Senior Trump trade and manufacturing advisor Peter Navarro explains the president's tariffs on Mexico and Canada while doubling China's surcharge on 'Varney & Co.'
PRNewswire/ - The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) plays an important role in keeping fentanyl, its precursors and other dangerous narcotics off our streets. Today, the CBSA shared details about additional actions being taken to stop fentanyl and other synthetic narcotics from reaching communities across the country and abroad.
Rundown trailers streaked with graffiti that sit along a windy gravel road just outside Ontario in eastern Oregon are part of an encampment that’s rife with guns and drugs and people on edge. “Fentanyl flats,
Trump said the tariffs against Mexico and Canada are expected to go into effect on April 2, after a monthlong pause. But then Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said another pause is possible based on fentanyl prevention and progress on the border.
The Canadian government has pulled the country’s banks into the fight against fentanyl, recruiting them to join a money-laundering intelligence group that aims to cut off the funds that support trafficking of the deadly drug.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged Canada to follow Mexico in aligning with U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, aiming to strengthen North Americas trade stance. Mexico has already proposed similar measures,
Canada boosts border security with drones and sniffer dogs to combat fentanyl, aiming to impress Trump and avoid tariffs.
Canada and Mexico are expected to intensify efforts this week to avoid punishing 25% tariffs on their exports to the U.S. in talks to persuade President Donald Trump's administration that their steps to increase border security and curb fentanyl trafficking are working ahead of a March 4 deadline.
Canadian fentanyl czar Kevin Brosseau says American officials are showing their approval for his new role as he and several other top officials are in Washington to show Canada's successes at reining in drugs and migrants.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the tariffs on Mexico and Canada expected to be leveled this week are a “fluid situation.” Lutnick joined Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures,” where he
U.S. President Donald Trump is set to decide on new tariff levels with Canada and Mexico, amidst negotiations concerning border control and the fentanyl crisis. The potential 25% tariffs could impact $900 billion in North American trade,
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