Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wynne asks Harper for first face-to-face meeting in more than a year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2014 11:44 AM
  • Wynne asks Harper for first face-to-face meeting in more than a year

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has sent a letter to the prime minister, asking for their first face-to-face meeting in more than a year.

Wynne and Stephen Harper last met Dec. 5, 2013, which Wynne calls "too long" between meetings of the prime minister and premier of the country's most populous province.

In the letter, which Wynne released publicly, she says their relationship should be one of "collaboration, not confrontation."

Harper is to be just outside Toronto today, speaking at a roundtable discussion with the Retail Council of Canada in Mississauga, but no meeting with Wynne is scheduled.

Wynne also writes that some of her ministers have reached out to their federal counterparts on issues she raised in previous letters to Harper, but it is "no substitute for leadership and collaboration at the top."

Harper and Wynne have publicly disagreed over pension plans, infrastructure and transit.

MORE National ARTICLES

Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting

Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting
OTTAWA — The topic of sliding oil prices is expected to surface this weekend when provincial finance ministers from across Canada have their first face-to-face meeting with federal counterpart Joe Oliver.

Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting

Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status

Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status
TORONTO — A decision by the Supreme Court of Canada to hear the federal government's challenge of Omar Khadr's youth status stunned his lawyers on Thursday, although not much would have changed for him if the decision had gone the other way.

Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status

Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report

Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report
OTTAWA — A long-awaited market analysis into which fighter jet could replace the CF-18s tells the Harper government it can postpone a decision and keep flying the current fleet until 2025, but it will cost roughly $400 million.

Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report

Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police

Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police
SURREY, B.C. — Homicide investigators in Surrey, B.C., say they have arrested a woman believed to be the mother of a child who was found dead in a vehicle.

Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police

Crown asks jury to find Luka Rocco Magnotta guilty in slaying of Jun Lin

Crown asks jury to find Luka Rocco Magnotta guilty in slaying of Jun Lin
MONTREAL — The Crown is asking jurors to find Luka Rocco Magnotta guilty of first-degree murder and four other charges in the slaying and dismemberment of Jun Lin.

Crown asks jury to find Luka Rocco Magnotta guilty in slaying of Jun Lin

Oil price plunge won't affect long-term plans in Newfoundland offshore: industry

Oil price plunge won't affect long-term plans in Newfoundland offshore: industry
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The oil price plunge may be draining Newfoundland and Labrador's treasury but industry watchers say such volatility has little impact on long-term offshore development plans.

Oil price plunge won't affect long-term plans in Newfoundland offshore: industry