The leaders in Canada and Mexico agreed on maintaining strong trade ties and safeguarding North American competitiveness in a phone call ahead of President Trump's major tariff announcement Wednesday which he is billing as “Liberation Day.
As the United States prepares to welcome the world for FIFA’s Club World Cup this June, golf’s Ryder Cup in September, the World Cup next year and the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, the question becomes: Will the world want to come?
To support his plan to increase tariffs, President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that the Canadian government charges U.S. farmers a 250% or 270% tariff on dairy products exported to Canada. That's misleading.
U.S. stocks tumbled in early trading on Tuesday, just a day before President Donald Trump's expected announcement of sweeping new tariffs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 250 points, or 0.6%, while the S &P 500 declined 0.45%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq ticked down 0.3%.
In the March 31 letter also addressed to Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, MichAuto and the Detroit Regional Chamber advised against proceeding with tariffs on assembled vehicles from Canada and Mexico and parts that come from outside of North America.
As President Donald Trump is set to put tariffs on imports from many different countries, here's what it will mean for American consumers.
Increasing concerns about the feasibility of holding the 2026 FIFA World Cup between the US, Canada and Mexico have emerged, following Trump's tariffs against both these countries. View on euronews
In the March 31 letter also addressed to Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, MichAuto and the Detroit Regional Chamber advised against proceeding with tariffs on assembled vehicles from Canada and Mexico and parts that come from outside of North America.