Montreal
Families reuniting in Gaza as hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are finally allowed to return to the devastated north. The mass movement comes as Israel opens checkpoints, after a dispute over hostage releases was resolved with Hamas.
9m ago
A massive U.S. federal immigration roundup those snared nearly 1,000 people over the weekend continues. As Laura Aguierre explains, some citizens and leaders are setting up protective measures as agents potentially close in.
17m ago
"Concentrate on what they can control," says Julie White of Quebec Manufacturers and Exporters, as business leaders came together to call on the province to use energy as leverage in the potential U.S. tariff threat. Alyssia Rubertucci reports.
1h ago
It may look beautiful, but some say it smells like hot garbage. The Corpse at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens has bloomed for the first time and its iconic smell is bringing all some nosey visitors to the area.
3h ago
“Concentrate on what they can control,” says Julie White of Quebec Manufacturers and Exporters, as business leaders came together to call on the province to use energy as leverage in the potential U.S. tariff threat. Alyssia Rubertucci reports.
“A devastating impact,” says Jean Simard, CEO of Aluminium Association of Canada, who warns that President Donald Trump’s tariffs could shift the North American aluminum sectors. Tehosterihens Deer reports.
“It’s unique,” says Samantha Leger, VP of communications for the 2025 Great Northern Concrete Toboggan Race. The national engineering competition is set to ‘sleigh’ in Montreal this weekend. Pamela Pagano reports.
“She was a nice lady,” said Juliana, a neighbour of Lisa Marie Rytar, about the alleged murder of a 42-year-old woman in LaSalle, the first homicide in Montreal this year and the first woman in Quebec killed in 2025. Gareth Madoc-Jones reports.
“Team morale is at zero and no one feels like working,” said an Amazon delivery driver after learning he would be laid off this morning. Amazon is closing seven warehouses in Quebec, close to 2,000 employees will lose their jobs. Erin Seize reports.
“It’s a sign of things to come,” said Concordia University Economics Professor Moshe Lander about Amazon’s shift to third-party delivery, adding that U.S. tariffs could push companies to move manufacturing down south. Alyssia Rubertucci has more.