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A New Year Without Illusions—A Canadian Reality Check

By Emad Barsoum•January 2, 2026•3 min read

Every new year arrives carrying hope. Hope is personal: better health, stability, dignity. Hope is shared among families and friends. And hope, on a larger scale, is national—a quiet expectation that the country we work for will, in return, work for us.

For hardworking Canadians, expectations are not extravagant. Most families are not asking for luxury or privilege. They are asking for the minimum required to keep moving forward: affordable housing, accessible healthcare, quality public education, safety, and a sense of security about tomorrow. These are not lofty ambitions. They are the basics of a functioning society.

Yet for millions, even these modest needs remain unmet. Housing affordability has become a crisis in nearly every major Canadian city. Emergency rooms are overcrowded, family doctors are disappearing, and wait times stretch into months. Parents worry about the future their children are inheriting, while grocery bills, rents, and interest rates quietly erode household stability. The middle class—long considered Canada’s backbone—feels increasingly squeezed and uncertain.

At the start of a new year, an uncomfortable question must be asked: Will any of this change by hope alone?

History tells us otherwise. Progress has never come from quiet optimism. It has come from accountability, civic pressure, and engagement that does not end when the ballots are counted. Real change requires more than voting every four years—it requires reminding those in power who they work for.

Election seasons are filled with promises, empathy, and carefully staged appearances. Once campaigns end, however, many elected officials disappear into party discipline, internal politics, and closed-door meetings. MPs, MPPs, councillors, and even mayors often find themselves expected to approve decisions made by party leadership, even when those decisions clash with the realities of their constituents’ lives. Those who challenge the line risk marginalization.

Meanwhile, citizens are offered symbolism instead of solutions. We are invited to barbecues with party leaders. We are encouraged to take photos with MPs, councillors, and ministers. We are told this is engagement. It is not. Canadians do not need political selfies or summer BBQs. We do not need staged smiles while real problems remain unresolved. Solve the housing crisis. Fix healthcare access. Address affordability and public safety. Then—and only then—we will gladly host the barbecue and take the photos.

Too often, policies appear to benefit the well-connected, the powerful, and the financially insulated, while ordinary Canadians are asked to be patient, flexible, and understanding. But patience does not lower rent. Optimism does not shorten hospital wait times. Hope does not replace leadership.

If this new year is to mean anything, it must mark a shift from illusion to expectation. Citizens must move from passive hope to active demand. Politicians must be reminded—daily—that their role is not ceremonial, nor is it about party loyalty. Their job is to ensure Canadians can live normal, decent, and dignified lives.

This does not require radical change. It requires seriousness, courage, and a return to priorities rooted in everyday Canadian reality.

As we step into the new year, let us be clear: this is not a year for wishing. It is a year of expecting actions.

Happy New Year.

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