The deciding factor in this election was Canadian values
US Democratic Party strategist James Carville famously coined the phrase "It’s the economy, stupid" as the theme of Bill Clinton's successful 1992 presidential campaign.
October 9, 2015
October 9, 2015politics,Insight,canadian identity,values,government rolemichael adams
Which conservative party will you vote for?
Many Canadians who will not vote Green will confide that they rather like Elizabeth May. She stands out as the only female party leader, and given her fourth-party status she can speak with a candour others won’t risk.
October 9, 2015
October 9, 2015politics,Insight,canadian identity,social values,valuesmichael adams
Listening In: What recent populist victories tell us about Canada
Societies have conversations with themselves. Sometimes these conversations are so noisy that everyone is forced to pay attention. In Canada, our noisiest conversations since World War II have been Quebec sovereignty and the War Measures Act.
June 30, 2015
June 30, 2015politics,Insight,government role,democracymichael adams
We support the war (for now)
Recent surveys have found Canadians to be supportive of Canada’s military deployment to Iraq and Syria to aid in the fight against ISIS.
April 19, 2015
April 19, 2015Insightgovernment role,foreign affairs,michael adams
Three ways Liberals and NDP can win over Conservative voters
As this year’s federal election approaches, the Conservative government is increasingly crystallizing its offer to voters around a single promise: security. The economy has been removed from the party’s display window, replaced by the global fight against ISIS and its sympathizers, some abroad, some next door.
April 6, 2015
Counterpoint – Harper has not shifted Canadians’ opinions
What has Stephen Harper done to Canada? To some, that‟s a rueful, rhetorical question. To them it‟s obvious: this government has changed the country drastically and for the worse.
February 7, 2015
February 7, 2015politics,Insight,canadian identity,values,government rolemichael adams
Many Canadians aren’t voting. Have they stopped caring about democracy?
It wasn’t long ago that Canadians voted in large numbers. Just a few decades ago it was normal to see turnout rates for federal elections in the mid-70s.
February 7, 2015
February 7, 2015Insightdemocracy,civic engagement,michael adams
What might success look like for young Aboriginals?
The past year has been an eventful one for aboriginal peoples in Canada. The tragedy of violence against aboriginal women has finally been forced onto the national agenda, thanks in large part to the Native Women’s Association of Canada’s insistent counting of victims.
December 29, 2014
December 29, 2014indigenous peoples,Insight,education,lived experiencemichael adams
Crime and populism
Over the past eight years, the federal Conservatives have seldom missed an opportunity to show Canadians how seriously they take crime and how eager they are to make convicted offenders sorry for their transgressions.
December 3, 2014
December 3, 2014politics,Insight,government rolemichael adams
Canada’s do-it-yourself foreign aid
Recent numbers from the World Bank remind us that the worldwide flow of remittances – the money immigrants send back to their countries of origin – is astounding. In all, international migrants were responsible for the movement of an estimated U.S. $529-billion in 2012.
March 28, 2014
March 28, 2014Insightgovernment role,foreign affairs,michael adams









