A group of Montrealers who are tired of the endless tales of corruption heard at the Charbonneau commission plans to file a lawsuit to recoup money lost to kickbacks and waste.
Montrealers plan to seek corruption compensation through courts
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Tories press to tighten tax loopholes
Anxious to find every penny it's owed, the federal government is seeking to plug tax loopholes with a 1,000-page piece of legislation it wants passed into law as soon as possible.
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Oilsands crude a greener alternative: Joe Oliver
Canada's oilsands bitumen is a "greener alternative" than some other global sources of energy, says Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver.
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Differing accounts of Cdn cardinal's role in Vatican scandal
Differing accounts emerged Tuesday about the role Canada's top Catholic played in the sex-charged resignation of Scottish Cardinal Keith O'Brien.
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CBC head unloads on Sun News
CBC president Hubert Lacroix didn’t let facts get in the way of a good rant Tuesday at a House of Commons committee looking into sexual harassment at the state broadcaster.
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London councillor drops N-word in debate
A London city councillor dropped a racial slur in a public debate Tuesday, saying she did it for shock value.
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Engineer unhappy with construction quality at Elliot Lake, Ont., mall
The structural engineer of the Algo Centre Mall testified at the public inquiry that he wasn't pleased with the workmanship during construction in the late 1970s.
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Bev Oda wins golden pig award for gorging on public dime
Former cabinet minister Bev Oda was awarded a golden pig statuette Wednesday in recognition for excellence in public trough diving.
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Obama 'out of excuses' to delay Keystone, says Saskatchewan's Brad Wall
The debate over the Keystone XL pipeline is "strictly politics" and President Barack Obama has "no more excuses" to delay it, according to Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall.
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Border agents seize huge cocaine haul at Montreal airport
Border officials say they nabbed 31.9 kg of cocaine from the luggage of a man who arrived at Montreal-Trudeau Airport.
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Almost 300,000 able to vote in Liberal leadership race
Liberal leadership hopefuls will begin in earnest Thursday to sweet-talk their rivals' boosters into kicking the tires of other campaigns.
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Morgue worker sacked for reportedly snapping pics of dead girls
A city morgue employee was fired in 2012 after he committed “inappropriate acts,” the head coroner for Quebec City said Wednesday afternoon.
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Top 10 Justin Trudeau gaffes
Top 10 Justin Trudeau gaffes
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Chris Hadfield on the psychology of space
Last month, we posed this question to Sun Media readers: What would you ask an astronaut? Turns out, our readers wanted to know a lot about space.
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Quebecers paying millions for accused bikers' legal defences
Quebec taxpayers paid $11.4 million over two years to defend 118 accused motorcycle gangsters, QMI Agency has learned.
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Border officer fired over organized crime buddy
A Canadian Border Services Agency officer was tossed from the force and is under police scrutiny after an investigation revealed he was palling around with a member of organized crime.
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Irving contracted to build new Navy ships
The Navy is still a long way from putting new arctic and offshore patrol ships through their paces, but the ships are a step closer to construction.
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Feds failing aboriginal inmates: Watchdog
Federal prisons are flooded with aboriginal inmates and correctional programs designed to address their needs are chronically
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Libertarian Ron Paul headlines Manning Networking Conference
The big draw guest at this year's Manning Networking Conference is former Republican congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul. He's best known as the world's most prominent libertarian politician.
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Abuse victims criticize Que. Cardinal Marc Ouellet
Quebec City's Catholic Diocese pleaded Thursday for reporters to not help ruin Cardinal Marc Ouellet's chances of becoming the next pope.
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