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1. Suppose they gave a postal strike and nobody noticed

2. The fall economic update is late, but if your finances looked this bad, you'd be shy too

3. Sometimes the people get it wrong; A growing body of research shows voters aren't motivated by rational considerations, but factors such as social identity and partisan loyalty

4. WIN OR LOSE; No matter the outcome of Tuesday's presidential election, Donald Trump will throw America into chaos, Andrew Coyne writes. The only real question is whether it will last for weeks - something America can survive - or for years

5. Liberal MPs lack the means - but mostly the courage - to take down their leader

6. Our democracy is under attack. Do our leaders know it? The peace and prosperity Canadians have always taken for granted is increasingly in danger

7. A disastrous campaign has cost Trump almost none of his support

8. Other countries have taken a clear stand on Venezuela. Why hasn't Canada?

9. DO NOT REMAIN CALM. A TRUMP PRESIDENCY REALLY WILL BE THAT BAD; It's easy to believe that America's institutions will simply endure the former president's threat to democracy. It's much more difficult to reckon with just how dire things could get, Andrew Coyne writes

10. Canada's NATO commitments are a running joke; To much fanfare, the Trudeau government took to the world stage - and offered little more than another defence-spending IOU

11. First-past-the-post is not the defence against extremists we think it is

12. Why does Trudeau insist on staying on as Liberal Leader? To save democracy, of course; The future of democracy may be on the ballot south of the border. It is not here

13. After 18 years, the CPP admits it could have earned more with index funds

14. Tax capital gains like other income, yes - but tax all kinds of income less

15. Provincial finances are a future crisis in the making. It's time to start work on a solution; Half the provinces have debts that are likely to grow faster than the economy, meaning they will face steep tax hikes or spending cuts

16. The productivity puzzle: How could we be doing so poorly? We did everything right! For a while, Canada seemed to do everything that orthodox economics would recommend for prosperity. Still, productivity slumped and growth rates fell

17. As country after country passes Canada by, it's no longer one of the richest nations; We are in a growth crisis - at the very moment we most need growth to pick up, it has all but petered out

18. Angry at businesses like Bell Media? Real competition - not anger - is the answer; Rather than pout at being gamed, yet again, Trudeau would be better advised to stop playing the game

19. First, Trump tried to overthrow American democracy. His next target: the rule of law; The presidential candidate is not just seeking absolution for past crimes - he is seeking a licence to commit more

20. If we’re not going to use carbon taxes to reduce our emissions, it may be better to do nothing

21. Pierre Poilievre works to flip the script; And here is that script, from the Conservative Leader's efforts to rebrand himself

22. Getting inflation to 2% could be easier than the Bank of Canada wants to admit; The central bank has to persuade people it has the stomach for the fight. It's not enough just to set a target: It has to be a hell-or-high-water target

23. There is no 'convention' that the party with the most seats gets to govern

24. The Liberal-NDP deal has changed the game in ways we still haven't grasped; The supply-and-confidence agreement has helped make Canada's progressive bloc explicit. Could that prompt the Conservatives to think bigger?

25. The shocking collapse in Canadian productivity in spite of the Liberals' best efforts

26. Road pricing works. It's in use around the world. Why not in Canada?

27. The best thing the government could do to save the media is to stop trying; The Online News Act may not not yield a dime in revenues for the publishers and could deprive them of their social-media traffic

28. 100 million Canadians by 2100 may not be federal policy, but it should be - even if it makes Quebec howl; If the province is 'trapped' on immigration, it is only caught on the horns of its own self-imposed dilemma

29. Does a country have 'no choice' but to subsidize its auto industry? Ask Australia

30. A subsidy war with the U.S. isn't the way out of our economic growth crisis; If an investment is economic, it doesn't need a subsidy. If it isn't economic, it shouldn't get one

31. Israel's legal reforms look awfully Canadian - and that's not good

32. Everything isn't broken. The government is; The House of Commons is back in session - a reminder that both sides agree on one fundamental falsehood

33. The federal government's fiscal plan is a sham

34. Corporate Canada has been protected from competition for too long; Our sheltered oligopolies are not an accident of history, but the result of deliberate government policy

35. Germany's conspiracy-fuelled coup plot shouldn't be laughed off

36. Thank you, Doug Ford, for exposing the lie at the heart of our modern democracy; Ontario's Premier is allowing for minority rule. Infamy! Outrage! It's ... almost like the electoral system we have now

37. The Liberals' new era of fiscal restraint never seems to come; Budget after budget, Ottawa projects spending to grow at a modest pace, but the entire curve shifts higher with each revision

38. With the 'Freeland Doctrine,' the Liberals say what's long been apparent to everyone else; In a recent speech, the Deputy Prime Minister acknowledged that the age of peace through prosperity is over

39. Quebec's election offers fresh evidence of how broken our electoral system is

40. These are desperately serious times. We need serious politics to match; After decades of relative economic stability, international peace and national unity, all three have either broken down, or seem poised to

41. There's a case for centrism, on balance; Success in politics goes to the party or the candidate who moves the middle to them - sometimes by redefining what 'the middle' means

42. The risk of political violence in Canada has never been higher

43. Why this inflation may be easier to tame than inflations past; The current bout uniquely comes after 30 years in which central banks both promised and delivered low and stable rates, but recovery will depend on what people expect to happen

44. Where would Poilievre take the Tories? Not to the far right, but the far out; His campaign - a grab bag of grievances and resentments, plus a few shiny objects - is aimed squarely at attracting support from extremists

45. How the pandemic broke central bankers' orderly world; Recent price shocks shattered the spell cast over the public, and banks couldn't afford to take a leisurely approach to liquidity

46. Reasonable limits: The antidote to U.S.-style extremism in high court decisions

47. The government can do more on inflation; Ottawa's job is mostly just to avoid hindering central banking efforts, but it has largely failed

48. It's time to consider mandatory voting; In a democracy, where claims of government legitimacy rely on elections, turnout matters

49. There was no real winner in this Ontario election

50. The paranoid style in Conservative politics has deep roots; As the party of those who were excluded from the Liberal power consensus, it has always tended to attract its share of cranks

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