When the chief executives of a couple hundred tourism marketing organizations from around the world convened for an annual summit this past week in Savannah, Ga., they addressed the elephant in the room — President Donald Trump’s taunting of Canada.
While the president has threatened to ratchet up duties against both in recent weeks, he has yet to take direct aim at them.
President Donald Trump says April 2 will be “Liberation Day” — a moment when he plans to roll out a set of tariffs that he promises will free the United States from foreign goods.
President Trump downplayed concerns that his forthcoming round of 25% tariffs on all foreign-made vehicles will cause prices on those automobiles to spike, arguing that it will be a boon for
Prime Minister Mark Carney pledged to respond to Trump’s latest tariffs targeting the automotive industry with strong counter measures, but held off introducing further tariffs until it becomes clear what the president will introduce next week.
The scenario risks reviving painful memories of pandemic-era toilet paper shortages, when store shelves were stripped bare amid panic buying.
With the Trump administration slapping tariffs on Canadian exports, Canada's government is reminding Arizonans the tariffs will raise consumer prices.
Former Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell sharply criticized the Trump administration’s Ukraine policy and pivot toward isolationism Thursday night, accusing President Donald Trump’s advisers of showing “their embarrassing naivete” in dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday called President Donald Trump's new tariffs on auto imports "unjustified," and said Canada would impose "retaliatory trade actions of our own."