Canada
🍁 Nation • Politics • Economy • Sports • History
Current Events
Toronto❄️
1°C
H: 1° / L: −6°
Clearing; wind chill −15
AQI 22 Good
Montréal❄️
−3°C
H: −1° / L: −9°
Flurries; gusty northwest
AQI 18 Good
Ottawa❄️
−5°C
H: −3° / L: −10°
Flurries; blustery
AQI 16 Good
Edmonton⛅
−2°C
H: 0° / L: −6°
Partly cloudy; brisk
AQI 14 Good
Vancouver⛈️
10°C
H: 12° / L: 6°
Overcast; light rain
AQI 20 Good
Sat⛈️11°
Sun⛅13°
Mon☀️14°
Weather data indicative; source: Environment and Climate Change Canada, March 27, 2026. AQI from AQHI.ca (US AQI scale).
Canada Hits NATO 2% Defence Spending Target for First Time Since Cold War
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Thursday in Halifax that Canada has achieved NATO's benchmark of spending two per cent of gross domestic product on defence — the first time since the fall of the Berlin Wall. The milestone was confirmed in NATO's annual report, which showed Canada spent roughly $63 billion on defence in the 2025–26 fiscal year, a more than $18-billion increase over the previous year. Carney made the announcement at HMC Dockyard Halifax, where he also unveiled more than $3 billion in new Atlantic Canada defence infrastructure investments, including $1.2 billion to modernise CFB Halifax Dockyard and $648 million for new aviation support facilities at 14 Wing Greenwood.
Conservative defence critic James Bezan disputed the achievement, arguing the increase relied partly on accounting reclassifications and that operational capabilities remain limited: "We are still waiting for new submarines. We are still waiting for new tanks." NATO has since shifted its goalposts higher, setting a new 3.5% direct military spending plus 1.5% infrastructure target by 2035 — a commitment Canada has pledged to meet. Canadian Forces recruitment applications are up 13% year-over-year.
Foreign Affairs Minister Anand Joins G7 Meeting in France as Iran, Ukraine Top Agenda
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is attending the G7 Foreign Ministers' Meeting at the Abbaye des Vaux-de-Cernay, southwest of Paris, on March 26–27, representing Canada alongside counterparts from the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom. Before the ministerial sessions, Anand visited Paris to officialise Canada's candidacy to host the Francophonie Summit in 2028 with La Francophonie Secretary-General Louise Mushikiwabo. The G7 meetings are being held under France's rotating presidency and are overshadowed by sharp divisions over how far allies should go in supporting — or constraining — the U.S.-led war on Iran.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in Cernay-la-Ville on Friday for the summit's second day, calling on European allies to do more on the Strait of Hormuz blockade. European ministers, meanwhile, are pressing Rubio for clarity on U.S. military objectives and warning against a prolonged conflict that threatens global energy security. Officials acknowledged they have abandoned attempts to produce a comprehensive final communiqué to avoid open transatlantic tensions — an unusual sign of disunity within the G7.
CPP Payments Deposited Today Amid Rising Cost-of-Living Concerns
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Millions of Canadians are receiving the third CPP payment of 2026 today, with amounts reflecting the 2.0% cost-of-living adjustment applied at the start of the year. The March 27 deposit arrives as new data show mortgage affordability worsened in eleven of Canada's thirteen major cities in February — a report by Ratehub.ca published this week — even as oil-driven inflation continues to pressure household budgets nationwide. Major financial institutions including TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, and CIBC are processing deposits in the early morning hours.
The CPP payment cycle's reliability is providing stability for the roughly six million Canadians who depend on the pension plan as a primary or supplementary retirement income source. Financial planners note the March deposit coincides with tax-filing season, prompting heightened attention to how CPP income interacts with annual CRA filings. For Canadians who contributed to pension systems in partner countries before moving to Canada, international social security agreements allow foreign contribution periods to count toward CPP eligibility.
