Jean Chrétien, who was Canada’s prime minister from 1993 to 2003, joined a chorus of officials who say Trump's remarks are no longer a joke and may undermine America’s closest ally.
Jean Chretien has said Ottawa should ... In addition, Ottawa needs to join forces with Panama, Mexico, Denmark and the European Union, which have also been targeted by Trump's territorial or trade-related demands of late, Chretien wrote.
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FILE - President Donald Trump, center, reaches out to Mexico's President Enrique Pena ... “Give your head a shake!” Jean Chrétien, who was Canada’s prime minister from 1993 to 2003, joined ...
The Prime Minister’s Office has announced the federal cabinet will retreat the day of Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Come the likely May federal election, ‘Axe the Tax’ will seem a rhyming artifact of a bygone era. For someone touted as quick on his feet as Poilievre has been, he has come off as wooden and stuck in time since November 5. There is no new message. No pivot. No awareness that circumstances have changed.
Jean Chretien, former Canadian Prime Minister (1993-2003), has strongly criticized US President-elect Donald trump over his proposal to annex Canada. In an article for the Globe and Mail, Chretien, on his 91st birthday,
There’s a lot of concern about guns, but it’s Canada who has a concern that unregulated gun traffic is coming in from the States to Canada. So we’ve got our quarrels about the border that in some sense are more serious than Trump’s. So it all looks like pretext to me, either as a prelude to a negotiation or there’s something else going on.
The former and near-future Oval Office occupant has mused about buying Greenland, making Canada the 51st state, reclaiming the Panama Canal and renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf ... when then-Prime Minister Jean Chretien refused to follow President ...
Canada’s political leaders have responded to Trump’s threats to use “economic force” to transform Canada into the US’s 51st state with doubled-down pledges of fealty to the Canada-US military-strategic partnership,
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says talk of Canada becoming the 51st state is a distraction from more pressing threats of U.S tariffs on Canada and their likely impact. In an interview that aired Sunday on MSNBC,
In an interview that aired Sunday on MSNBC, he said Canada is ready to respond with retaliatory tariffs should president-elect Donald Trump follow through with a threat to impose 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico when he takes office next week.