David Moscrop
About David Moscrop
David Moscrop is a politics writer, podcast host, and the author of Too Dumb for Democracy? He also writes a weekly Substack newsletter.
What a case of scurvy tells us about Canada's politics and economy
A single reported case of scurvy in a country of over 40 million people stands out as a story because it points to an underlying social, political, and economic deficiency reality that so many can identify with – that in a rich country, there are in fact many people who can’t afford to meet basic needs, including the most basic need of all, healthy food.
The Liberals are caught in the balancing act of their lives
The Liberals will have to find ways to balance NDP and Bloc demands and expectations while navigating promises of fiscal responsibility, appealing to younger voters, and not falling into Conservative traps.
Byelections suggest the Liberals are in fact cooked
The poor Liberal performance in the last three byelections don’t doom them to failure, but they do suggest that rumours of the party’s coming demise aren’t exaggerated.
Is Mark Carney the Liberals' saviour — or just more of the same?
Carney is accomplished and plainly has tremendous capacity. He’s also a technocrat and a mild reformer who is very much of and within the boundaries of the status quo.
Don't be fooled, Conservatives are no friend to workers
Conservatives – and centrists, for that matter – in Canada and around the world have long undermined the working class and their rights
Bonfire of the mediocrities: Unpacking the Libs’ 'lavish' stay at the Sudbury Holiday Inn
A look at photos of the world-famous Sudbury Holiday Inn shows a square concrete block – with windows – featuring a kidney-shaped pool that could accommodate dozens of swimmers if nobody tried to swim
Liberals use of foreign workers to suppress wages for political benefactors must stop
The government has rigged the market for industry, with the influx of cheap foreign labour suppressing the capacity for domestic workers to bargain for better wages and working conditions.
Why Pierre Poilievre disowns the extremists he flirts with
Poilievre may be foolish, but he isn’t a fool. He’ll shun the media until he hears a question that allows him to frame discussions as he’d please
Poilievre's 'worst crime wave' rhetoric is political nonsense
What we get from the Conservatives is a string of emotionally-manipulative campaign slogans about terror and the “‘worst crime wave in Canadian history."
A Kamala Harris administration won’t be a free ride for Canada
Anyone hoping for an easy go of things for Canada under a Harris administration will, if she wins, be quickly disabused of the fantasy.