Trump gets apology from Canadian PM
Digest more
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
Canada’s Doug Ford Says Trump’s Reaction Is Proof Reagan Ad Was Genius
The ad was developed by Ontario’s provincial government. The goal of the ad, per Ontario Premier Doug Ford, was to reach as many Americans as possible. After a conversation with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Ford announced the decision to pull the ad, which will officially stop airing on Monday.
In our news wrap Friday, President Trump says he's ending trade negotiations with Canada because of a television ad making the case against U.S. tariffs, Secretary of State Rubio expressed confidence that the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas would hold and the Pentagon said it accepted a $130 million donation from a private donor to help pay the military during the government shutdown.
President Donald Trump said he's terminating trade negotiations with Canada citing a negative TV advertisement about tariffs.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is boasting about an anti-tariff advertisement that he says prompted U.S. President Donald Trump to cancel trade talks with Canada. Ford told reporters Monday the ad — which featured a clip of former U.
President Donald Trump says he’s ending trade talks with Canada, one of the United States’ closest allies and trading partners. The president made the unexpected change because of his objections to a Canadian-made ad criticizing tariffs featuring a speech by former President Ronald Reagan.
6don MSN
Trump threatens Canada with 10% extra import tax for not pulling down anti-tariffs ad sooner
The ad used the words of former President Ronald Reagan to criticize U.S. tariffs, angering Trump, who said he would end trade talks with Canada. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he would pull the ad after the weekend, and it ran Friday night during the first game of the World Series.
The Canadian Armed Forces is developing a new Defence Mobilization Plan that could see its reserve strength grow from about 28,000 members to as many as 400,000, according to an internal directive approved earlier this year by senior military and government officials.
The careening juggernaut that is this increasingly interdependent world’s economy is already subject to enough unpredictable forces as it is: wild weather and war among them. When reckless