Conservative Pierre Poilievre has a plan for revival but needs an election first.
But first the good news. At the confirmation hearing of billionaire U.S. businessman Howard Lutnick, co-chair of Trump’s transition team, Lutnick said the Feb. 1 tariff threat to Canada and Mexico relates only to illegal fentanyl and migrants, but there seems to be progress by the two countries.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the bordering nation is crucial to President ... “We are thinking in terms of 25 percent on Mexico and Canada because they’re allowing vast numbers of people … to come in, and fentanyl to come in ...
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said he was thinking of imposing 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico because they were allowing many people to cross the border as well as fentanyl.
Outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says prices for Americans will go up if President Donald Trump follows through with his vow to apply sweeping tariffs on Canadian products.
Trudeau has appeared on multiple U.S. news networks to warn Canada’s neighbors that their pocketbooks are at risk of becoming collateral damage in Trump’s trade war. “Anything an American president does to hurt the Canadian economy will also hurt American consumers and American workers and American growth,” he told CNN’s Jake Tapper last week.
Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on all Canadian products unless Canada curbs what he claims is a flow of migrants and drugs into the U.S.
If the president does choose to proceed with tariffs on Canada, Canada will respond and everything is on the table,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.
Nancy Soderberg, a former United Nations ambassador and the director of the Public Service Leadership Program at UNF, joins Bruce Hamilton on Politics & Power this week to see if President Donald Trump is trying to gain the upper hand with China or even truly has an expansionist agenda.
The impending Canada-US trade war is a reactionary conflict between rival imperialist powers that will be waged at the expense of workers on both sides of the border.
TORONTO — Outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Jan. 23 that American consumers will pay more whenever President Donald Trump decides to apply sweeping tariffs on Canadian products.