‘Calm, focused and ready’: Canada continues World Cup prep ahead of two friendlies
TORONTO — Jesse Marsch watched his players go through warm-up drills on a chilly, windswept pitch. “Be sharp,” the head coach of Canada’s men’s soccer
TORONTO — Jesse Marsch watched his players go through warm-up drills on a chilly, windswept pitch. “Be sharp,” the head coach of Canada’s men’s soccer

TORONTO — Toronto police say their move to ban protests on residential streets of a predominantly Jewish neighbourhood in the city’s north end is a

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Tuesday he believes the information and privacy commissioner, who is speaking out about changes he is making to
TORONTO — Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainment chief operating officer Nick Eaves says Toronto Stadium will outshine its small size when it hosts matches at

The premiers of Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and Saskatchewan are jointly calling on the federal government to give them more of a say in judges who

The U.S.-Israel war with Iran has stoked fears that Tehran could activate dormant agents abroad to execute terror plots.”I believe there’s sleeper cells all over

The Mounties called it the “Native extremism program.” Today, it sounds like a spy novel.Intelligence dossiers stuffed with documents. Wiretaps. Paid informants. Covert operatives with

Newly released RCMP Security Service files reveal that it amassed more than 900 pages of intelligence on the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) over

There was something suspicious about the young, hippie-looking man who rolled up to François Paulette’s home, out of the blue, in a Datsun pickup truck.It

The secret agent was code numbered A-828.Intelligence reports say the person was a “reliable source who is well acquainted with National Indian Brotherhood members.” An

Six years after the Ontario government made e-learning a mandatory requirement for a high school diploma, students don’t appear to be taking online school to diversify their course selection as the province had intended, according to a CBC News analysis of provincial enrolment data.

More than 125,000 people have crossed from Lebanon into Syria this month, fleeing escalating violence and returning to a country that’s still struggling to rebuild after more than a decade of civil war.