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July 11, 2025 | In an opinion piece published in Canada鈥檚 National Observer,聽Marc Fortin, alongside Richard Gold, Evan Henry, and Martin Bader, argue聽that Canada should seize the moment created by U.S. research setbacks to build a stronger, more collaborative innovation ecosystem. With American universities facing cuts and instability, the authors call on Canada to rethink how they support research, moving away from patent sales toward long-term industry partnerships, open data, and simplified licensing.

Classified as: Marc Fortin, Research, U.S. politics, innovation
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Published on: 14 Jul 2025

July 14, 2025 | In an article for聽Policy Magazine, MPP '25 Al-Amin Ahamed examined the gap between Canada鈥檚 2022 federal ban on conversion therapy and the ongoing harm caused by its underlying ideology. While Bill C-4 made it a criminal offence to attempt to change or suppress someone鈥檚 sexual orientation or gender identity, Ahamed warns that the ideology behind these practices has simply evolved鈥攁dopting new language and methods that fall outside the law鈥檚 reach.

Classified as: LGBTQ+, health, Bill C-4
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Published on: 14 Jul 2025

June 16, 2025 | Speaking on Montreal Now with Aaron Rand, Pearl Eliadis cautioned that if Canada鈥檚 Supreme Court does not act to limit Quebec鈥檚 use of the notwithstanding clause in laws such as Bills 21 and 96, the anglophone community may need to seek recourse through the United Nations Human Rights Committee. Eliadis noted that Canada, as a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, has a duty to uphold principles of equality and non-discrimination鈥攑rotections she believes are being undermined by the legislation.

Classified as: Pearl Eliadis, bill 21, Bill 96, United Nations
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Published on: 14 Jul 2025

July 12, 2025 | Pearl Eliadis spoke to CityNews Montreal about the potential to challenge Quebec鈥檚 Bills 21 and 96 before the United Nations Human Rights Committee. Eliadis explained that bringing the case to the UN would aim 鈥渢o get the UN committee's view鈥 on whether the laws violate international human rights obligations. The interview highlights growing legal interest in using international mechanisms to confront the controversial legislation.

Classified as: Pearl Eliadis, bill 21, Bill 96, United Nations
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Published on: 14 Jul 2025

June 2025 | Vincent Rigby, alongside other senior experts, co-authored a white paper analyzing the Canada-EU Security and Defence Partnership. While the agreement aims to reduce reliance on U.S. defence suppliers and expand access to the European market, the report warns that its success is far from guaranteed. Rigby and his co-authors highlight major fiscal and political barriers, including Canada鈥檚 underinvestment in defence, EU divisions over spending targets, and implementation hurdles in aligning procurement and supply chains.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, defence, EU
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Published on: 10 Jul 2025

July 9, 2025 |聽Vincent Rigby, along with retired vice-admiral Mark Norman, former deputy trade minister Tim Sargent, former defence minister Perrin Beatty, and professor Fen Hampson, wrote a report highlighted in The Globe and Mail that raises concerns about Canada鈥檚 new Security and Defence Partnership with the European Union. The pact, signed by Prime Minister Mark Carney, aims to reduce Canada鈥檚 reliance on U.S. military contractors and boost the Canadian defence industry by tapping into the EU鈥檚 growing defence market.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, defence, EU
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Published on: 10 Jul 2025

June 23, 2025 | Vincent Rigby聽 joined the CDA Institute鈥檚 Expert Series alongside former Canadian Ambassador to NATO Kerry聽Buck and former NATO Assistant Secretary General Wendy Gilmour to unpack what鈥檚 at stake as leaders gather in The Hague for the 76th NATO Summit.聽The conversation focused on Canada鈥檚 recent pledge to meet NATO鈥檚 long-standing 2% GDP defence spending target by March 2026, as well as the summit鈥檚 broader agenda鈥攅xpected to include raising the defence spending floor to 3.5%, enhancing alliance readiness, and addressing industrial capacity shortfalls.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, NATO
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Published on: 26 Jun 2025

June 25, 2025 | Professor Taylor Owen,聽founding director of聽聽has come together with other advisors to build an application, called Gander.聽It鈥檚 a social media platform that lets you post videos, write updates, and tailor your feed to what聽you聽actually want to see 鈥 minus the trolls, conspiracy theories, and the 鈥渨hy is this even in my feed?鈥 content.

Classified as: taylor owen, Taylor Owen on Digital Governance
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Published on: 26 Jun 2025

June 23, 2025 |聽Professor聽Vincent Rigby, a former NSIA to the Prime Minister, along with聽Kerry Buck, a former Canadian Ambassador to NATO and Former Assistant Secretary General, Defence Investment, Wendy Gilmour joined the CDA Institute聽 to discuss the key issues, challenges, and likely outcomes of this year鈥檚 Summit for Canada and the Alliance in this podcast.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby
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Published on: 25 Jun 2025

June 18, 2025 | In March 2023,聽Jennifer Welsh聽launched Tour de Table, a podcast series that joins leading scholars and policymakers for a bilingual discussion of the political, economic, and security challenges confronting our world and whether and how Canada is prepared to address them.聽

Classified as: Jennifer Welsh
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Published on: 19 Jun 2025

June 17, 2025 | Professor聽Vincent Rigby, a former Global Affairs Canada and Department of National Defence government official, contended at how Canada must not step away from the U.S. completely regarding trade, economics,聽defense, and聽security, despite 鈥渄iversification strategies鈥 because of Trump. 鈥淚 mean, we share a continent...we are indivisible in that respect, and so it makes sense for Canada to still work closely with the United States on defense and security issues,鈥 said Rigby.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, diplomacy
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Published on: 19 Jun 2025

June 14, 2025 | Vincent Rigby, quoted in The聽Globe and Mail,聽sees Carney鈥檚 foreign policy as a clear break from traditional diplomacy rooted in values. He argues that Canada is embracing a more pragmatic, hard-headed approach in response to global volatility. While diversification of defence partnerships鈥攕uch as working with European suppliers鈥攊s on the table, Rigby stresses that close coordination with the U.S. remains essential.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, G7, defence
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Published on: 17 Jun 2025

June 15, 2025 | Jennifer Welsh joined CBC Radio鈥檚 The Sunday Magazine with Piya Chattopadhyay to analyze how rising tensions between Israel and Iran are shaping the global security landscape鈥攋ust as G7 leaders gather in Alberta. Speaking alongside former Canadian ambassador Arif Lalani, Welsh described Israel鈥檚 latest military strikes as unusually ambitious in scale and timing.

Classified as: Jennifer Welsh, Nuclear, war
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Published on: 16 Jun 2025

May 19, 2025 | MPP 鈥21 Asif Khan in Policy Magazine critically examines the long-awaited rollout of the Canada Disability Benefit (CDB). While the federal government has promoted the CDB as a landmark anti-poverty initiative, Khan argues it falls drastically short. Capped at just $200 per month, the benefit will only lift a fraction of working-age Canadians with disabilities out of poverty in its first decade.

Classified as: income inequality, disability
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Published on: 16 Jun 2025

June 9, 2025 | Vincent Rigby was quoted in the National Post in response to Prime Minister Mark Carney鈥檚 announcement that Canada will meet NATO鈥檚 2% defence spending target this fiscal year, adding over $9 billion. Rigby, who previously served as national security and intelligence adviser, called the move a significant and welcome shift from earlier governments, emphasizing that it shows Canada is taking its defence commitments seriously. He noted that this is not just about supporting allies鈥攊t鈥檚 also about protecting Canadian interests and values.

Classified as: Vincent Rigby, NATO, defence
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Published on: 12 Jun 2025

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