While many issues turned Canadians away from their prime minister, the high cost of groceries and homes has become a chief grievance.
Mr. Trudeau’s decision to call it quits—but not to leave office immediately—puts the Canadian government under the command of a lame duck for the next few months. It’s not a good look for Canada while Donald Trump is threatening to abrogate the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement and put 25% tariffs on Canadian goods.
In 2014, Heinz sold off its hundred-year old tomato processing plant in Leamington, Ont., leaving local farmers and workers in the lurch and setting off a rivalry with French's. But after fierce consumer backlash, Heinz returned to producing ketchup in Canada in 2020.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is planning a final wave of appointments to fill the 10 vacancies in the Senate before he retires in March, Radio-Canada has learned.
Montreal, Canada – The race to replace Justin Trudeau as leader of Canada’s ruling Liberal Party – and as the country’s prime minister – is well under way, with seven candidates throwing their names into contention.
The leader of Ontario said he will be calling an election next week because he needs a mandate to fight Trump's threatened tariffs.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the country's premiers met again on Wednesday to continue crafting a strategy to hit back at President Donald Trump as the threat of U.S. trade action becomes more acute.
In 2021, Ontario courts dismissed 85 percent of all drug-possession ... Six months later, his rating had collapsed, to just 40 percent. [David Frum: Justin Trudeau falls from grace] What changed in the spring of 2018? During the school break of that ...
Promised by Premier Doug Ford last fall, $200 cheques are now landing in mailboxes across Ontario. Heather Rivers reports on what you need to know about them. Promised by Premier Doug Ford last fall, $200 cheques are now landing in mailboxes across Ontario. Heather Rivers reports on what you need to know about them.
Kraft Heinz is defending its Canadian-made ketchup after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used the condiment as an example in trade talks.
The ketchup giant is seeing red after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau brought up its past exit from Canada while discussing a potential Canada-U.S. trade war.