·Video

Flashback: Blue Mondays

A young Conservative Party candidate talks to a CBC reporter in 2004. the race for the NDP's first leader in 1961, and more.

Your biweekly blast from the past looking inside the archives of the CBC

CBC's Flashback newsletter looks inside the CBC archives with inspiration from recent news headlines and what's happening at CBC. Sign up here to get it delivered straight to your inbox.

Blue Monday

Conservative Party makes "blue list" in 2004 election

7 days ago
Duration 2:55
A young Conservative candidate, who is running in a riding that the party has targeted in 2004, tells a CBC reporter a win for him would "send a signal" that the Conservative Party is in Ontario to stay. Aired May 16, 2004 on CBC's Sunday Report.

After the dust settled on the Canadian federal election last month, the Liberals held a minority government under Leader Mark Carney. In what CBC News said was a "startling upset," Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre lost his seat.

Poilievre was knocking on doors in an Ottawa-area riding when a CBC News reporter met him before the federal election of 2004. She said he was running in a seat that Conservative Party strategists were pouring resources into
because, like others across Canada, it was on their 'blue list' of possible winners.

"This is Main Street, Ontario," said then 24-year-old Poilievre (who was identified on-screen and by reporter Jennifer Ditchburn as Pierre Poilevre) as they walked in the riding. "You know, it's part rural, part suburban, [a] lot of middle-class families, and it would send a signal that the Conservative Party is here, in Ontario, to stay."

Leadership qualities

New progressive political party seeks leader in 1961

2 days ago
Duration 2:52
Tommy Douglas makes his pitch against opponent Hazen Argue at the founding convention of what eventually becomes the New Democratic Party. This CBC News special aired Aug. 2, 1961.

CBC News described the New Democratic Party's results in the 2025 election as "the worst showing of the party's history," noting "a repeated decline in the party's vote share and seat count" since its success under Leader Jack Layton in 2011. Leader Jagmeet Singh stepped down from his role that very night.

When the NDP elected its first leader in 1961, folksinger Joe Glazer led the convention in a rendition of This Land is Your Land before the contenders, Hazen Argue and Tommy Douglas, made speeches. Host Norman DePoe remarked on the "signs and shouting" among the crowd.

"This is a reminder not only of the hoopla that's now accepted here, but of the tremendous personalization of Canadian politics," added Robert McKenzie, his fellow broadcaster. "You'd almost think this was a presidential campaign coming up, a direct election in a few years' time for prime minister."

Space oddity

Where will Skylab fall to Earth?

46 years ago
Duration 5:07
The world is waiting to learn where a large research satellite will re-enter the planet's atmosphere in July 1979.

In 1972, the Soviet Union launched the probe Kosmos 482 to Venus, but it was "stuck in Earth orbit" after the rocket engines shut off too early, according to CBC News. A report from USA Today said it fell into the Indian Ocean on May 10.

When an empty American space station named Skylab was expected to fall back to Earth in 1979, a roomful of international reporters was assembled at the HQ of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in Washington, D.C.

"The crash landing was at more or less the time predicted by the NASA experts," said Jan Tennant, anchor of CBC's The National, before a report about Skylab's demise from correspondent John Blackstone. "And it came down at more or less the place predicted by the experts: at the southwestern tip of Australia."

Tough customer

Bob Rae reacts to Macdonald Commission report

40 years ago
Duration 1:51
Then-Ontario NDP Leader Bob Rae reacts to the Macdonald report's call for a free-trade deal in 1985.

When Prime Minister Mark Carney met with the American president last week, Carney said Canada is "the largest client of the United States." In 1985, Ontario NDP Leader Bob Rae told CBC's The Journal that he was concerned Canada would become "a client" of the U.S. due to free trade.

Ready for anything

Candles
Those stocking up for in the event of a Y2K disaster had a range of candles to choose from. (The National/CBC Archives)

Sources told the Canadian Press earlier this month that Canadian Tire has made a bid for some the intellectual property of Hudson's Bay. If it succeeds, we hope to be able to pick up a striped blanket while buying survival supplies, as consumers did at Canadian Tire due to Y2K fears.

High rollers

Box full of yellow wheels
A Dominion Roller Skate employee works with wheels used on the company's roller skates in 1980. (CBLT News/CBC Archives)

A woman in Cold Lake, Alta., has started a roller skating group with the support of community members who were "excited and ready to roll," she told CBC News. In 1980, a CBC report said one Canadian company was making more than 2,000 pairs of roller skates daily to meet demand.

Fit for a king

Prince Charles in a parka
During a 1975 visit to Canada, Prince Charles is seen responding to a CBC reporter's question about the formal rules of royal protocol and how that applied to his own life. (CBC)

Later this month, King Charles is scheduled to visit Canada's Parliament to deliver the speech from the throne, reports CBC News. Charles has been to Canada many times before, including a tour in 1975, when the then–Prince of Wales got a taste of Canada's North.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Sign up for this biweekly blast from the past, straight from the CBC Archives.

...

The next issue of Flashback will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.