Canada can work with US President Donald Trump’s administration to reshape global trade and weaken China’s dominance of supply chains, according to Chrystia Freeland, the Canadian politician who’s vying to replace Justin Trudeau as prime minister.
Chrystia Freeland would drop the Canadian government’s policy of raising the capital gains inclusion rate if she wins the race to replace Justin Trudeau as prime minister, according to a person with knowledge of her plan.
She is pitching herself as the best option to oppose incoming US president Donald Trump. Read more at straitstimes.com.
The Canadian candidate for prime minister said she believes Trump is smart and is threatening to impose tariffs on allies in part to pave the way for tougher policies on China.
Government House Leader Karina Gould also announced her candidacy to replace Justin Trudeau, billing herself as someone who can bring about generational change
Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney will abandon his party's consumer carbon tax and replace the policy with an incentive program that rewards Canadians for making green choices. The former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor will make the announcement at an event in Halifax later Friday morning.
The race to replace Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is now set, with former central banker Mark Carney and former Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland the two biggest names to have declared their candidacy.
Liberal leadership candidate says he would keep industrial carbon price; says Trump presidency is a chance for Canada to ‘leapfrog the United States’
I’m not all that hungry right now, but I need to eat some of my own words. In my last column, I wrote: “It’s likely (Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau, after three election victories and more than nine years in power,
Conservatives previously levelled attacks at Carney for lack of transparency around Brookfield compensation package
Indian-origin Canadian politician Ruby Dhalla has announced her candidacy for the leadership of Canada's Liberal Party. If successful, she could become the first woman of color to serve as Canadas prime minister.
A new report illustrating that finding comes as the race to crown Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s successor now has a pared-back field of five candidates, many of whom spent the