Doug Ford, Trump and Canadianism
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Trump, Ontario and Mark Carney
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The minister of the environment, conservation and parks announced the changes Friday morning, along with the creation of the Ontario Provincial Conservation Authority.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford joins Meet the Press NOW to explain his decision to run an ad opposing President Trump’s tariff policy that featured former President Ronald Reagan.
The tense exchange happened after an anti-tariff commercial aired by Ontario infuriated the Trump administration.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford has called on Pete Hoekstra, the U.S. ambassador to Canada, to apologize to Ontario’s representative in Washington
The fact Ford delayed pulling the ad to Monday to allow the ad to air during the first two World Series games irritated Trump. He called the move a “hostile act” and responded by announcing plans to raise tariffs on Canada by an additional 10 percent over the weekend.
Environmental Defence executive director Tim Gray called the legislation a “messy, complicated bill” that attacks progressive housing and transportation policy and centralizes power with the province. The bill will allow Ontario to overrule municipal official plans, trumping planning local authority, he said.
The leader of Canada’s most populous province is bragging about the impact of his anti-tariff ad that prompted U.S.
Call 1-800-Doug Ford … doctors, come see us,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford told Quebec physicians frustrated by the Legault government’s new doctor-compensation law. The remark, made Wednesday, drew an immediate rebuke from Quebec Premier François Legault,
Canadian officials may have said they were caught off guard last week when U.S. President Donald Trump announced he was cutting off trade negotiations with Canada over Ontario's anti-tariff advertisement,