President Donald Trump's flurry of tariffs, government layoffs and spending freezes may be doing more to harm the U.S. economy than to fix it.
Notably, the border treaty that Trump referred to was established in 1908 and finalized the international boundary between Canada, then a British dominion, and the United States
Mr. Pepin was joined by about 50 others in Vancouver, and roughly as many demonstrators assembled from noon onward in Ottawa outside the U.S. embassy, organic outbursts of outrage in response to Mr. Trump sticking to his threat to impose punitive tariffs of 25 per cent across the board on Canadian goods and 10 per cent on energy.
The mitigation efforts are meant to protect workers, he said, “and see them through the crisis come hell or high water.” The moves follow the United States' decision to impose tariffs on Canadian goods, disrupting a strong trading relationship and raising costs for consumers on both sides of the border.
Pooling U.S.-Canada resources from energy to AI to defense would be a boon for global and hemispheric security.
Canada's industry minister is looking to block what he calls "predatory investment behaviour" as the trade war with the United States continues.
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Agreement marks ‘unprecedented progress’ on reducing internal trade barriers, Internal Trade Minister Anita Anand says