Canada, Mark Carney and Trump
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The Christian Science Monitor |
Now he’s the prime minister and the favorite to win national elections April 28 – largely thanks to the Trump administration’s hostility toward Canada.
The New York Times |
Mr. Carney estimated that Canada would collect about $5.7 billion from the retaliatory tariffs he said it was imposing — on top of the $42 billion or so he said Canada would generate from the tariffs ...
CBC.ca |
Poilievre has said he wants to defund the CBC while maintaining its French-language programming.
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Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney is speaking French in a video from an election campaign rally, not performing a ritualistic chant, as was suggested by posts sharing the clip online.
An article shared across social platforms claims Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney responded to a heckler at a campaign rally with an other-worldly, satanic mantra. This is false; while the clip is real,
The Liberal Party has removed Rod Loyola, who was running in the Edmonton Gateway riding, adding to a growing list of nominees exiting the federal election race.
You can get in touch with James by emailing [email protected] Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberal Party has extended its lead over the opposition Conservatives ahead of next month's federal election on April 28,
President Trump spoke Friday with Canada’s new PM as the US prepares to slap 25% tariffs on Canadian imports — and referred to the leader as “Prime Minister,’’ dropping the “governor” moniker he
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Canada Is Betting on Mark Carney, Technocrat ExtraordinaireAs an election looms, Mark Carney is the face of Canada’s Liberal Party comeback — and the latest figure to stand between the country and Trump-era fallout. He may also be its first casualty. The Liberal Party of Canada is one of the most successful ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Thursday that the idea of entering into a customs union with the U.S.– essentially matching American tariffs on other countries like China –would be risky.
Mark Carney’s father Robert Carney was a federal Indian day school principal in the Northwest Territories in the 1960s, at a place where residential school boarders also attended. Yet three historians are urging caution when approaching that complicated legacy.