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Carney says he told Ontario premier not to run anti-tariff ad, apologized to Trump
- On Saturday, Prime Minister Mark Carney confirmed he apologised to U.S. President Donald Trump, saying `I did apologise to the president`, and said the apology was conveyed Wednesday at a dinner hosted by South Korean President Lee Jae-Myung during the APEC summit in Gyeongju.
 - The Ontario ad campaign prompted President Donald Trump to announce on Truth Social he was increasing the tariff on Canada by 10 per cent and canceling trade talks last week.
 - Carney says he reviewed the commercial and told Ontario Premier Doug Ford not to air the 60-second ad using edited excerpts from Ronald Reagan's 1987 radio address.
 - Officials report that negotiations had been making progress before being suspended last week and have not resumed, while Trump accepted Carney's apology but said he will not restart trade talks.
 - Carney said his next move is the federal budget on Nov. 4 to refashion Canada's economy amid 50-per-cent tariffs on steel and aluminum, 25-per-cent on autos, and over 45 per cent on softwood producers.
 
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184 Articles
184 Articles
Harris insists Biden was ‘fully competent’ to serve again; Canadian PM apologizes to Trump for anti-tariff ad
In this Media Miss Minute, despite taking over the 2024 campaign, former Vice President Kamala Harris said former President Joe Biden was "fully competent" to serve a second term. And Canada's prime minister has apologized to President Trump for a controversial ad featuring Ronald Reagan, commissioned by Ontario's premier. Media Miss by the left: Kamala Harris insists Joe Biden was ‘fully competent’ to serve second term in Jon Stewart interview …
Coverage Details
Total News Sources184
Leaning Left57Leaning Right22Center48Last UpdatedBias Distribution45%  Left
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources lean Left
 
45% Left
L 45%
C 38%
R 17%
Factuality
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