Politics
Carney Addresses Halifax Chamber: Economic Sovereignty a Key Priority
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered a keynote address Friday morning at the Halifax Chamber of Commerce, building on Thursday's NATO milestone announcement by underscoring the government's broader vision of economic and defence sovereignty. Carney argued that the Iran war has sharpened Canada's strategic calculus, adding urgency to the government's efforts to diversify trade relationships, reduce dependence on U.S. supply chains, and deepen integration with European and Indo-Pacific partners. He cited Canada's new Defence Investment Agency as a vehicle for accelerating procurement and reducing the roughly 70% of defence purchasing that currently flows to U.S. companies.
The Prime Minister confirmed a decision on Canada's new submarine program — choosing between a South Korean and a German-Norwegian consortium — will be made "by the summer." He also noted that over the coming decade, Canada's cumulative defence investment will total "half a trillion dollars," covering submarines, aircraft, drones, sensors, and radar infrastructure. Opposition Conservatives welcomed the NATO target milestone but questioned the spending timeline, arguing urgency on capability gaps is overdue.
Opposition Parties React to Ontario's $13.8 Billion Budget Deficit
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Ontario Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy tabled a $244.2-billion budget Thursday that projects a $13.8-billion deficit for 2026–27 — nearly double the $7.8 billion projected in last year's plan. The government blamed "ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty," including the Iran war, U.S. tariffs on automobiles, aluminum, and steel, and slowing Ontario growth projected at just one per cent real GDP in 2026. The budget delays balanced-book targets to 2028–29, with the province now projecting a $6.1-billion deficit in 2027–28. Ontario's net debt is set to reach $485 billion — more than $100 billion above the figure when the Ford government was first elected in 2018.
Key measures include a temporary HST exemption on all new home purchases (saving buyers up to $130,000), a 30% cut to the small-business corporate tax rate to 2.2%, and $1.1 billion for hospitals over one year — less than the $2.8 billion the Ontario Hospital Association said it needs. NDP Leader Marit Stiles called the budget "adrift," while interim Liberal leader John Fraser said it does nothing for affordability. Ontario is projecting unemployment to rise to 7.4% in 2026.
Federal By-Elections Scheduled for April 13 in Three Ridings
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Canadians in three federal ridings — University-Rosedale and Scarborough Southwest in Toronto, and Terrebonne in Quebec — are heading toward by-elections on April 13, with advance polls already open across all three constituencies. The contests mark the first electoral tests for the Carney Liberals since their April 2025 majority win and are being watched as a barometer of public sentiment on defence spending, cost of living, and the government's handling of the Iran war's economic fallout. University-Rosedale, held by a strong NDP incumbent for years, is considered a close three-way race; Scarborough Southwest trends Liberal but has shown competitive Conservative results in recent cycles.
All three vacancies were created by the deaths or resignations of sitting MPs in the months following the 2025 federal election. Elections Canada has noted that voter turnout in by-elections has declined over successive election cycles, and has launched targeted outreach campaigns encouraging participation, particularly among young first-time voters in both urban ridings. Party leaders are expected to make campaign appearances in all three constituencies before election day.
Economy & Business
S&P/TSX
Thu Mar 26 Close
31,888
▼ −495 (−1.53%)
Stagflation fears; banks & miners sold off.
WTI Crude
Oil (USD/bbl)
$94.48
▲ +$4.17 (+4.6%)
Iran rejects deal; Gulf strikes resume.
Gold
Spot (USD/oz)
$4,442
▼ −126 (−2.8%)
Dollar strength & rising yields weigh on gold.
CAD / USD
Canadian Dollar
$0.7215
▼ −0.4%
Source: XE.com, Mar 26–27, 2026
CAD / INR
vs. Indian Rupee
₹68.24
≈ Flat
Source: XE.com, Mar 27, 2026
CAD / EUR
vs. Euro
€0.6257
▼ −0.2%
Source: XE.com, Mar 26–27, 2026
CAD / GBP
vs. Pound Sterling
£0.5412
≈ Flat
Source: XE.com, Mar 27, 2026
"The TSX retreat on Thursday reflected classic stagflation anxiety — oil up sharply, equities falling as bond yields rose and markets priced in a longer-than-expected conflict. Energy producers found modest support, but the damage to banks, miners and growth stocks was broad." — BNN Bloomberg, March 26, 2026
Canada's Tariff-Hit Sectors Face Compounding Pressure as Iran Oil Shock Bites
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Canadian manufacturers already reeling from two years of U.S. tariffs are now absorbing a second simultaneous blow: the oil price shock driven by Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Energy-intensive industries including steel, aluminum, lumber processing, and petrochemicals are seeing input costs surge even as softening export demand reduces revenue. RBC economist Claire Fan noted that five or six targeted manufacturing sub-sectors are "really, really hurting versus the rest of the economy," with the bifurcation becoming more pronounced as the Iran conflict stretches into its fourth week.
