Reagan, Ontario and Donald Trump
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Changes intended to take place by spring construction season The Ontario government is proposing an end to indefinite residential leases in the province as part of a bill announced Thursday. The move is one of more than three dozen measures contained in the bill,
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the province will “pause” its U.S. advertising campaign on tariffs as of Monday so that trade talks can resume after U.S. President Donald Trump broke off trade negotiations with Canada over the ads.
Saying they are “united” in creating new job opportunities for Canadians while “turbo charging the economy, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Ontario Premier Doug Ford presented a unified front at the Darlington nuclear plant Thursday morning to pledge a total of $3 billion for the small modular reactor new nuclear project.
The president of the Windsor Chamber of Commerce says people shouldn't panic over an announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump that he is ending trade negotiations with Canada over ads run by the Province of Ontario criticizing his tariff regime.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford called the traffic enforcement tool a "cash grab" at a news conference in Vaughan Thursday. He said his government will introduce new legislation to ban speed cameras.
Marla Tremblay, executive director of Sudbury-based MineConnect, called the framework “a major step forward” for Ontario’s mining supply and services sector. “Streamlining approvals will mean faster projects, stronger supply chains, and greater opportunity for Ontario companies to compete and grow.”
The Honourable Patty Hajdu, Minister of Jobs and Families and Minister responsible for the Federal Economic Agency for Northern
Ontario, Canada will keep airing an ad critical of tariffs through the weekend ‒ and then pause it ‒ following President Trump's objections.