Under the agreement, China would sharply reduce tariffs on Canadian canola seeds to a combined rate of roughly 15%, down from about 85%, while Canada would allow up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles ...
The program has yet to spend much of the $25 billion appropriated last summer, as officials continue to debate fundamental ...
Walmart is often seen as the ultimate store for everyday convenience, but beyond its familiar aisles and blue-and-yellow ...
The Canadian prime minister confirmed that he and the US president spoke by phone after Trump threatened 100% tariffs on ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney said he stood by his Davos warning about great-power coercion in a call with United States President Donald Trump, pushing back on U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s ...
China’s EV brands may start building in Canada as tariffs drop, but U.S. backlash and Canadian labor concerns are already ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says told U.S. President Donald Trump that he meant what he said in his speech at Davos, ...
The Manila Times on MSNOpinion
When ice melts, illusions die: Greenland’s lessons for Manila
AS conjectured in my column (TMT, Jan. 21), Venezuela has slipped from the headlines, eclipsed by Trump’s designs on ...
Mark Carney said he stood by his Davos warning about great-power coercion in a call with Trump, pushing back on US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s account of the conversation.
The Canadian prime minister indirectly slammed Trump's tariff threats, saying they're used as economic coercion against smaller countries.
In posts on the Truth Social platform, Trump referred to Carney as "governor," a reminder of the president's previous musings about using economic force to compel Canada to become the 51st state.
Do U.S. energy or mineral companies really want to dive into Greenland to produce oil or rare earths? Here are the answers and the facts behind them.
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