Following president-elect Donald Trump's decisive election victory, there are sure to be significant knock-on effects for Canada. Here's a look at the different areas in which a second Trump presidency may affect Canadians.
Following president-elect Donald Trump’s decisive election victory, there are sure to be significant knock-on effects for Canada.
The report also details negative impacts on several U.S. states and Canadian provinces specifically, in which the other country is its largest trading partner, namely Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Manitoba, and New Brunswick. South of the border, Montana, Michigan, Illinois, and Texas rely on trade with Canada for significant percentages of the state economy.
“The first thing that popped into my mind is, where are the potential opportunities for alignment between the United States and Canada and a second Trump presidency? And I think that's something that in the business community we're particularly interested in thinking about,” Dickerman said in an interview with CTV News. He’s the vice-president, United States, for the Business Council of Canada.
According to the Canadian Chamber of Commerce report, if Trump introduces the blanket 10-per cent tariff on all imports he’s promised, and Canada responds in kind, Canadian incomes and productivity would both fall. Dickerman told CTV News that because Canada has already negotiated trade and tariffs with the previous Trump administration, it “isn’t necessarily in a position of weakness.”
"The friendship between Canada and the U.S. is the envy of the world," Trudeau said in a post on social media Wednesday morning. “I know President Trump and I will work together to create more opportunity, prosperity, and security for both of our nations.” "I want to say with utter sincerity and conviction to Canadians that Canada will be absolutely fine," she said.
“Because they know that once Donald Trump comes to office, they're out of here, so they'll be fleeing over the northern border,” she also said. According to Craft, that date is “not good enough,” and the federal government will have to spend more, and faster, once Trump is back in office. 'Canada will be absolutely fine': Justin Trudeau, his ministers and Pierre Poilievre congratulate Donald Trump
'I'm not proud of it': Jason Kelce apologizes after video shows him spiking a cellphone after fan used a homophobic slur Toronto police say 59 suspects are facing a total of 300 charges in connection with an auto theft and re-vinning probe.Vancouver musician lands 'meaningful interaction' with Ed Sheeran after busking outside his show
'You never know what you're going to find': Halifax junk remover shares some of his company's strangest discoveriesWhen Leah arrived at work directing traffic around a construction site, she never expected to see a van painted in all sorts of bright colours, and covered in eclectic decorations, including a stuffed moose attached to its roof.After 14 years of repairing and selling bicycles out of the garage of her home, a Guelph, Ont.
A Montreal woman says her dream of becoming a nurse was destroyed after she was sexually assaulted by a former supervisor in his office at John Abbott College in 2021 when she was a student.A Quebec couple's dream adventure turned into a nightmare last week after they were violently attacked by a group of armed men in Panama while travelling in their converted bus.
Ontario's Special Investigation Unit has cleared police actions in a shootout with a murder suspect last June that left one police officer with bullet wounds to his neck.Traffic on the Lasalle extension in Sudbury came to a halt Wednesday afternoon after the roof of a silver BMW was sheared off in a crash.Dozens of popular brands of bread have been recalled in Canada after pieces of metal were discovered in some of the products.
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