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Here's where you can see King Charles III and Queen Camilla during their visit to Ottawa

Here's where you can see King Charles III and Queen Camilla during their visit to Ottawa

CTV News20-05-2025

CTV royal commentator Afua Hagan says King Charles' visit to Canada House reinforces to the world his position as Canada's head of state.

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Carney travels to Europe for security, defence talks with EU, NATO
Carney travels to Europe for security, defence talks with EU, NATO

Global News

time29 minutes ago

  • Global News

Carney travels to Europe for security, defence talks with EU, NATO

Prime Minister Mark Carney will depart for Europe on Sunday for back-to-back summits where he is expected to make major commitments for Canada on security and defence. Carney will be joined by Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand, Defence Minister David McGuinty and secretary of state for defence procurement Stephen Fuhr at the EU and NATO summits, where military procurement and diversifying supply chains will top the agendas. The international meetings come as Canada looks to reduce its defence procurement reliance on the United States due to strained relations over tariffs and President Donald Trump's repeated talk about Canada becoming a U.S. state. Carney will fly first to Brussels, Belgium, starting the trip with a visit to the Antwerp Schoonselhof Military Cemetery where 348 Canadian soldiers are buried. He will also meet with Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever, European Council President António Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. Story continues below advertisement At the EU-Canada summit, Anand and McGuinty are expected to sign a security and defence agreement with the EU in what one European official described Friday as one of the most ambitious deals Europe has ever signed with a third country. The agreement will open the door to Canada's participation in the ReArm Europe initiative, allowing Canada to access a 150-billion-euro loan program for defence procurement, called Security Action for Europe. An EU official briefing reporters on Friday said once the procurement deal is in place, Canada will have to negotiate a bilateral agreement with the European Commission to begin discussions with member states about procurement opportunities. A Canadian official briefing reporters on the summit Saturday said the initial agreement will allow for Canada's participation in some joint procurement projects. However, a second agreement will be needed to allow Canadian companies to bid. 1:48 Carney to increase U.S. steel, aluminum tariffs if trade talks with Trump stall At the EU-Canada summit, leaders are also expected to issue a joint statement to underscore a willingness for continued pressure on Russia, including through further sanctions, and call for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza. Story continues below advertisement After Brussels, Carney heads to The Hague in the Netherlands for the NATO leaders' summit on Tuesday and Wednesday. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy There, Carney will meet with the King of the Netherlands and later with leaders of Nordic nations to discuss Arctic and transatlantic security. At the NATO summit, Carney will take part in bilateral meetings with other leaders. The summit agenda includes a social dinner hosted by the king and queen of the Netherlands and a two-and-a-half hour meeting of the North Atlantic Council. NATO allies are expected to debate a plan to hike alliance members' defence spending target to five per cent of national GDP. NATO data shows that in 2024, none of its 32 members spent that much. The Canadian government official who briefed reporters on background says the spending target and its timeline are still up for discussion, though some allies have indicated they would prefer a seven-year timeline while others favour a decade. Canada hasn't hit a five- per- cent defence spending threshhold since the 1950s and hasn't reached the two per cent mark since the late 1980s. NATO says that, based on its estimate of which expenditures count toward the target, Canada spent $41 billion in 2024 on defence, or 1.37 per cent of GDP. That's more than twice what it spent in 2014, when the two per cent target was first set; that year, Canada spent $20.1 billion, or 1.01 per cent of GDP, on defence. Story continues below advertisement In 2014, only three NATO members achieved the two per cent target — the U.S., the U.K., and Greece. In 2025, all members are expected to hit it. Any agreement to adopt a new spending benchmark must be ratified by all 32 NATO member states. Former Canadian ambassador to NATO Kerry Buck told The Canadian Press the condensed agenda is likely meant to 'avoid public rifts among allies,' describing Trump as an 'uncertainty engine.' 'The national security environment has really, really shifted,' Buck said, adding allies next door to Russia face the greatest threats. 'There is a high risk that the U.S. would undercut NATO at a time where all allies are increasingly vulnerable.' Trump has suggested the U.S. might abandon its mutual defence commitment to the alliance if member countries don't ramp up defence spending. Story continues below advertisement 'Whatever we can do to get through this NATO summit with few public rifts between the U.S. and other allies on anything, and satisfy a very long-standing U.S. demand to rebalance defence spending, that will be good for Canada because NATO's good for Canada,' Buck said. Carney has already made two trips to Europe this year — the first to London and Paris to meet with European allies and the second to Rome to attend the inaugural mass of Pope Leo XIV.

The complicated, high-risk task ahead for Alberta's new man in D.C.
The complicated, high-risk task ahead for Alberta's new man in D.C.

National Post

time31 minutes ago

  • National Post

The complicated, high-risk task ahead for Alberta's new man in D.C.

