The old mentality may have told us to fight our battles separately; let environmentalists deal with the environment, let workers and students deal with the economy. But this is the same fight because the crises of the climate and the economy have the same root: putting profits before people and the planet. | | Irwin Cotler: Nice Try, But the Bill of Rights Is No Charter As we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Harper government insists on casting the Canadian Bill of Rights as not only the catalyst for the Charter, but indeed itself as a great instrument of rights protection. This is to misstate history, to minimize the importance of Charter, and to marginalize the revolutionary impact that this document has had not only on our laws, but on our lives. | | MOST POPULAR ON HUFFINGTONPOST.CA |
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