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04/14/2021 10:00 AM EDT
Welcome to Corridors. Over the next few issues, we’ll introduce you to contributors as obsessed as we are with policy and Canadian politics. Our goal is to add context and perspective to a moment without precedent on Parliament Hill including Budget 2021.
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Ottawa’s growing environmental problem is not toxic waste, but toxic work.
Quite shocking, really, the number of high-level executives in the public sector who have left positions, or are sidelined, in a cloud of accusations about workplace harassment sometimes sexual in nature. The corner office is lit with gloom.
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Try refreshing your browser, or Egan: Ottawa as a toxic workshop, with the servants saying no more Back to video
Our departed governor general is the most glaring example. When she resigned in January in a crossfire of accusations about toxic times at Rideau Hall, it was a first in Canadian history. Instead of handshakes and polite ceremony, there were tears, screaming and disgrace.
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Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press
The Canadian Museum of History confirmed on Thursday that its chief executive officer has resigned after an independent investigator submitted a report earlier this year related to workplace harassment complaints.
Mark O’Neill joined the institution in 2001 when it was still called the Canadian Museum of Civilization, and was appointed to a five-year term as director in 2011. He oversaw a rebranding that included changing the name to the Canadian Museum of History.
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Mark Carney’s will-he-or-won’t-he political dance takes another step Friday night as the former central banker appears as the keynote speaker at the Liberal Party’s policy convention.
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