Our year-end review on how politics changed Canada
The 2015 federal election campaign was the centre piece of a topsy-turvy political year that saw Canada's political scene turned upside down. As the year comes to a close, we gather a panel of savvy observers to share their thoughts on the year that was and what its legacy will be.
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The year that was in Canadian politics is coming to an end.
And what a year it was.
Justin Trudeau carried his third-place Liberal Party back to power with a strong majority government, ending close to a decade of Stephen Harper's Conservative party rule.
And in Alberta, a similar upset came earlier this year as the NDP ended the provincial Tories' 4-decade long run.
Away from the ballot box, there was the trial of Mike Duffy, the Syrian refugee crisis, and the skidding price of oil – all shaking up this past year's politics.
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Our political panel joined us to look back on it all.
- Jonathan Kay is Editor-in-Chief of The Walrus magazine. He was in Montreal.
- Susan Delacourt is a journalist with The Toronto Star and iPolitics. She was in Ottawa.
- Rita Trichur is a reporter with the Wall Street Journal's Canada Bureau. She was in Toronto.
This segment was produced by The Current's Howard Goldenthal.