Canada-US relations – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 23 Oct 2025 01:02:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Canada-US relations – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Canada plans to shrink U.S. reliance, cut spending in upcoming budget https://artifex.news/article70192083-ece/ Thu, 23 Oct 2025 01:02:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70192083-ece/ Read More “Canada plans to shrink U.S. reliance, cut spending in upcoming budget” »

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Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney makes a live address on Canada’s plan to build a stronger economy, in advance of the 2025 Budget, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, October 22, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Wednesday (October 22, 2025) said his government’s first budget will reduce economic and security reliance on the United States and cut wasteful spending.

Mr. Carney, who was elected in April, stressed that his government’s maiden budget will be about both austerity and big investments as he seeks to protect the Canadian economy from what he has called a crisis brought on by a newly protectionist U.S.

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“The decades-long process of an ever-closer economic relationship between the Canadian and U.S. economies is over,” Mr. Carney said in a televised address to a group of university students.

“Many of our former strengths — based on close ties to America — have become our vulnerabilities,” he said.

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As U.S. tariffs batter Canada’s steel, aluminium and auto sectors, Carney pledged to double the country’s non-U.S. exports over the next decade. The diversification will bring in an additional C$300 billion, he claimed.

Mr. Carney, under pressure to spur growth and assert Canada’s Sovereignty, has promised a massive scale-up in defence spending and housing infrastructure.

But he has also lost revenue due to tax cuts, scrapped retaliatory tariffs to try to strike a deal with U.S. President Donald Trump, and spent on relief measures for tariff-hit industries, straining government coffers. His government has asked all ministries to cut spending.

In his address, he said the budget will present a strategy to cut wasteful expenditures and drive efficiency. “When we have to make difficult choices, we will be thoughtful, transparent, and fair,” he said.

Economists forecast the government’s fiscal deficit for the year 2025/26 will be between C$70 billion and C$100 billion, one of the largest in decades and a massive jump from the projected C$43 billion for the fiscal year that ended March 2025.

The budget, which will be presented on November 4, will help to catalyse “unprecedented” investments in Canada over the next five years, Mr. Carney said. He plans to balance the operating budget in three years and said he will include a climate strategy.

But the budget, a major test for Carney, cannot be passed unless his minority government gathers support from some Opposition members.

In an outreach effort, Carney met with leaders from other political parties on Wednesday (October 22), including the main Opposition leader Pierre Poilievre, who has urged restraint on the deficit.

“We won’t play games. We won’t waste time. And we won’t hold back. We will do what it takes,” Carney said in his
remarks.



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Elon Musk Mocks Trudeau Over Canada-US Merger Idea, Says “Girl, You’re…” https://artifex.news/elon-musk-mocks-justin-trudeau-over-canada-us-merger-idea-saying-girl-youre-7429132/ Wed, 08 Jan 2025 14:29:45 +0000 https://artifex.news/elon-musk-mocks-justin-trudeau-over-canada-us-merger-idea-saying-girl-youre-7429132/ Read More “Elon Musk Mocks Trudeau Over Canada-US Merger Idea, Says “Girl, You’re…”” »

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Billionaire Elon Musk has sparked controversy with a post aimed at former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. On Wednesday, Musk responded to Trudeau’s statement rejecting a Canada-US merger, saying, “Girl, you’re not the governor of Canada anymore, so it doesn’t matter what you say.” Musk’s comment was in response to Trudeau’s assertion that “There isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States. Workers and communities in both our countries benefit from being each other’s biggest trading and security partner.”

The exchange comes amid a heated debate over US President-elect Donald Trump’s suggestion that he will use “economic force” to make Canada the 51st US state. Trump has been floating this idea since his electoral victory, claiming that “Many people in Canada LOVE being the 51st State” and that the US can no longer afford the “massive Trade Deficits and Subsidies” that Canada needs to stay afloat, hence Trudeau resigned.

Trump’s comments have been met with widespread criticism from Canadian leaders, including Trudeau, who emphasised the benefits of the US-Canada relationship. Trudeau stated that “workers and communities in both our countries benefit from being each other’s biggest trading and security partner.”

The controversy has escalated with Trump sharing a distorted map on social media, showing Canada as part of the United States, alongside the caption “Oh Canada!” The move has sparked concerns about the future of US-Canada relations and the potential implications of Trump’s proposals.

Recently, Musk also responded to MP for Carleton Pierre Poilievre’s post on X about Canada’s sovereignty. Poilievre had posted, “Canada will never be the 51st state. Period. We are a great and independent country. We are the best friends in the U.S. We spent billions of dollars and hundreds of lives helping Americans retaliate against Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attacks. We supply the U.S. with billions of dollars of high-quality and totally reliable energy well below market prices. We buy hundreds of billions of dollars of American goods.”

