The cheap Canadian oil America craves is becoming a key bargaining chip in President Trump’s threatened trade war.
Donald Trump’s claim that the US doesn’t need anything from Canada is “simply false,” said Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada’s Energy Minister and a potential candidate in the contest to replace Justin Trudeau as Prime Minister. The US doesn’t have ...
Exactly what president-elect Donald Trump plans to do with his tariff threat remains a mystery to Canadian officials and most Republicans, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Thursday.
As political and business leaders scramble for a response to Trump 2.0, a brash yet risky idea has taken hold: Use America’s dependence on Canada’s natural resources to level the battlefield
Canada is preparing a list of potential US retaliatory tariffs and some of those could be on critical minerals, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said
Canada’s minister of energy and natural resources, Jonathan Wilkinson, has pushed back against incoming US President Donald Trump’s recent claim that America does not need anything from its northern neighbour as “simply false.” Wilkinson ...
Facing threats of tariffs, the federal minister met with Senator Ted Cruz and other Republicans to convince them the two nations are better off working together
Jonathan Wilkinson is the latest Liberal in Washington amid President-elect Donald Trump’s tariff threats, and the Canadian energy minister is making the pitch for a Canada-U.S. energy and resource alliance.
The recently announced funding is part of a larger $39.5 million investment, which was revealed last November. The funding is aligned with the National Adaptation Strategy (NAS) and aims to reduce climate change risks and build more resilient communities across Canada.
Wilkinson said he wants to work with other Group of Seven nations to make pricing support initiatives a possible “centrepiece” of discussions when Canada hosts the G-7 Summit in June. This could be expanded to other nations like Australia, he said, adding that nickel dumping has caused “enormous problems for our Australian friends.”
Canada’s outgoing prime minister and the leader of the country’s oil rich province of Alberta are confident Canada can avoid the 25% tariffs President Donald Trump says he will impose on Canada and Mexico on Feb.
Canada’s energy minister came to Washington this week to warn U.S. lawmakers that President-elect Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs would inflict economic pain on Americans, with higher prices and job losses.