Robert Fife

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For the British actor, see Robert Fyfe.

Robert Fife is a Canadian political journalist and author who has been the Ottawa bureau chief for CTV News since February 2005. Starting January 2016, Fife will serve as Ottawa bureau chief for The Globe and Mail. Before his stint at CTV, Fife was also Ottawa bureau chief for CanWest News Service, the National Post, and the Sun Media chain. When with CTV, he was the host of its Question Period show, a political panel discussion; after Fife's move to The Globe and Mail was announced, it was also stated that the show would be rebranded CTV’s Question Period with The Globe and Mail’s Robert Fife. Fife broke the news of the Canadian Senate expenses scandal with his reporting on Mike Duffy and Nigel Wright.

Biography[edit]

Fife is a native of Chapleau, Ontario. He has been covering national politics since 1978,[1] when he began his career in the parliamentary bureau of News Radio. He moved to United Press International of Canada in 1983.

Fife worked as a senior political correspondent for The Canadian Press from 1984 to 1987. He spent a decade as the Ottawa bureau chief for Sun Media where he also wrote a regular column.[2] In 1998, Fife joined the National Post as its Ottawa bureau Chief. In 2002, he became the bureau chief for both the National Post and CanWest News Services. In 2005, Fife became Ottawa bureau chief for CTV News.[3]

Fife served as the executive producer of CTV News Channel's daily political show Power Play with Don Martin.[2]

On 14 May 2013, Fife broke the news that Nigel Wright, then Chief of Staff to Prime Minister Stephen Harper had written a $90,000 cheque to cover the questionable Senate expenses of Mike Duffy.[4][1]

On 19 November 2015, it was announced that starting 1 January 2016, Fife was moving on from his role as Ottawa bureau chief for CTV News to serve the same role for The Globe and Mail, which is also owned by Bell Media.[2] Fife is currently the host of CTV’s political panel show Question Period, which will be renamed CTV’s Question Period with The Globe and Mail’s Robert Fife in 2016.[2]

Awards[edit]

  • National Newspaper Citation of Merit, Political Reporting 2004
  • National Newspaper Citation of Merit, Breaking News 2002
  • Edward Dunlop Award for Spot News, 1997

Books[edit]

  • Kim Campbell: The Making of a Politician (1993)[1]
  • A Capital Scandal: Politics, Patronage and Payoff — Why Parliament Must Be Reformed (with John Warren, 1991)[1]

References[edit]

External links[edit]