President Donald Trump delayed some of the tariffs he imposed on Canada and Mexico earlier in the week late Thursday afternoon. Meanwhile, a lot of people in our region have wondered how potential tariffs would effect how utilities like Green Mountain Power get energy from Hydro-Quebec.
Businesses in northern Vermont are reporting that Canadians are cancelling planned trips to Vermont or saying they won't visit during the Trump administration.
Matthew Holmes, executive vice president at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, reached for an arcade game metaphor to describe what it’s been like tracking President Trump’s ever-changing tariff policies.
President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada took effect at midnight Tuesday, prompting a retaliatory promise from Canada to impose tariff’s on $100 billion of American goods over the next few weeks.
A high-ranking Trump administration official used the library as a stage to dramatize the president’s threats to impose tariffs on Canada and his oft-repeated suggestion it should become the 51st state.
Two dozen Canadian nationals were charged for their alleged roles in a scheme that targeted seniors by posing as relatives asking for emergency bail.
As tensions continue between the United States and Canada, some Vermont businesses say they are seeing a rise in trip cancellations from Canadians. The Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing
Sen. Peter Welch (D-VT) is co-sponsoring a bill to allow Americans to legally buy lower-cost Canadian drugs; Canadians have opposed similar bills.
Canada send surplus energy to states across the Northeast, including New York — but will Canada shut it off? Plus, how much electricity does the U.S. actually get?