• Political news

    Carney to brief premiers on U.S. trade talks at Muskoka summit

    Prime Minister Mark Carney will sit down with Canada’s premiers in Huntsville, Ont., Tuesday to deliver a detailed briefing about his government’s ongoing trade negotiations with the Trump administration.  U.S. President Donald Trump and Carney agreed in June at the G7 summit to try and reach a trade deal by July 21, but Trump recently moved that deadline to Aug. 1.  Carney’s briefing on how those negotiations are going lands in the middle of the three-day first ministers’ meeting where the premiers are discussing their own response to the trade war. Carney said he was coming to the meeting shortly…

  • Political news

    Many Canadian exports can avoid Trump tariffs if CUSMA-compliant. Here’s what that means

    Canadian exporters across a wide range of industries have a way to escape U.S. President Donald Trump’s blanket tariffs.  That escape hatch is compliance with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), the three-way free trade deal signed by Trump back in 2018.  U.S. and Canadian officials have said the across-the-board tariffs Trump is threatening to impose on Aug. 1 won’t apply to goods that comply with the terms of CUSMA.  Trade policy experts say the vast majority of Canadian exports can qualify for this exemption, and that’s leading to a stampede of companies rushing to do the paperwork to get their products…

  • Political news

    A Chinese research vessel returns to Arctic waters — and it appears Canada is watching

    The Canadian military and possibly the coast guard appear to have been keeping tabs on a Chinese research vessel as it returns to Arctic waters off Alaska for the second year in a row. Data compiled by an independent researcher and ship tracker, Steffan Watkins, shows a Canadian air force CP-140 surveillance plane was flying in the vicinity of the Xue Long (Snow Dragon) 2 as it exited the Bering Strait on Sunday. The aircraft, according to Watkins’s research, relocated to Anchorage, Alaska, from its base in Comox, B.C., on July 9. It has conducted four patrols since then, including…

  • Sports

    Calm in the crease: Inside Gwyneth Philips’ ascension to the Ottawa Charge’s starting job

    A few days after more than 11,000 fans of the opposing team chanted her name inside Minnesota’s Xcel Energy Center, Gwyneth Philips was alone with her thoughts in the forest. The rookie goaltender led her Ottawa Charge to the PWHL Finals against the Minnesota Frost. Ottawa came up short in four games against the reigning Walter Cup champions. None of the blame could be placed on Philips’ shoulders. The 25-year-old, who was thrust into the role of starter after an injury to Emerance Maschmeyer earlier in the spring, led all goaltenders with a 1.23 goals against average. She didn’t lose…

  • Political news

    Are first ministers’ meetings cool again?

    When Mark Carney sits down with the premiers in Huntsville, Ont., on Tuesday, it will be the third time in four months that he and the premiers have met face-to-face. Going back to the waning days of Justin Trudeau’s premiership, Canada’s first ministers will have now sat down together a total of four times already this year. That is, by recent standards, an unusual amount of time for the prime minister and the premiers to spend in each other’s midst. In the last 35 years, such gatherings have been generally rare and, in fact, consciously avoided. But it’s possible that…

  • Political news

    B.C. premier slams U.S. ambassador for saying Trump thinks Canadian boycotts are ‘nasty’

    B.C. Premier David Eby said he believes U.S. leadership has “very little awareness” of how offensive their remarks are, like the U.S. ambassador to Canada saying President Donald Trump thinks Canadians are “nasty” to deal with because of U.S. boycotts.   “Do they think Canadians are not going to respond when the president says, ‘I want to turn you into the 51st state and begger you economically unless you bow to the U.S.’?” Eby said in an interview on CBC’s Power and Politics Monday evening in Huntsville, Ont., where premiers are meeting this week. “Obviously, Canadians are outraged.” Ambassador Pete Hoekstra made the…

  • Political news

    Scott Moe arrives at premiers’ summit warning some U.S. tariffs are Canada’s ‘reality’

    Canada’s premiers arrived in Ontario cottage country on Monday eager to discuss the country’s ongoing trade crisis with the United States and settle into a plan for how they can work together with Indigenous leaders to strengthen the country’s economy. On his way into the summit, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said it’s becoming obvious Prime Minister Mark Carney’s warning that it’s unlikely Canada can strike an entirely tariff-free deal with the U.S. is simply “the reality of the situation.” “Exceptions, carve outs, exclusions, exemptions — whatever you might call them, that is the reality: that we won’t get to zero on each and…

  • Political news

    Montreal woman who joined ISIS as a teen convicted of aiding a terrorist group

    Oumaima Chouay, who fled her home in Montreal nearly a decade ago to join ISIS in Syria, is the first person in Canada convicted for providing family support to a terrorist entity as a spouse.  Chouay was sentenced Monday to one day of custody, in addition to the 110 days she served in pretrial detention, according to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada (PPSC). The 29-year-old also received a three-year probation order.  The sentence was a joint recommendation from the Crown prosecution and Chouay’s lawyer, Dominique Shoofey.  PPSC director George Dolhai said in a statement that the sentence reflected the steps “Ms. Chouay…

  • Sports

    White House says Trump serious about wanting Commanders to revert to old name deemed offensive

    A day after Donald Trump threatened to hold up a deal for a new football stadium in the nation’s capital if the Washington Commanders did not go back to the name Redskins, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the president’s comments were not a joke. “The president was serious,” Leavitt told reporters Monday while answering questions on the White House driveway. “Sports is one of the many passions of this president and he wants to see the name of that team changed.” Asked why he’s getting involved, Leavitt called Trump a “non-traditional president” and said sports fans are behind…

  • Sports

    Victoria Mboko, Canadian teammate Leylah Fernandez victorious in Round 1 of Citi Open

    Canadians Victoria Mboko and Leylah Fernandez won their opening matches Monday at the Citi Open hardcourt tennis tournament. Mboko, a wild-card in Washington, came back from a break down in the second set to post a 6-2, 6-4 win over Russia’s Anastasia Potapova. Fernandez followed with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Australia’s Maya Joint. Mboko, a 19-year-old from Toronto, won 62.7 per cent of total service points compared to 50 per cent for Potapova. The Canadian had 13 break-point chances against Potapova and converted five of them, the last coming in the deciding game. Potapova scored two breaks on six…