Journalists ignore ‘troublesome episode’ It is one of the enduring mysteries of Canadian political journalism. Why are Ottawa journalists still so incredibly, inexplicably incurious about the fact an infamous international wheeler-dealer gave Brian Mulroney $300,000 in cash from a Zurich bank account within months after he stepped down as prime minister. And why is nobody […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Is it because he’s black? The problem with racism is it isn’t as obvious as it once was. Segregated schools and whites-only clubs were easy targets. Trying to read between the lines of a blandly bureaucratic municipal planning report that claims putting a new landfill next door to a longstanding black community is a proper […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Fiddling over Fage II fun, but… The radio host’s question — coming as it did on a day when the premier of our province was reduced to absurdly repeating his new the-facts-are-the-facts mantra to explain away the latest inconvenient new facts that had suddenly replaced the old, no-longer-fact facts he’d been dispensing — seemed ludicrously […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Fage I, Foley Melvin and now… Fage II The bigger mess, as is so often the case in Rodney MacDonald’s all-message-track-all-the-time government, has less to do with the initial stupidity and more — much more — to do with the premier’s inept mishandling of everything that happens afterward. That’s not to suggest the specifics of […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
A feast of Stephens I know it’s personal, perhaps even petty of me to get caught up in what was clearly a minor moment from a major occasion — Stephen Harper’s first annual round of year-end media interviews as our prime minister. I mean, Harper was nothing if not newsworthy, generating plenty of pre-Christmas headlines […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Firing board just the first step It is difficult to fault Education Minister Karen Casey for her decision last week to fire — or should I say “relieve of their responsibilities and authorities” — all 13 elected members of the Halifax Regional School Board. It is easier to quibble over where the minister, and her […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
The Holocaust and the West’s double standard Forget for a moment the knee-jerk need to be shocked and appalled that Shiraz Dossa, a St. Francis Xavier University political science professor, presented a paper at a “bizarre international conference.” (CTV) Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is, of course, “a lunatic and dangerous man” (Yvon Grenier, St. […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Will the province learn Judge Nunn’s lessons? To his credit, Justice Minister Murray Scott got it right. "I can’t go back," he conceded in his first response to the release last week of Merlin Nunn’s report into the death of Theresa McAvoy. "I can only go ahead." But, he added with apparent sincerity, “we want […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Reading the ‘State of Rodney’ If you want to know the true State of the Province of Rodney MacDonald, you could do worse than to read the premier’s "State of the Province" speech last week. Forget for the moment MacDonald’s unchanging confection of over-baked, under-done puffball platitudes: "The notion of leaving our province a little […]
Stephen Kimber’s freelance journalism appears in local, regional, national and international publications.
Liberals dance around trust funds Quick now. Who said the following? “Since the beginning of the Regan administration… the Liberal Party… has been living… from the proceeds of crime.” If you guessed those fightin’ words were uttered — and later retracted —by a politically potty-mouthed NDP MLA during last week’s filibuster on a Tory-Liberal campaign-finance […]



STEPHEN KIMBER, a Professor of Journalism at the University of King's College in Halifax and co-founder of its MFA in Creative Nonfiction Program, is an award-winning writer, editor and broadcaster. He is the author of two novels and eight non-fiction books. Buy his books
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