As President-elect Donald Trump threatens Canada’s sovereignty, historian Jamie Bradburn reminisces on America’s invasion of Toronto over 200 years ago
Toronto is set to see some bitterly cold temperatures next week as a blast of arctic air descends on parts of Canada and the United States.
Deep in the Canadian soul — deeper than the cultural clichés of the reverence for hockey, the devotion to poutines, and the mania for Tim Hortons coffee — is an abiding fear. It is a fear of American invasion or, worse yet, annexation.
It’s not the thing you think is going to happen to you in Canada,’ says a Toronto mother who has opted to seek care for her son in the United States following delays at SickKids
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump said the United States doesn't need Canada's automotive industry, amid threats to use "economic force" to make Canada a state and levy 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods.
Canada's finance minister says Trump is trying to agitate people and create chaos knowing it will never happen.
Trump claims that’s not good enough. In a recent press conference, Trump refused to rule out the use of force to take Greenland (and the Panama Canal). “For purposes of national security and freedom throughout the world, the United States of America feels that the ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity,” Trump insists.
There are no guarantees on Wall Street, and even reliable dividend stocks can end up cutting their payouts. For example, W.P. Carey, on the cusp of what would have been its 25th consecutive annual increase,
Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s former deputy prime minister, whose sudden resignation in December helped set the stage for Prime
But economic, political and technological changes have left Canada with few ways to handle trade restrictions now.
Chrystia Freeland launched her Liberal leadership bid with an 80-second video, saying "Donald Trump doesn't like me" and that Canada must meet Trump's threats "dollar-for-dollar."
After much speculation, the hard-throwing Japanese pitcher posts his decision on Instagram, choosing to play with countrymen Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Los Angeles.