President Donald Trump repeated false claims about the US trade relationship with Canada and Europe in virtual Thursday remarks to the World Economic Forum in Davos. He also delivered a smattering of other misstatements and exaggerations about trade,
Energy company Drax lobbied Canadian officials for their intervention as the UK group sought changes to EU rules that could prevent the bloc from burning wood biomass sourced from forests in British Columbia.
Combine our own energy vulnerability with our economic reliance on fossil fuels and throw in a 25 per cent U.S. tariff threat, and what you get is the current national crisis.
I'm old enough to remember conservatives freaking out over the Keystone Pipeline. Now Trump is telling business leaders at Davos that we don't need any stinking oil from Canada.
President Trump vowed on Tuesday to hit the European Union with tariffs and warned that a 10% duty on Chinese imports could also come by February 1 because fentanyl is being sent from China to the U.S.
The duo behind the viral caps approached several players in the apparel sector and heard the same refrain: they don’t manufacture hats fully in Canada because the cost is so high and the demand isn’t
The Trump administration is discussing a 10% punitive duty on Chinese imports. Trump said the EU also has troubling trade surpluses with the United States.
Moreover, in a Washington press conference held on Tuesday, Trump promised to put tariffs on the European Union as well. He said, "China is an abuser, but the
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has said that Washington will impose tariffs on the European Union and that his administration was discussing a 10% punitive duty on Chinese
The European Commission told Lufthansa on Wednesday it would order the German flag carrier to reinstate charter airline Condor's access to Lufthansa's short-haul network to feed Condor's Frankfurt-New York route.
Believe what narrative you want: following an exchange of heated rhetoric and mutual threats of trade sanctions on social media yesterday, either Colombian President Gustavo Petro backed down from his refusal to allow military deportation flights or Donald Trump blinked and allowed said removals to proceed in a more humane manner.