Chiefs of Ontario and Nishnawbe Askiy Nation announced this week they are going ahead with negotiations with Canada on child welfare system in Ontario.
Chiefs in Ontario say they're back at the negotiating table working out a child welfare reform deal with Indigenous Services Canada.
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The head of Canada's most populous province is taking shots at President-elect Donald Trump over his comments on annexing the country, joking that Canada should purchase Minnesota and Alaska in retaliation.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford hits back at President-elect Donald Trump after he suggested Canada should become a part of the United States.
Canada’s governing Liberal Party will announce the country’s new prime minister March 9 after a leadership vote that follows the resignation of Justin Trudeau this week.
Doug Ford dismissed Trump’s talk of annexing Canada as a 51st state and rebutted the president-elect’s assertion that the U.S. does not need Canadian autos, lumber or dairy products. Geoff Robins/AFP via Getty Images
With Justin Trudeau missing in action, the premier of Canada's largest province has anointed himself national spokesman, deflecting "51st state" jabs and instead working to sell President-elect Donald Trump on “a new American and Canadian century.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford suggested Canada should buy Minnesota and Alaska in response to Donald Trump's comments about Canada being the 51st state. The comments come after Trump threatened to impose an additional 25% tariff on Canadian goods.
For the first time since U.S. president-elect Donald Trump threatened hefty tariffs on Canadian goods, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took his argument against the import taxes directly to the American public.