The softwood lumber industry — which had already seen 22 mills close and 50 more operating at reduced capacity since 2022 due to U.S. tariffs — is now grappling with a logistical crisis as ocean freight rates climb on tight tanker availability. Steel exporters report that U.S. shipments fell 50% in December year-over-year and have not recovered. Industry coalitions are calling on Ottawa to combine import barriers against third-party goods being redirected to Canada from other tariff-affected nations with targeted stabilisation funds for workers in the most affected communities.
Ontario Budget: Small Business Tax Cut to 2.2%, HST Waived on New Homes
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
Finance Minister Bethlenfalvy's 2026 Ontario budget contains two headline economic measures aimed at stimulating activity in a slowing province. The small-business corporate income tax rate will be cut 30% — from 3.2% to 2.2% — effective July 1, putting an estimated $450 million annually back into the hands of small firms hit hardest by the trade war. The province will also temporarily waive the provincial portion of HST on all new homes, saving buyers up to $130,000 on properties valued up to $1.5 million — a measure expected to cost $1.4 billion in foregone revenue over one year.
The broader fiscal picture remains challenging: Ontario expects real GDP growth of just one per cent in 2026, with unemployment projected to reach 7.4%. The government is redirecting $4 billion of remaining Protect Ontario Account funds into a new investment vehicle focused on AI, life sciences, and advanced manufacturing. Infrastructure spending rises 14% to $36.7 billion, with hospitals, transit and highways each receiving roughly $1 billion more. Net debt is projected to reach $485 billion — and debt servicing costs of $17.2 billion now exceed the province's spending on post-secondary education.
CUSMA Review Clock Ticking: Canadian Exporters Brace for July Renegotiation
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
With the mandatory July 1 review of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement now just over three months away, Canadian trade officials and business coalitions are accelerating preparations for what could be a pivotal renegotiation. The July review allows each CUSMA partner to renew for 16 years, withdraw entirely, or trigger annual extensions that could stretch negotiations over a decade. Prime Minister Carney has acknowledged that the agreement has been "effectively broken in the short term by U.S. actions," yet the Iran war's energy price shock may have shifted Washington's view of Canada's strategic value as a secure commodity supplier.
Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc met U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Washington earlier this month, though U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra acknowledged "headwinds" in bilateral talks since October. Analysts at Boston Consulting Group outline three scenarios: a targeted extension, a full three-way deal, or CUSMA's termination in favour of bilateral arrangements. With the Ontario budget projecting 1% provincial growth amid trade uncertainty, business lobbies argue a stable trade framework is existential for Canadian manufacturing competitiveness.
Sports
NHL Playoff Push: Leafs, Senators, Canadiens All in Action as Postseason Race Intensifies
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
With just over two weeks remaining in the NHL regular season, Canadian franchises are locked in tight battles for playoff spots across both conferences. The Toronto Maple Leafs sit fifth in the Atlantic Division and are tracking the Ottawa Senators for a critical wild-card berth. Toronto hosts the Florida Panthers tonight at Scotiabank Arena in a pivotal matchup. The Montréal Canadiens have secured a playoff spot and are focusing on seeding, while the Ottawa Senators are in the hunt for a first-round home-ice advantage. The Edmonton Oilers remain in Pacific Division contention, and the Colorado Avalanche — leading the overall standings — host the Winnipeg Jets in Winnipeg.
