Let’s face it: Ontario wasn’t prepared for U.S. President Donald Trump. The threat of 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian exports ...
Provincial progressive conservative leader adds $1 billion to skills development fund as auto industry faces struggles with slowing market growth and looming U.S. export tariff threat.
Economic mayhem does not typically make for a winning election campaign. The exception: when blame for the trouble can logically be pinned on an outside enemy, particularly a bully boy like Trump.
Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford promised to spend billions on electric vehicle subsidies if re-elected, while his opponents question if he got Ontario the best EV deal.
Good morning, Greater Sudbury! Here are a few stories to start your day on this Friday morning.
Given that Ford could have waited months to risk losing his job as Ontario’s leader, why would it make sense to call an election so far ahead of schedule?
Everybody I meet seems to think this provincial election is going to be a cakewalk for Premier Doug Ford and they wonder why we’re bothering to have it. Well, not everybody. Certainly not Liberal ...
In the month leading up to yesterday's campaign kickoff, Ontario Progressive Conservative Party Leader Doug Ford’s government announced $17.8 billion in total funding for various energy projects.
President Trump said Thursday he is moving forward with a 25% tariff on Canadian imports. Michigan will be ‘disproportionately affected’ as a border state with heavy auto trade, according to experts.
The Progressive Conservative leader said Ontario would maintain its share of funding for EV battery production subsidies even ...
“Our economy as a whole is extremely integrated with the American economy,” he says. Slotwinski says there is also a significant movement of goods across the border on any given day’ in the ...
Can Bonnie Crombie defeat Doug Ford in the upcoming Ontario election? She talks to Steve Paikin about her plans.