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.
188 Articles
188 Articles
Trade talks with the U.S. ‘not yet revived’ since anti-tariff ad apology: Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney gave no indication trade talks with the United States will resume any time soon, despite apologizing to U.S. President Donald Trump who abruptly ended negotiations over an ad campaign.
Canadian Prime Minister Apologizes After Ad - Patriot Newsfeed
Politics makes strange bedfellows — and sometimes stranger apologies. President Donald Trump revealed Friday aboard Air Force One that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney personally apologized for a controversial anti-tariff advertisement that featured none other than Ronald Reagan speaking out against protectionist policies. The ad, produced not by Carney’s Liberal Party but by Ontario’s Conservative-led government, was intended to pressure the…
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 …
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