Alberta's new man in Washington, D.C., is Nathan Cooper, the 44-year-old former MLA from the rural heartland of the province. Nathan just wrapped up six years as Speaker of the Alberta legislature, an all-around nice fellow credited with keeping partisan shenanigans in the legislature to a minimum. Article content Ontario, Quebec and Alberta are the only provinces with full-time boots on the ground in D.C.; Alberta has a total of 11 staff in four offices across America, Nathan reports. 'To put that in perspective,' he adds, 'Quebec has close to 100 full-time people trying to defend the interests of Quebec in the U.S.' Article content Article content Article content I'm curious: What would entice Nathan to quit a plum job — refereeing partisan debates under the dome in Edmonton — and move to D.C. as a diplomat, a place where it's a struggle for anyone to be heard above the cacophony of lobbyists and legislators? Article content Article content Alberta needs someone in D.C. 'who can tell our story,' Nathan pitches. It's a glib answer to my question, but he qualifies his response; he knows he needs to convince not just the pro-energy crowd in the U.S. of the merits of Alberta as a trading partner, but the skeptics too. 'It's very possible,' he observes, 'the House and the Senate will be different after the (American) midterms.' Article content 'And, I think the Speaker's role, in many respects, prepared me for that,' he explains, 'because at the end of the day, you need to be able to garner the trust and respect of both sides of the House, or you end up in a very unruly place.' Article content Article content Nathan replaces former MP James Rajotte as Alberta's representative in Washington, and when we chat, he's been in the new job for less than two weeks. Cellphone in hand and safely parked on the side of the road, he's enroute to G7 briefing meetings in Calgary. A full 20 minutes into our conversation, he relaxes a little, unbuckles his seatbelt and takes a few sips of his Tim Horton's coffee. Article content Article content 'What a rocket ride,' he says with a nervous laugh, and describes his first week in D.C., alongside Premier Danielle Smith: meeting U.S. senators and congresspeople, as well as Canadian and American energy producers. After the G7, where the hosting province enjoys certain privileges including 'grip and grins' with world leaders, there's the Calgary Stampede in early July, a shindig that attracts politicos from across the world. Article content By August, Nathan plans to have his family settled in D.C. and he'll be working from an office lodged within the Canadian Embassy. 'Alberta and Ontario are still inside the embassy,' he explains, 'while the province of Quebec has their own office space and functions independent of the embassy.'

A limit on foreign steel imports, Canada's slowed population growth and DHL suspends operations: Business and investing stories for the week of June 22
A limit on foreign steel imports, Canada's slowed population growth and DHL suspends operations: Business and investing stories for the week of June 22

Globe and Mail

time37 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

A limit on foreign steel imports, Canada's slowed population growth and DHL suspends operations: Business and investing stories for the week of June 22

Getting caught up on a week that got away? Here's your weekly digest of The Globe's most essential business and investing stories, with insights and analysis from the pros, stock tips, portfolio strategies and more. Canada plans to adjust countertariffs on U.S. steel and aluminum imports on July 21 to new levels that will depend on how trade talks are going, Prime Minister Mark Carney said in a news conference in Ottawa on Thursday. This is the first major trade announcement from Mr. Carney's government since this week's G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta, where his office said he and U.S. President Donald Trump had agreed to work toward a comprehensive trade and security deal within 30 days. Ottawa also announced that it will attempt to limit steel imports from countries that don't have free-trade agreements with Canada to 2024 levels. As Niall McGee reports, that includes China, India, Taiwan, Turkey and Russia – and they have been accused of selling the metal at an artificially low price to gain market share (a practice known as dumping). If this group of countries exceeds 2024 steel shipment volumes, a 50-per-cent tariff will apply. But Algoma Steel Group Inc. chief executive Michael Garcia says the federal government's quotas still fall far short of what is needed during the vicious trade war. Canada Post said it has reached a contract deal with its second-largest union after 18 months of negotiations. The agreement with Canadian Postmasters and Assistants Association covers about 8,500 employees, who mostly manage post offices in rural Canada, and includes an 11 per cent wage increase over the next three years. Canada Post still hasn't reached a deal with the primary union representing about 55,000 postal workers, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers. Given the impasse, the federal government intervened last week to force unionized Canada Post workers to vote directly on the latest offers from the postal service, though no date has been set. Meanwhile, DHL Express suspended operations across Canada on Friday after a heated labour dispute and the implementation of a new federal law that bans the use of replacement workers during strikes. The U.S. trade war is affecting Canada much worse than Mexico, especially looking at data about commercial trucks and overall trade flow. According to new data on border traffic released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the number of commercial trucks entering the U.S. from Canada fell 10.5 per cent in May from the year before. By comparison, the number of U.S.-bound trucks from Mexico declined by a more modest 2.8 per cent last month. A similar pattern has played out in trade flows. In April, U.S. imports from Canada fell 14.4 per cent from the same month in 2024, compared with a 2.7-per-cent decline in imports from Mexico. Jason Kirby takes a closer look at the numbers in this week's Decoder series. Canada's population barely grew in the first quarter of this year as tighter immigration policies slowed the number of new arrivals, according to data from Statistics Canada. Between Jan. 1 and April 1, 2025, the overall population grew by just 20,107 people to roughly 41.55 million, Vanmala Subramaniam reports. By comparison, the population jumped by an average of 217,000 people a quarter from 2021 to 2024 – raising widespread concerns about access to housing and health care and forcing the federal government to implement new restrictions on migration, particularly for temporary residents. The Statscan data also showed that the number of temporary residents fell for a second consecutive quarter. As of April 1, there were 61,111 fewer temporary residents in Canada, compared with the start of the year. The largest decrease in temporary residents came from those holding study permits. There were about 53,000 fewer international student visa holders in the first quarter of this year, compared with the previous quarter. A Bay Street veteran and financial commentator is speaking out after finding himself at the centre of an alleged online 'pump and dump' scam that used his identity to defraud some investors out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. David Rosenberg, an economist and founder of Rosenberg Research, said ads appearing on Facebook and Instagram as early as March have promoted a fake investment program falsely listing him as its administrator. Since then, he's heard from several individuals who lost money to the scheme, a sum Mr. Rosenberg said he believes exceeds $1-million, though the total amount is unknown. Mariya Postelnyak shares his story. Get the rest of the questions from the weekly business and investing news quiz here, and prepare for the week ahead with The Globe's investing calendar.

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