Mark Carney responds to Trump's 35% tariff threat to Canada
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The tariff war with the U.S. is ravaging several economic sectors — autos, metals, appliances and consumer goods — so a major revenue drop is all but certain. Increasing spending amid that reality seems bound to result in a record-setting deficit.
Prime Minister Mark Carney came into office promising to deal with the trade threat from the United States and get our economic house in order. But he’s likely quickly realizing that he’ll also have to deal with his predecessor’s reckless spending habits.
The federal government has started its comprehensive review of government spending, but what will it mean for Canada's public service, what balance will it have to strike and can the Liberals really cut so much?
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Jacobin on MSNMark Carney Is Hacking Away at Canada’s Public SectorJust over 100 days into his term, Canadian prime minister Mark Carney is taking aim at the size of the state while ramping up military spending. He’s launched a whole-of-government review, pushing deep cuts,
The prime minister is a habitual winker. Once is once, two is a coincidence, three is a trend, and National Post counts at least four prominent public winks by Mark Carney since winning the top office — in Rideau Hall at his swearing in,
The investments that Prime Minister Mark Carney held before handing them over to a blind trust have been publicly disclosed by the ethics commissioner.
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When asked to rate Carney’s performance since taking office March 14 and being elected April 28, you may be surprised what Mr. Wonderful Kevin O’Leary had to
Prime Minister Mark Carney is retreating this week for vacation, but the federal government isn’t saying where.
3dOpinion
Calgary Herald on MSNBraid: Carney promises development but keeps the Trudeau laws that hinder itThe dawning suspicion is that Carney faces tough resistance from the old Trudeau stalwarts such as ex-environment minister Steven Guilbeault. So he’s trying to enable projects while leaving the virtue-signalling laws in place.
During the election, Prime Minister Mark Carney promised taxpayers a more efficient government bureaucracy, costing them less money while delivering better public services.