Canadians firmly do not want to join the U.S., but if Donald Trump's pipe dream became reality, America would cash in.
Canada is looking at putting retaliatory tariffs if President-elect Donald Trump follows through with his threat to impose 25 percent tariffs on all Canadian products.
The president-elect is suddenly pushing to annex Greenland, reclaim the Panama Canal and absorb Canada, provoking longtime allies just days before taking office.
Donald Trump won the 2024 election by vowing to solve America's problems at home, but now he can't stop talking about his ambitions of expansion abroad.
Donald Trump's increasingly strident approach to relations with Canada is provoking fear about the potential consequences north of the border and questions about just how serious the U.S. president-elect actually is.
Trudeau cautioned that President-elect Donald Trump is “a very skillful negotiator” and fretted that his statehood push may be masking a more menacing tariff threat.
The president-elect’s comments about the U.S. annexing its northern neighbor were rejected by Canadians of all political stripes.
Trump—who has seemingly joked of a U.S.-Canada merger before—said if the two countries merge there would be no tariffs, lower taxes and the U.S. and Canada would be “TOTALLY SECURE” from Russian and Chinese threats.
The former and future first couple arrived in the nation’s capital on Wednesday ahead of Jimmy Carter’s funeral
Alberta's unemployment rate dropped dramatically last month. Statistics Canada released its December 2024 Labour Force Survey on Friday, which showed Alberta's unemployment rate sitting at 6.7 per cent, down from 7.5 per cent the month prior.
On Friday’s (January 10) new live episode of The View, the cohosts started the hour by talking about the memorial service for former President Jimmy Carter, which was attended by all five living presidents and some of their spouses — Bill and Hillary Clinton,