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The Walrus Wins at the Canadian Association of Journalists Awards Program
Nicholas Hune-Brown received an award in the Written Feature category
Read MoreFact-based journalism that sparks the Canadian conversation
Nicholas Hune-Brown received an award in the Written Feature category
Read MoreThe Walrus is pleased to announce the appointment of Yasmin Duale to the team
Read MoreFive questions for authors Emily Austin, Lisa Bird-Wilson, Pik-Shuen Fung, Brian Thomas Isaac, Conor Kerr, and Aimee Wall
Read MoreThe author of Ghost Forest (Strange Light) is the winner of the forty-sixth annual Amazon Canada First Novel Award
Read MoreSarah Lawrynuik describes her connections to Ukraine
Read MoreTeresa Wong describes the tantrums that led to her story in the anthology
Read MoreWhat makes teenagers sign up for a degree program about dealing with death?
Read MoreMany factors have to align for a recipient to receive an organ from a donor
Read MoreRecipient Rob Csernyik will produce a new piece of investigative reporting on the relationship between gambling and suicide in Canada
Read MoreA conversation with author Rawi Hage about his new short story collection, Stray Dogs
Read MoreThe Walrus uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences.
Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta has defunded its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.
Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta has defunded its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.
Shaky relations between the US and Canada, increasingly worrisome “jokes” about making Canada a 51st state, and a Canadian federal election on the horizon.
All this political chaos leaves uncertainty about the future. But one thing’s for sure: to make sense of these relentless developments, The Walrus is committed to bringing you up-to-the-minute political analyses from our contributing writers to help you and the rest of Canada stay informed and help us rally, as a country, for a better tomorrow.
The Walrus is one of the few places in Canada where this type of reporting is freely available, without a paywall, to everyone in this country and beyond its borders. We need your support to keep this work going. Will you show your love for independent Canadian journalism today by supporting The Walrus?
Shaky relations between the US and Canada, increasingly worrisome “jokes” about making Canada a 51st state, and a Canadian federal election on the horizon.
All this political chaos leaves uncertainty about the future. But one thing’s for sure: to make sense of these relentless developments, The Walrus is committed to bringing you up-to-the-minute political analyses from our contributing writers to help you and the rest of Canada stay informed and help us rally, as a country, for a better tomorrow.
The Walrus is one of the few places in Canada where this type of reporting is freely available, without a paywall, to everyone in this country and beyond its borders. We need your support to keep this work going. Will you show your love for independent Canadian journalism today by supporting The Walrus?