From TikTok Politics to Economic Trouble: Is Canada LOSING CONTROL? episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 29, 2026 · 32 MIN

From TikTok Politics to Economic Trouble: Is Canada LOSING CONTROL?

from Inside Politics: Fake Pipeline Progress in Ottawa, Schoolyard Politics in Manitoba · host Kevin Klein

As the federal NDP gathered in Winnipeg for a leadership convention that could define its future—or confirm its decline—the city felt… quiet. No buzz. No urgency. No sense that a national political moment was unfolding. That silence set the tone for a fiery episode of Inside Politics, where host Kevin Klein and panellists Royce Koop, Lawrence Pinsky, and Robert-Falcon Ouellette pulled no punches in dissecting what they see as a party—and a country—drifting in the wrong direction. “I forgot they were even having a convention,” Robert-Falcon Ouellette admitted, capturing the broader concern: if Canadians aren’t paying attention now, when will they? The discussion quickly escalates from the NDP’s identity crisis to a much bigger question—why Canadian politics seems increasingly focused on optics over outcomes. Panellists agree Jagmeet Singh’s tenure left the party weakened, but they clash on what comes next. Some argue new leadership candidates at least “believe something,” offering bold—if controversial—ideas. Others warn that those ideas could push Canada further toward economic instability. And that’s where the conversation hits its stride. With Canada facing rising debt, job losses, and stubborn affordability issues, Klein presses the panel: why are voters rewarding politicians who perform well on camera instead of those who deliver results? “Why aren’t we electing builders?” he asks. The critique doesn’t stop at the NDP. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew comes under sharp scrutiny for comments blaming global issues on U.S. politics—remarks the panel calls distracting at best, damaging at worst. Meanwhile, deeper concerns emerge: a weakening Canadian dollar, rising taxes, and what some describe as a political class more focused on social media than solutions. Yet amid the criticism, there’s a thread of cautious optimism. With shifting political winds and growing public frustration, panellists suggest there may still be time to correct course—if leaders start prioritizing substance over style. It’s a fast-moving, at times explosive conversation that cuts through headlines and challenges viewers to think harder about the future of Canadian politics. And if the NDP convention lacked energy, this episode certainly doesn’t.

As the federal NDP gathered in Winnipeg for a leadership convention that could define its future—or confirm its decline—the city felt… quiet. No buzz. No urgency. No sense that a national political moment was unfolding. That silence set the tone for a fiery episode of Inside Politics, where host Kevin Klein and panellists Royce Koop, Lawrence Pinsky, and Robert-Falcon Ouellette pulled no punches in dissecting what they see as a party—and a country—drifting in the wrong direction. “I forgot they were even having a convention,” Robert-Falcon Ouellette admitted, capturing the broader concern: if Canadians aren’t paying attention now, when will they? The discussion quickly escalates from the NDP’s identity crisis to a much bigger question—why Canadian politics seems increasingly focused on optics over outcomes. Panellists agree Jagmeet Singh’s tenure left the party weakened, but they clash on what comes next. Some argue new leadership candidates at least “believe something,” offering bold—if controversial—ideas. Others warn that those ideas could push Canada further toward economic instability. And that’s where the conversation hits its stride. With Canada facing rising debt, job losses, and stubborn affordability issues, Klein presses the panel: why are voters rewarding politicians who perform well on camera instead of those who deliver results? “Why aren’t we electing builders?” he asks. The critique doesn’t stop at the NDP. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew comes under sharp scrutiny for comments blaming global issues on U.S. politics—remarks the panel calls distracting at best, damaging at worst. Meanwhile, deeper concerns emerge: a weakening Canadian dollar, rising taxes, and what some describe as a political class more focused on social media than solutions. Yet amid the criticism, there’s a thread of cautious optimism. With shifting political winds and growing public frustration, panellists suggest there may still be time to correct course—if leaders start prioritizing substance over style. It’s a fast-moving, at times explosive conversation that cuts through headlines and challenges viewers to think harder about the future of Canadian politics. And if the NDP convention lacked energy, this episode certainly doesn’t.

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From TikTok Politics to Economic Trouble: Is Canada LOSING CONTROL?

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This episode is 32 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 29, 2026.

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As the federal NDP gathered in Winnipeg for a leadership convention that could define its future—or confirm its decline—the city felt… quiet. No buzz. No urgency. No sense that a national political moment was unfolding. That silence set the tone for...

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