Brian Crombie Radio Hour cover art

Brian Crombie Radio Hour

Brian Crombie Radio Hour

By: NEWSTALK Sauga 960 AM
Listen for free

A high-profile businessman and political strategist, Brian Crombie brings his straightforward and highly informed perspective to his new show – The Brian Crombie Hour on Sauga 960AM Tuesdays and Thursday evenings at 7 pm. His vast experience working on Federal, Provincial, and Local politics and at the high levels of the business world, Brian gives us a glimpse inside the political war rooms and behind the boardroom doors. A man constantly on the move, Brian easily navigates between issues here in Canada and abroad.

While politics and business dominate his time, Brian also explores his other great interest, The Arts. Whether it's politics, business, or the Arts, there will be no shortage of guests for his weekly roundtable. Politics of the day, emerging businesses, Economic issues, or the hottest trends in the Arts- they will be all under Brian’s microscope to get his own political opinions and thoughts. Every hour will end with a robust round table debate with an incredible array of guests from all across the political, business, and arts spectrum.Copyright NEWSTALK Sauga 960 AM
Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1635 - Immigration, Productivity & Canada’s Economic Future: Can Canada Grow Without Population Growth?
    May 21 2026
    On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian Crombie is joined by leading economists Don Drummond and Parisa Mahboubi for a major discussion about Canada’s slowing economy, falling immigration targets, and deepening productivity crisis. The episode begins with an examination of Canada’s post-pandemic immigration reset and why the federal government reduced immigration levels after years of rapid population growth. The panel discusses the pressures created by housing shortages, healthcare strain, infrastructure limits, and affordability challenges — while also exploring how slower immigration could reduce GDP and employment growth in the near term. The conversation also looks at Canada’s aging population, declining birth rates, and the growing consensus that immigration alone cannot solve the country’s long-term demographic and economic challenges. The discussion explores why immigration policy may need to be more closely aligned with housing capacity, labour market needs, healthcare systems, and productivity growth. In the second half of the program, the focus shifts to Canada’s long-standing productivity problem. Don Drummond explains why Canada has struggled for decades to close the productivity gap with the United States and why many Canadian companies fail to scale into globally competitive businesses. The panel examines weak investment in technology and innovation, regulatory barriers, interprovincial trade restrictions, tax policy concerns, and what some describe as an “ambition deficit” in the Canadian economy. One of the central discussions explores why many Canadian businesses plateau instead of pursuing aggressive long-term expansion. As population growth slows, the episode asks a defining economic question for the country’s future: Can Canada still build a high-growth economy based on productivity, innovation, investment, and competitiveness rather than simply adding more people?
    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1634 - Alberta at a Crossroads: Separation, Western Alienation & Canada’s Growing Divide
    May 20 2026
    On this episode of The Brian Crombie Radio Hour, Brian Crombie is joined by Jeanne Milne and Erin Waite for an in-depth discussion on the growing conversation around Alberta separatism and the broader political tensions reshaping Canada. The panel examines why increasing numbers of Albertans are expressing frustration with Ottawa, the role Premier Danielle Smith and the UCP government are playing in the debate, and how economic pressures, populism, and regional alienation are fueling calls for greater autonomy — or even separation. The conversation also explores the potential economic and constitutional consequences of Alberta leaving Canada, including concerns around pipelines, trade access, investor confidence, Indigenous treaty rights, and comparisons to Brexit and past Quebec sovereignty movements. As Alberta remains one of the country’s wealthiest provinces, the episode asks a critical question: Is separatism a serious political movement, or a reflection of deeper distrust and polarization spreading across Canada?
    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
  • Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1633 - Trump, China & Canada’s Strategic Crossroads: Taiwan, Power, and a Shifting World Order
    May 19 2026
    On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian Crombie is joined by Charles Burton for a wide-ranging discussion on the rapidly evolving geopolitical struggle between the United States and China — and what it could mean for Canada and the global order. The conversation begins with President Donald Trump’s recent visit to China and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s reference to the “Thucydides Trap” — the theory that conflict often arises when a rising power challenges an established one. Together, they examine China’s long-term ambitions, the growing tensions surrounding Taiwan, the concept of strategic ambiguity, and whether the world is entering a more unstable multipolar era marked by rising authoritarian influence and weakening global consensus. The discussion also explores China’s internal pressures, including economic slowdown, demographic decline, military instability, and youth unemployment — and whether these challenges could shape Beijing’s global behaviour in the years ahead. In the second half of the program, the focus shifts to Canada’s relationship with China following Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recent diplomatic engagement and discussions around strategic cooperation. The episode examines difficult questions about economic dependence, foreign influence, espionage concerns, democratic values, and whether Canada risks becoming strategically vulnerable in an increasingly competitive world. As global alliances shift and tensions rise, the episode asks a larger question: Does the West still understand the realities of power, deterrence, and authoritarian ambition — and where does Canada fit in this new geopolitical landscape?
    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet