European NATO allies and Canada say they will ramp up defense spending but are cool on U.S. demands for the size of their military budgets.
Canadians are bracing alongside other geopolitical partners as President Donald Trump prepares to unleash his next round of tariffs in what he is calling "liberation day."
“We know that the relationship will never be the same again,” Joly said at NATO headquarters, where she was attending a meeting of allied foreign ministers. “That's my message to Europeans, the relationship with the U.S. will never be the same.”
Trump said this week he had settled on a course of action for the fresh round of tariffs set to take effect on April 2.
Some publishers say that costs could increase to the point where some outlets may have to cancel print editions, cut staff, or close down altogether.
Former ambassador Jeff Flake said the trade mission led by Gov. Spencer Cox will help Utah companies navigate the current economic environment
The trade war is set to plunge Canadian provinces into deeper deficits, revitalizing a sleepy corner of the credit market.
Just hours after President Donald Trump announced massive new tariffs on nearly all imports to the United States, a bipartisan group of senators made the