Trump announces 35% tariff on Canada
Digest more
Canada adds 83,000 jobs
Digest more
Multiple states bordering Canada could feel the greatest impact of a 35 percent tariff on Canadian products starting August 1.
President Donald Trump ratcheted up tariffs on Canada late Thursday, stoking tensions with a top U.S. trade partner as the two sides try to hash out a trade agreement by the end of the month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 250 points,
Six Republican Congress members callously urged Canada to take “proper action” to mitigate smoke wafting into the U.S.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will keep working toward a new trade framework with the United States despite U.S.
Explore more
The threatened tariff was the latest in Trump’s on-and-off tax on imports from around the world. But among the three largest U.S. trading partners, Trump reached a framework for talks with China and still doesn’t have agreements with Canada or Mexico.
Canada is facing a 35% tariff on imports to the U.S. starting Aug. 1, said President Trump, though some of the country’s goods may still be exempt.
The president pointed to yesterday's new highs as proof that tariffs were good policy. Did that narrative just change?
President Donald Trump published a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, accusing Canada of having "financially retaliated" against the U.S.
The 35% level would be one of a range of tariffs on the U.S. ally, some of which are already in place, while others have been threatened and then walked back.
Jalali, her husband, their four adult children and daughter-in-law all found asylum in Canada after fleeing the Taliban's rule in Afghanistan in 2024. The family secured humanitarian visas from Brazil and paid human smugglers thousands of dollars to ...
Warnings were issued for southern Ontario and southwest Quebec as hot and humid weather is expected to linger through Thursday.
Canada would bear the brunt of Trump's tariffs in terms of economic contraction, says The Budget Lab of Yale.