“Our weak and pathetic NDP-Liberal government has failed to make these obvious points. I will fight for Canada. When I am Prime Minister, we will rebuild our military and take back control of the border to secure both Canada and the U.S. We will take back control of our Arctic to keep Russia and China out. We will axe taxes, slash red tape and rapidly green-light massive resource projects to bring home paycheques and production to our country. In other words, we will put Canada First.”

Musk replied to the post with, “A referendum of the people is the essence of democracy!”

As Trump prepares to take office, his plans to use “economic force” to bring Canada into the US are likely to face significant opposition from lawmakers, law enforcement officials, and the public. The situation remains highly contentious, with Musk’s tweet adding fuel to the fire.
 





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Former Canadian PM Mulroney, driver of U.S. free trade deal, dies aged 84 https://artifex.news/article67902538-ece/ Fri, 01 Mar 2024 01:40:50 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67902538-ece/ Read More “Former Canadian PM Mulroney, driver of U.S. free trade deal, dies aged 84” »

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Brian Mulroney, the former Canadian prime minister who struck a free trade deal with the U.S. but whose legacy was marred by revelations of improper business dealings with an arms dealer, has died.

Mulroney died peacefully surrounded by family, his daughter Caroline Mulroney posted on social media platform X on Thursday, February 29, 2024. He was 84.

Mulroney had a heart procedure in August and was treated for prostate cancer earlier last year, she said in a social media post in late August 2023.

A corporate lawyer turned businessman, Mulroney led the center-right Progressive Conservatives to a historic win in 1984 over the Liberals of Pierre Trudeau.

Justin Trudeau condoles death

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Pierre’s son, shared in a social media post that he was devastated by Mulroney’s death.

“He never stopped working for Canadians, and he always sought to make this country an even better place to call home. I’ll never forget the insights he shared with me over the years – he was generous, tireless, and incredibly passionate,” Mr. Trudeau wrote.

A skilled politician with a gift for public speaking, Mulroney sought to emulate in Canada the conservative leanings of the Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher era by revamping the tax system and selling off government assets.

His nine-year stewardship was marked by negotiations for the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement in 1988, which helped boost Canadian exports, and the introduction of a goods and services tax in 1991. The tax was enormously unpopular politically but helped fix the government’s finances.

Under Mulroney, some government-run corporations were sold off, including Air Canada.

Mulroney took an active interest in foreign affairs, pushing through a treaty with the United States to curb acid rain, spearheading efforts to tackle the 1984 Ethiopian famine and speaking out against apartheid in South Africa.

“You cannot name a Canadian prime minister who has done as many significant things as I did, because there are none,” the author Peter Newman quoted him as saying in an interview.

Mulroney was born on March 20, 1939. He and his wife Mila had four children.

A tall man with a broad smile and booming voice, Mulroney was known for his charm, which University of Toronto history professor Robert Bothwell described as “a unique characteristic that was extremely effective”.

Acid rain treaty

Mulroney formed a close bond with Reagan, the U.S. president at the time, and the two men marked a 1985 summit with a public rendition of the song “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling”.

Mulroney’s ties to Reagan helped him negotiate the landmark acid rain treaty and the trade deal with the U.S., by far Canada’s biggest trading partner.

“It’s quite clear that Reagan was prepared to go out of his way to oblige his friend Brian,” Bothwell said in an interview. “I do think that on relations with the United States, he deserves immense credit.”

Mulroney also presided over two failed bids to change Canada’s Constitution to grant the predominantly French-speaking province of Quebec the status of a distinct society.

The efforts, designed to thwart the Quebec independence movement, fostered deep cleavages between French and English Canada that reverberated politically for decades.

Mulroney won large majorities in 1984 and 1988, in part by bringing together social conservatives in the west of Canada and nationalist voters in Quebec.

But strains began to emerge and the union fell apart in the late 1980s and early 1990s with the creation of the overtly separatist Bloc Quebecois and the western-based Reform Party.

He resigned in 1993 amid record low popularity numbers. The Progressive Conservative party was reduced to just two of 295 seats in the House of Commons in an election later that year – easily the biggest defeat in Canadian history – and never recovered politically.

After leaving politics, Mulroney returned to law and became a partner with the Montreal firm Norton Rose Fulbright.

In 1995, a leaked letter revealed that Royal Canadian Mounted Police had accused Mulroney of having taken kickbacks from German-Canadian arms dealer Karlheinz Schreiber on the sale of Airbus airliners to Air Canada in 1988. Mulroney sued the Liberal government and won an apology and damages in 1997.

But in 2010, an inquiry into the affair concluded Mulroney had indeed had inappropriate business dealings with Schreiber. Mulroney told the inquiry there was nothing illegal about the payments, but apologised publicly for taking the money.

“My second biggest mistake in life, for which I have no one to blame but myself, is having accepted payments in cash from Karlheinz Schreiber,” he said in 2007. “My biggest mistake in life — by far — was ever agreeing to be introduced to Karlheinz Schreiber in the first place.”

A close friend of both Reagan and former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, he delivered eulogies at the funerals of both men.



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