U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins raised concern over Mexico's proposed constitutional amendment that would ban ...
As the trade conflict intensifies, attention has turned to Canada's vast reserves of critical minerals and rare earth ...
President Donald Trump continued to belittle Canada and threaten it with joining the United States as the economic war with the country continued.
Goods covered by the countries’ USMCA agreement get a reprieve, but levies remain in effect for many goods, including oil.
The president had threatened to hit Canadian metals with 50 percent tariffs but opted not to go ahead after Ontario lifted a charge on U.S. electricity.
Trump can wage this war because he has the world’s largest weapon: the U.S. economy. When a consumer of our size changes its buying patterns, it can have a devastating effect on others. Canada and ...
Long-threatened tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump have plunged the country into a trade war abroad — all while ...
But Mr. Trump has also said he wants factories to move from Canada and Mexico into the United States. And in a social media post on Tuesday, he said U.S. banks were prevented from doing business ...
The Trump reprieve applies to products covered under a 2020 pact, which leaves a lot of goods still subject to the new 25% ...
Just two days later, Trump confirmed the US would pause tariffs on goods and services compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) until April 2. However, Trump said Friday ...
Ontario implemented a 25 percent tariff on all electricity exports to the U.S. on Monday, impacting three states.