
FIFA World Cup brings excitement â and multiple concerns â to Canada’s host cities
As excitement builds around the world for this year’s FIFA World Cup tournament, residents and small businesses in Canada’s host cities are bracing for daily

As excitement builds around the world for this year’s FIFA World Cup tournament, residents and small businesses in Canada’s host cities are bracing for daily
TORONTO — After an eight-year buildup, the Canadian men’s soccer team will soon play a FIFA World Cup game on home soil for the first
TORONTO — As people from around the world arrive in Toronto and festivities marking the beginning of the FIFA World Cup get underway, health-care workers

TORONTO — Ontario taxpayers will spend $200 million on a new parking garage at Ontario Place, but the government says it will quickly generate tens

WASHINGTON — The United States’ top diplomat in Canada says that when U.S. President Donald Trump says the U.S. doesn’t need anything from its northern
Canadians may soon have a better chance of winding up on the cover of Time. The 103-year-old American magazine brand says it’s launching a licensed
TORONTO — The stage is set for Toronto’s turn as FIFA World Cup host, and some government officials and advocates worry that the major sporting

The New York Knicks came from 29 points down and moved to the brink of their first championship since 1973 by beating the San Antonio Spurs 107-106 in Game 4 of the finals on OG Anunoby’s tip-in with 1.2 seconds remaining.

We’re now just hours away from the start of the FIFA World Cup, which kicks off at 3 p.m. ET Thursday, with Mexico facing South

The tornado that touched down in an area of southeastern Saskatchewan on Tuesday had an intensity rarely documented in the province.

Ottawa’s choice of Saab’s GlobalEye surveillance jet has potentially opened a new battle in Washington. Experts say fully integrating the aircraft into NORAD would require access to sensitive U.S. stealth communications technology that has never been released to foreign manufacturers, creating operational, political and technical challenges.

More than 300,000 unwed Canadian women were forced to give up their babies in the decades after the Second World War. Though many of these forcible adoptions happened in religious maternity homes that received public funding, the federal government has yet to offer a formal apology.