Anja Karadeglija
About Anja Karadeglija
Reporter with The Canadian Press
Meta snubs CRTC by refusing to release info on news blocking measures
Last year, the company blocked news from Facebook and Instagram in response to the Online News Act. The legislation was aimed at Meta and Google and would have required Meta to compensate media outlets for displaying their content.
Canadian rent inflation predicted to slow over the next few years: Desjardins
Last month, the federal government announced plans to slash Canada's immigration targets by 20 per cent as the government faced increased pressure to address the cost and availability of housing.
Poilievre tells MPs that Carbon pricing will cause economic 'nuclear winter'
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre signaled the Liberals' carbon price and the economy will remain his prime target when Parliament resumes this week.
Canada soon to use facial recognition app for people being deported: documents
The mobile reporting app would use biometrics to confirm a person's identity and record their location data when they use the app to check in. Documents obtained through access-to-information indicate that the CBSA has proposed such an app as far back as 2021.
Chuck Strahl, Former Conservative cabinet minister, dies
Strahl was first elected in 1993 and represented the B.C. riding of Chilliwack–Fraser Canyon until his retirement in 2011.
Federal report details racism in the Privy Council Office
"Black and racialized employees — through dozens of examples of racial stereotyping, microaggressions, and verbal violence — described a workplace culture where such behaviour is regularly practised and normalized, including at the executive level," the report says.
Canada is a player in AI research. So why can't we commercialize it?
It has impressive research bench strength. It has billions of federal dollars for the taking. It's kind of a nice place to live.
Ottawa willing to expand number of medications covered by pharmacare bill: minister
Health Minister Mark Holland says the government is open to adding more medications to the list of drugs covered by its proposed pharmacare program.
Public service unions vow to fight new in-office work mandate
Unions representing public servants say they are blindsided and outraged by new rules forcing federal employees to work from the office at least three days a week.
CSIS prepped PMO briefing note on election meddling by China
Canada's spy agency knew China "clandestinely and deceptively interfered" in the past two federal votes, according to a top-secret briefing document that emerged on Monday at the public inquiry into foreign interference.