Ontario has five offices in the U.S. With 88 people around D.C. and 30 in New York, as well as others in Texas, Chicago, and California, Quebec has the largest official provincial presence in the U.S.
While all eyes in Canada are rightly focused on the uncertainty caused by the erratic and irrational policy moves of the incoming Trump administration , we are also seeing a curious political dynamic play out among Canada’s conservative premiers in Ontario,
Albertans aren’t traitors. We’re just pissed off. And Premier Danielle Smith is not standing alone. She is standing with Albertans. Now a new poll points out that reality in stark numbers. It confirms what people in Alberta have been saying for way too long.
A salmonella outbreak linked to recalled mini pastries has made over 60 people sick in Canada. The majority of cases have been reported in Quebec, followed by Ontario, B.C., Alberta and New Brunswick.
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.
The hoped-for consensus on how to retaliate against U.S. tariffs didn't materialize during the first minister's meeting in Ottawa after Alberta continued to refuse to go along with possible cuts to oi
Trudeau blasted Smith, reminding her that the federal government bought the Trans Mountain pipeline, which now has a C$34.5 billion price tag, giving Alberta its only route to export oil from Canada’s Pacific coast.
Facing the greatest economic threat since at least the 1970s, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his would-be successors are united once more in fending off the true enemy of the state: Alberta Premier Danielle Smith.
Ontario politicians, business leaders and union executives are set to descend on Washington, D.C., for U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration as part of a provincial pushback to the incoming administration’s looming trade war.
The current Alberta premier, a former talk-show host and lobbyist, similarly never seemed to have much in common with Ontario Premier Doug Ford, a business owner from a sort of political dynasty ...
Canadians were on the move in huge numbers last year, and Ontario cities were very popular for people relocating within the country.
"Premier Smith's oil is Ontario's auto sector," said Council of the Federation chairman and Ontario Premier Doug Ford. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith stated Wednesday that her government can’t fully back Ottawa’s efforts to fight looming U.S. tariffs so long as retaliatory tariffs on oil and gas remain on the table.