President Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on Canada over drug trafficking, equating it with Mexico. U.S. government reports do not support the claim.
With a decision on oil imminent, the U.S. President repeated his three reasons for imposing tariffs: illegal migration, fentanyl smuggling across the border and imbalances on trade
If President Donald Trump's threat to tariff Canadian imports by 25% goes forward, 200 years of peaceful and profitable Great Lakes maritime trade will be at risk.
Mexico and Canada are Wisconsin’s two largest trading partners, supporting a combined $25 billion in cross-border trade in 2023.
Kia has announced the brand’s compact EV5 all-electric SUV is coming is coming to North America, but there’s a catch. It is only coming to Canada. It’s not every day a manufacturer imports a vehicle to just Canada and not the United States,
With President Trump's threat of tariffs on Mexico and Canada looming for Saturday, there's one possible reason why they may not happen at all. Such tariffs are likely to be found by a court to fall o
President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign promise to impose steep tariffs on imports -- including those coming from close U.S. allies -- has some of his fellow Republicans in Congress worried about its potential hit to their home-state economies.
Trump said his decision will be based on whether the price of oil charged by the two trading partners is fair, although the basis of his threatened tariffs pertains to stopping illegal immigration
President Donald Trump on Thursday said he plans to follow through on Saturday on his threat to impose 25 percent tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada.
Senior Trump advisor Jason Miller joined 'Fox & Friends' to discuss the latest on President Donald Trump's controversial Cabinet nominees and the status of tariffs on Mexico and Canada
President Donald Trump has doubled down on his baseless claim that diversity hiring could be to blame for a mid-air plane crash that killed 67 people.Trump ordered a review of all federal aviation hiring and safety decisions after Wednesday night's deadly crash between an American Airlines jet and a military helicopter,