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Plus, Trump hates Canada, but Americans don’t
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This Week's Round-Up: November 12, 2025

How Poilievre Is Stealing the Working Class from the NDP

A political realignment the left can’t seem to reverse

BY COLIN HORGAN

Image of the New Democratic Party logo. The N is positioned like a door with Pierre Poilievre walking through it.

Pierre Poilievre correctly tracked the unrest building even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic—the deepening sense of burnout. The idea that we’re all giving more to get less. That working together is really about working for someone else’s benefit rather than your own. The feeling that there is little point in giving to a system that gives so little back. That, instead, what really counts is taking matters into your own hands, striking out on your own, self-optimizing, self-actualizing, self-fulfilling. Under this new cultural framework, fairness is a personal demand for what you’re owed. Common sense is the loudest opinion. Compromise is a betrayal of personal gain.

But Poilievre has a fatal flaw.

Read or Listen to the Story
Photo of Prime Minister Mark Carney stepping out of a car.

Are We Really About to Trigger an Election over This Budget?

A political game of chicken could force Canadians to the polls before Christmas

BY DAVID MOSCROP

A blue sky featuring several different flying drones.

Canadian Army to “Flood the Zone” with Drones, Commander Says

In a candid interview, Lieutenant General Wright outlines plans to dramatically overhaul how the military fights

BY WESELY WARK

Side-by-side comparison of the same photo of a person holding a grocery basket. Left is labelled 2019 and right is labelled 2025; each has a different price due to inflation.

Are We Going to Feel Broke Forever?

When it comes to lowering the cost of living, there’s not much any government can do

BY RENÉE SYLVESTRE-WILLIAMS

Elon Musk arrives on the red carpet for The Met Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art celebrating the Costume Institute opening of "In America: An Anthology of Fashion" in New York City on Monday, May 2, 2022. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI

Elon Musk Could Soon Be the World’s First Trillionaire

Tesla’s new pay package would make his wealth rival the GDP of some European nations

BY KATHY CHOW

Close up photo of United States president Donald Trump.

Sorry, Trump. Americans Still See Canada as a Friend

It's one of the rare things Democrats and Republicans agree on

BY PHILIPPE J. FOURNIER

Have you played Jigsaw yet?

The Walrus covers you know are now puzzles you can solve. Rebuild classic covers, one piece at a time. Go ahead, take a break with our new puzzles.

Solve Now
Surrealist art work depicting three people sitting at a table covered in magazines. Four people in suits with heads that are also magazines walk in through a door.

The Wild Protest Art That Free Trade Inspired

Police crotches at a Quebec summit, nations on disposable plates: how artists fought NAFTA culture

BY SARAH E. K. SMITH

Photo of Canadian author Margaret Atwood.

What’s Missing in Margaret Atwood’s New Memoir

Her book promises the “flesh-and-blood person” behind her fiction but delivers something far more cautious

BY AMARAH HASHAM-STEELE

Illustration of a Black woman in front of a sun and a rainbow.

Hell Is a Lot of Fun in Lorna Goodison’s Update of Dante’s Inferno

The brilliant translation sends readers to an underworld of Caribbean colonizers, politicians, and pop-culture villains

BY AMANDA PERRY

An illustration of an orange person touching a window looking at the planet earth.

I Have Watched Battlestar Galactica Every Year for Nineteen Years

And lately it’s been teaching me a lot about genocide

BY KHAWLA NAKUA

Illustration of three people smiling and hugging each other; the middle person is holding a cellphone.

What’s Giving Me Joy Lately? The Mutual Friend Selfie

There’s nothing like the magic of when two people you know should be friends unexpectedly connect

BY ASMAA MALIK

Photo of a grey squirrel holding a peanut.

Why Squirrels Drive Us Absolutely Nuts

They’re tiny agents of chaos and they know it

BY NANCY F. CASTALDO

Profile photo of poet Vivek Sharma on a green background.

Imaginary Breakfast with Real People

Propelled by a desire to escape / or surrender

BY VIVEK SHARMA

Philanthropic endeavours in Canada play a vital role in bridging the gaps that social safety nets can’t. With the never-ending trade war with the US and the possibility of a recession looming, philanthropic support from foundations is more important than ever.

The Walrus Talks Philanthropy in a Changing Canada brings together seven speakers who will discuss how philanthropy and charities are evolving to meet the needs of the communities they serve.

Join us in Vancouver, or online, to learn about the trends in philanthropy directly from the voices of the people doing the work.

Join Us

A MESSAGE FROM THE WALRUS LAB IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA

Remembering the Unknown: Canada’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

Twenty-five years ago, the remains of an unidentified Canadian soldier were laid to rest at Ottawa’s National War Memorial, now one of Canada’s most meaningful sites of remembrance.

In the latest episode of Canadian Time Machine, artist Mary Ann Liu, who designed the tomb, and Dr. Stacey Barker, Historian of Arts and Military History at the Canadian War Museum, share the vision, symbolism, and lasting significance of this iconic monument.

Listen and Subscribe

Check out the latest episode of What Happened Next

In this episode of What Happened Next, host Nathan Whitlock is joined by author Kenneth Oppel. His most recent book is the novel Best of All Worlds, which was published by Penguin Teen Canada earlier this year and is nominated for a Governor General’s Literary Award. It has also been named under “Best Children’s Books of 2025” by the Times (UK).

Kenneth talks to Nathan about the book he remembers having the biggest emotional impact on him as a kid, about his dislike of the various age groups and categories that get applied to children’s literature, and about his next novel, which just might be his first one written explicitly for adults.

Listen Now

The Cost of Care


As Monica Kidd writes in her cover story, “Need a Knee Replacement? You Can Get It at the Mall” (May), Canada is known for its “universal” health care system. However, we still come second to big-profit interests. According to a 2015 Angus Reid study, nearly 25 percent of Canadians chose not to fill or renew a prescription in the previous year due to the cost of medication. This often results in many low-income patients returning to the hospital, ultimately costing the health care system more than if the prescriptions had been covered. We continue to be one of the world’s only high-income nations with universal health care (theoretically, anyway) but with no similar blanket coverage for prescribed medication. I fear that our system will eventually include crucial treatments that are not universally accessible in a timely manner, except to those with the money to access them privately at for-big-profit prices.


Frank Sterle Jr.
White Rock, BC


Other countries with universal health care systems—including the UK, Sweden, and the Netherlands—have used the private sector to their advantage and incentivized greater efficiency through alternative funding models. While living in the UK for twelve years, my wife and I used the private-pay option several times when we couldn’t get timely care from the public system. We had very satisfactory outcomes at a reasonable cost. Although Canada’s health care system is fine once you get seen and treated, our “enforced egalitarianism” is hurting the people it is meant to serve, in both timeliness and needless suffering.


Bruce Brady
Victoria, BC


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There was a time when every story we covered needed a so-called “Canadian angle”—one that rooted the characters and consequences within this country’s borders. But we know Canada isn’t defined by its boundaries. And there’s no single Canadian perspective.

With your support, we’re bringing an array of voices to the page—those of underrepresented groups, diaspora communities, and more. Because in a time of overwhelming change, we need to know who Canada is.

If you believe in Canada’s need for trusted journalism, please donate to The Walrus today.


— Samia Madwar

Senior Editor

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