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
Ottawa could impose countermeasures on up to $150 billion worth of US imports if President-elect Donald Trump puts tariffs on Canadian goods and services, Reuters reports, citing a source familiar with the matter. The extent of any potential reaction would depend on what Trump does, the source says, according to the report.
The federal government will soon deploy two leased Blackhawk helicopters as part of its plan made in the shadow of Trump’s threats to trigger a trade war.
Canadian PM Justin Trudeau said that if a “worst-case scenario” trade war ensues between the US and Canada, Ottawa won’t hesitate to take strong retaliatory measures.
Canada's premiers met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday to plan a response to U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s tariff threats on Canadian goods. CBC’s Lorenda Reddekopp has the details.
A first round of retaliatory tariffs would cover approximately $37 billion of U.S. imports, a source familiar with Ottawa's plans told Global News on Friday.
Fears are intensifying that Donald Trump's tariff threat will become a reality for Canada. Officials around Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are increasingly worried that the U.S. president-elect's mind is made up,
Canadian officials are preparing retaliatory measures if the new U.S. administration imposes tariffs on Canadian imports.
Goods worth $3.6 billion cross the Canada-U. S. border every day. A Canadian Chamber of Commerce analysis said 25 per cent tariffs could shrink Canada's gross domestic product by 2.6 per cent and America's by 1.6 per cent. It would also disrupt the automotive, agriculture and energy sectors, among others.
Former Canadian finance minister Chrystia Freeland is running to be the next leader of the Liberal Party and Prime Minister of Canada.
Trudeau blasted Smith, reminding her that the federal government bought the Trans Mountain pipeline, which now has a C$34.5 billion price tag, giving Alberta its only route to export oil from Canada’s Pacific coast.