OTTAWA — The race to replace Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is dominated by one name: Donald Trump. How to wrestle with the incoming president and his tariff threats has emerged as the defining question in the Liberal Party leadership contest.
Canada’s foreign minister is warning Americans they will be paying a “Trump tariff tax” if President-elect Donald Trump follows through with a threat of imposing a 25% tariff on all Canadian goods.
The departures from the Net-Zero Banking Alliance began with Goldman Sachs' announcement on Dec. 6 and come ahead of Donald Trump's return to the White House next week. Trump has been critical of efforts by governments to prescribe climate-change policies.
The concurrent events have been met with mixed feelings by civil rights leaders, who broadly reviled Trump’s rhetoric.
The elected US President, Donald Trump, is now openly talking not only about his desire to make Canada the 51st state but also about being ready to use force - albeit for now, only economic force. Here’s an overview of why Trump might want to annex Canada,
A senior official says Canada is looking at putting retaliatory tariffs on American orange juice, sinks, toilets and some steel products if U.S. President-elect Donald Trump goes ahead with his threat
Trump's inaugural fund is reportedly the largest in recent history, having raised more from corporate donors than any other inauguration in the last 16 years. The donations, while symbolic, show that some corporations are vying for a friendly relationship with the president-elect and his incoming administration.
What’s the right strategy to respond to bullying? It may not work with Donald Trump, but Doug Ford has adopted the savviest approach we’ve yet seen.
Deep in the Canadian soul — deeper than the cultural clichés of the reverence for hockey, the devotion to poutines, and the mania for Tim Hortons coffee — is an abiding fear. It is a fear of American invasion or, worse yet, annexation.
Would Donald Trump’s tariffs hurt US consumers ... a professor at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. "It's hard to be strategic with an administration ...
Chief economists at five of Canada’s largest banks say Trump’s belligerence opens a window to address long-standing Canadian problems, such as interprovincial trade barriers and regulatory environment
This week, president-elect Donald Trump’s nominees began their Senate confirmation hearings. After four years of the administrative malaise of the Biden administration, the nominees proved to be ...