Canada’s premiers are divided on how to tackle Donald Trump as the incoming U.S. president threatens 25% tariffs on the nation’s goods.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday the country's leaders must put Canada first and forcefully hit back against president-elect Donald Trump if he goes ahead with punishing tariffs on all of our goods while also singling out Alberta Premier Danielle Smith for her reluctance to go all-in on retaliation.
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.
Officials across the country were watching to see if Trump imposed tariffs on Canada in his first day on the job.
Good morning. This is the Tuesday, Jan. 14 edition of First Up, the Star’s daily morning digest. Sign up to get it earlier each day, in your inbox. Here’s the latest on why Trump’s tariff threat has Doug Ford taking aim at Alberta, Toronto’s ...
The hypocrisy of the Canadian provincial and federal leadership is glaring. Doug Ford knows that Ontario, being the industrial heartland of Canada, will take the biggest hit in a tariff war with the U.
The hoped-for consensus on how to retaliate against U.S. tariffs didn't materialize during the first minister's meeting in Ottawa after Alberta continued to refuse to go along with possible cuts to oi
Ontario’s premier is proving to be the best leader we have in the looming confrontation with Donald Trump’s Washington
"Premier Smith's oil is Ontario's auto sector," said Council of the Federation chairman and Ontario Premier Doug Ford. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith stated Wednesday that her government can’t fully back Ottawa’s efforts to fight looming U.S. tariffs so long as retaliatory tariffs on oil and gas remain on the table.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau respond to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith declining to sign a joint statement by the premiers about Canada's response to Donald Trump's tariff threat.
Ontario politicians, business leaders and union executives are set to descend on Washington, D.C., for U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration as part of a provincial pushback to the incoming administration’s looming trade war.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says Canada needs to be prepared for tariffs to come into effect when Donald Trump takes office, but cutting off the supply of oil is not the answer.