Justin Trudeau would announce a short consultation period on a first round of tariffs that would cover approximately $37-billion of U.S. imports, with implementation to follow immediately after, sourc
US President Donald Trump has said he is considering imposing a 10% tariff on imports of Chinese-made goods as soon as 1 February. Trump said discussions with his administration were "based on the fact that they're sending fentanyl to Mexico and Canada."
If both Trump and Canada hiked tariffs, it would mark the start of a trade war that could be bruising for U.S. and Canadian businesses.
“Donald Trump is, as always, a skilled negotiator, and will do what he can to keep his negotiating partners a little bit off balance,” Trudeau said. “We’ve been here before. During President Trump’s first term in office, he announced challenges to our trading relationship that we were able to work through.”
OTTAWA - Atletico Ottawa has named Mexican Diego Mejia its new head coach on a one-year deal with a club option to extend through 2026. The Canadian Premier League team has been without a coach ...
Canada vowed strong pushback while Mexico urged calm in the face of US President Donald Trump's trade threats that risk throwing their economies into disarray.
Canada’s outgoing prime minister and the leader of the country’s oil rich province of Alberta are confident Canada can avoid the 25% tariffs President Donald Trump says he will impose on Canada and Mexico on Feb.
The focus on American prosperity and national security is the latest pivot by Canadian officials as the country tries to find its footing with the new Trump administration, and - more urgently - avert the threat of blanket 25% import tariffs imposed by the US, its largest trade partner and closest ally.
OTTAWA — Ontario Premier Doug Ford says Alberta Premier Danielle Smith understands why Canada's political leaders need to be united in the face of U.S.
OTTAWA — Canada's premiers are meeting virtually with the prime minister today to talk about Donald Trump's early moves as president and the looming threat of tariffs.
OTTAWA — Canada appears to be leaning toward hitting the United States with matching tariffs if President Donald Trump makes good on his threats, but not all of the country's premiers support that approach.