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Plus, Why Canada’s F-35 dilemma won’t end
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This Week's Round-Up: February 18, 2026

Carney’s Wealth Tests the Limits of Canada’s Ethics Laws

Our conflict-of-interest rules are no match for a prime minister this financially entangled

BY TAYLOR C. NOAKES

Image of a pile of $100 bills with the top of Prime Minister Mark Carney's head peeking out from behind.

Prime Minister Mark Carney claimed at a March 2025 press conference that, outside of his blind trust, he “owns nothing but cash and real estate”—a cottage and a family home. Duff Conacher, co-founder of Democracy Watch, calls that, at best, a calculated half-truth. A trust doesn’t erase ownership: it just pushes it out of sight. Carney can insist he severed ties with the private sector, but anyone with ongoing investments will still have a stake in it. By Conacher’s count, Carney has interests in 554 companies that would be subject to a blind trust, and another 103 entries that are subject to an ethics screen. Carney’s financial entanglement may be unprecedented in scale: “The largest I’ve ever seen in Canada,” says Stedman.


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Black and white photo of the exterior of a school building with police tape across the image. Red dots of blood are near the centre of the image.

What We’re Getting Wrong about the Tumbler Ridge Shootings

Blaming mental illness—or identity—lets society avoid harder truths about violence

BY CARMINE STARNINO, TRACY VAILLANCOURT

Photo of a white jet plane.

The F-35 Debate Is Really about How We Killed the Avro Arrow

The deliberate destruction of Canada’s homegrown fighter jet haunts our standoff with Washington

BY WES O'DONNELL

Photograph of President Donald Trump saluting. Trump is blurry and out of focus.

Politics Has Grown Too Big for Politicians Alone

Democracy cannot survive if it sees the public as a threat, not a partner

BY PETER MACLEOD, RICHARD JOHNSON

Photo of Pierre Poilievre speaking from behind a podium with a red maple leaf on the front; only the top half of his face can be seen.

Conservatives Are Competitive. Pierre Poilievre Isn’t

Polls point to a widening gap between party strength and leader popularity

BY PHILIPPE J. FOURNIER

Photograph of Pierre Poilievre taken from behind a plant.

The Undeclared Civil War Inside Poilievre’s Conservative Party

A vocal bloc is forcing a choice between populist intensity and broader appeal

BY KYLA RONELLENFITSCH

Photo of a sign on the exterior of a building that reads "Alberta Health Services."

Alberta Knew Measles Was Harming Pregnant Patients—But Stayed Silent

Internal documents reveal health officials withheld data about the people most at risk

BY MONICA KIDD

Illustration of two blue jugs on a beige background.

The Yukon’s Most Important Piece of Infrastructure Is a Plastic Blue Jug

Hauling water is how thousands make an increasingly unaffordable North livable

BY TRINA MOYLES

Image of a figure skater on a pink background.

Skate Canada Stood Up for Trans Athletes. Will the Olympics Follow Suit?

Activists have called for FIFA and the 2028 Olympics to pull out of the United States

BY MEL WOODS

Close up photo of a hockey players face with cartoon blue tears illustrated on the sides.

End of an Era: Quebec Players Missing from Men’s Olympic Hockey

It’s a moment of collective mourning

BY TOULA DRIMONIS

A purple-toned illustration of a hockey rink and net, a blurry crowd in the arena seats.

The Sexy, Soaring, and Utterly Unstoppable Heated Rivalry

The hockey romance is the perfect lens through which to view … pretty much everything

BY VARIOUS CONTRIBUTORS

Image of a red heart in the centre of a circular maze against a pink background.

I’ve Been a Therapist for 40 Years. Here’s What I Can Tell You about Love

It will force you to see yourself in ways you may not like

BY STEPHEN GROSZ

Wildfires are no longer a once-a-year emergency in Canada. With smoke and other side-effects now crossing provincial and national borders, Canadians are asking not whether this will continue, but how we respond.

Join us at The Walrus Talks Wildfires to hear from leading experts, engage with the latest research and perspectives, and explore promising solutions that can shape Canada’s response.

Join Us

A MESSAGE FROM THE WALRUS LAB IN PARTNERSHIP WITH WILSON COLLEGE OF LEADERSHIP AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AT MCMASTER UNIVERSITY

What does it take to spark real change in our communities?

Generations Ahead is a new podcast hosted by Sara Wolfe that explores the creative ideas and leadership shaping the future of Canada and beyond. The series features changemakers from classrooms, policy spaces, and grassroots movements who are tackling complex challenges and imagining what comes next.

This isn’t a typical leadership podcast. It’s about imagination, connection, and the possibilities that emerge when we approach today’s challenges with hope.

🎧 Listen and Subscribe

In this episode of What Happened Next, host Nathan Whitlock is joined by author, editor, and journalist Haley Mlotek. They talk about the brief urge she had to cancel the publication of her book, No Fault: A Memoir of Romance and Divorce, and about the importance of recognizing that books are not built upon two or three moments of inspiration but upon hundreds and hundreds of small decisions.

Listen Now

Don’t shrink now. Grow with us.

While others cut, The Walrus is investing. And that’s because of your donations. More podcasts, a bigger books section, expanded local reporting, and a broader international lens.

We’re not retreating, and you shouldn’t either. Donate today, or better yet, make a monthly commitment. It’s the best way to keep Canadian journalism growing.


Carmine Starnino

Editor-in-Chief, The Walrus

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