January 1 - A shooting results in the death of one person and injuries to six people in Killarney, Calgary with police making no arrests.[1]
January 15 - Target Corporation announces they will discontinue operations in Canada. Over 130 stores and over 17,000 workers are affected.[2]
February 14 - A 100-car train carrying crude oil derails approximately 30 kilometres from Gogama, Ontario.[3]
February 15 - 50th anniversary of the National Flag of Canada[4]
February 23 - A Fort McMurray, Alberta family was poisoned after attempting to kill bedbugs using illegally imported phosphine tablets. An eight-month-old child died and five others were hospitalized. A second child died in hospital.[5]
February 25 - A house burned to the ground near Kane, which is about 25 km west of Morris, Manitoba. Four children under the age of 15 were killed in the fire.[6]
March 8 - Just three weeks after the February 14 train derailment near Gogama, Ontario, 35 Canadian National Railway cars derail at a site just four kilometres from the town, spilling crude into the Makami River and igniting an oil fire that takes several days to extinguish.[7] The two incidents spark renewed debate on the effectiveness of Canada's rail safety regulations in the wake of the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster of 2013.[8]
March 16 - John Baird, the former Conservative cabinet minister and the MP for Ottawa West—Nepean, resigns his seat.[9]
March 26 - With the enactment of the United Kingdom's Succession to the Crown Act 2013, and assent from Canada's Succession to the Throne Act, 2013, the succession to the Canadian throne is changed from eldest son to eldest child for royals born after October 28, 2011.
March 30 - Canadian Parliament voted to extend the mission to targets in Syria.[10]
March 31 - James Lunney, Conservative MP for Nanaimo—Alberni leaves the Conservative Party caucus to sit as an independent, citing concerns about religious freedom.[11]
April 8 - Canadian airstrike operations in Syria begin, with an airstrikes on ISIL garrison near Raqqa.[12]
May 5 - Alberta general election[14] - won by the NDP.
July 3 - A mail bomb detonates and injures a Winnipeg lawyer. A former client is charged in this incident as well as at least two other incidents.
September 15 - A two-year-old child and her father are murdered in Blairmore, Alberta. An acquaintance of both father and mother faced charges in the crime.
October 19 - Justin Trudeau and the Liberals win the 2015 federal election, gaining a majority of seats in the House of Commons.
October 20 - Prime Minister-designate Justin Trudeau informed President Barack Obama that Canada intended to withdraw its air units from the mission while keeping its ground forces in Iraq and Syria.[15]
November 4 - Justin Trudeau is sworn in as the 23rdPrime Minister of Canada.
November 26 - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau amended the Canadian withdrawal to just the fighter aircraft. All other aircraft already deployed would remain in theatre.[16]
November 30 - Newfoundland and Labrador general election[17] - won by the Liberals.
Sport[]
December 26, 2014, to January 5 – 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Montreal and Toronto
May 31 - Oshawa Generals won their Fifth Memorial Cup by defeating the Kelowna Rockets 2 to 1. The Tournament was played at the Colisée Pepsi in Quebec City, Quebec
2015 Canadian Grand Prix
June 6 to July 5 – 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Edmonton, Moncton, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, and Winnipeg
June 15 - Winnipeg's Duncan Keith of the Chicago Blackhawks is awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy
June 20 – David Lemieux becomes the first Canadian to win the International Boxing Federationmiddleweight Championship by defeating Hassan N'Dam N'Jikam
November 28 - UBC Thunderbirds won their Fourth Vanier Cup by defeating the Montreal Carabins 31 to 26 in the 52nd Grey Cup played at Telus Stadium in Quebec City
November 29 – Edmonton Eskimos won their Fourteenth Grey Cup by defeating the Ottawa Redblacks 26 to 20 in the 103rd Grey Cup played at Investors Group Field in Winnipeg. Markham, Ontario's Shamawd Chambers is awarded Most Outstanding Canadian
Arts and literature[]
March 1 - 3rd Canadian Screen Awards
March 2 - Plum Johnson wins the RBC Taylor Prize for her memoir They Left Us Everything
^"Derailments cast doubt on new safety standards: Tank cars carrying crude oil catch fire in second incident near Gogama, Ont.". The Globe and Mail, March 9, 2015.