The Vancouver Canucks face a do-or-die weekend after dropping three of their last four games, sitting outside the wild-card picture by a single point. The Calgary Flames host the Anaheim Ducks tonight in a low-stakes contest. Meanwhile, the Toronto Maple Leafs' coaching staff has emphasised defensive structure over the final stretch, a shift from their porous mid-season play. Head coach Craig Berube noted postgame Thursday that "execution under pressure is what separates playoff teams from the rest."
Toronto Raptors Close Home Slate Friday Before Critical Road Trip
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
The Toronto Raptors wrap up their home schedule Friday night against the Charlotte Hornets at Scotiabank Arena, needing a win to maintain their slim hold on the tenth seed in the Eastern Conference play-in picture. The Raptors enter the game with a 31–41 record, three games behind the ninth-seeded Indiana Pacers with five games remaining. Toronto's young core — led by Scottie Barnes, Immanuel Quickley, and a productive bench — has outperformed expectations in a transitional season, and a play-in berth would be a meaningful development milestone.
General manager Masai Ujiri continues to resist short-term roster moves that would sacrifice future assets for marginal playoff improvement. The team will embark on a four-game road trip after Friday's home closer, with stops in Milwaukee, Miami, Boston, and Indiana — a brutal stretch that could define whether they make the play-in field. The Raptors have gone 8–6 in their last 14 games, showing the defensive intensity the coaching staff has cultivated since the All-Star break.
Canada vs. Iceland Friendly Tomorrow at Renovated Toronto Stadium Opens World Cup Era
Canada Desk • March 27, 2026
The fully upgraded Toronto Stadium (BMO Field) hosts its first match tomorrow as Canada takes on Iceland in a pre-FIFA World Cup 2026 friendly at 1:00 PM ET. The game inaugurates the $157.9-million renovation that expanded the venue to 45,000 seats, installed four massive LED videoboards, and delivered a FIFA-standard hybrid pitch. Tickets are available from $60. The match doubles as an official public opening of the renovated stadium, which will host six World Cup matches beginning with Canada's opening game on June 12.
Canada's men's national team, ranked among the top 20 in the world, are targeting a strong performance against Iceland — a European qualifier known for its physical, disciplined defending — as a tune-up ahead of a difficult World Cup group that includes Brazil. Striker Jonathan David and midfielder Alphonso Davies are expected to feature, with head coach Jesse Marsch using the friendly to experiment with tactical setups and assess squad depth ahead of the tournament. Mayor Olivia Chow has called the stadium "ready to welcome the world."
This Week in History
March 27, 1964: Alaska Earthquake — The Most Powerful in North American Recorded History
Canada Desk — History
On March 27, 1964 — Good Friday — a magnitude 9.2 earthquake struck Prince William Sound, Alaska, lasting nearly five minutes and triggering tsunamis that devastated coastal communities from Anchorage to as far as Crescent City, California. Known as the Good Friday Earthquake, it remains the most powerful seismic event ever recorded in North America and the second-most powerful in recorded world history at that time. The disaster killed 131 people and caused what would be billions of dollars in damage in today's values, wiping out the fishing village of Chenega and devastating parts of Anchorage. The earthquake reshaped scientific understanding of plate tectonics and directly contributed to the establishment of the National Tsunami Warning Centre. For Canada, the quake sent tsunamis crashing into British Columbia's coastal communities, particularly on Vancouver Island, reinforcing ongoing investment in early-warning systems for the Cascadia Subduction Zone — a fault that scientists warn could produce a similarly catastrophic rupture at any time.
Upcoming Events
Mar 28, 2026
Canada vs. Iceland — Pre-World Cup Friendly
Toronto Stadium (BMO Field), 1:00 PM ET — Tickets from $60
Sports — Soccer
Mar 28, 2026
IPL 2026 Season Opener — RCB vs. SRH (Bengaluru)
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru — 7:30 PM IST
Sports — Cricket
Apr 13, 2026
Federal By-Elections: University-Rosedale, Scarborough Southwest & Terrebonne
Polling stations across three ridings; advance voting open now
Civic — Federal
Jun 12, 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026 — Canada's Opening Match
Toronto Stadium, Exhibition Place
Sports — FIFA World Cup