Ontario Premier on anti-tariff ad featuring Ronald Reagan
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The fact Ford delayed pulling the ad to Monday to allow the ad to air during the first two World Series games irritated Trump. He called the move a “hostile act” and responded by announcing plans to raise tariffs on Canada by an additional 10 percent over the weekend.
The leader of Ontario declined to apologize for sponsoring an anti-tariff television commercial that US President Donald Trump used as a reason to terminate high-stakes trade talks with Canada.
Prime Minister Mark Carney says the federal government is in charge of trade talks with the Trump administration, as his office is declining to confirm whether he saw the Ontario government anti-tariff ad before it ran in the United States.
In a late-night social media post, the U.S. President accused Canada of misusing former President Ronald Reagan’s words against his tariffs.
Sourcing Journal on MSN
Trump Terminates Trade Negotiations With Canada Over Anti-Tariff Ad Featuring Ronald Reagan
The president took to Truth Social to declare that talks with Canada were tabled due to an advertisement featuring President Ronald Reagan.
The ad, which will stop airing on Monday, used audio of a 1987 address by Ronald Reagan making a case against tariffs.
The company’s latest ad isn’t about the iPhone. Technically, it’s about the Mac, but really, it’s about Apple and what the company wants you to think about what it stands for. And, it’s a reminder of a very different era for the company. The ad opens with the flicker of a cursor on a blank screen and a voice that sounds both familiar and true.
President Donald Trump said on Thursday he was terminating trade talks with Canada, threatening once again to upend the crucial economic relationship between the United States and its second-biggest trading partner.
2don MSN
Trump threatens Canada with 10% extra import tax for not pulling down anti-tariffs ad sooner
The ad used the words of former President Ronald Reagan to criticize U.S. tariffs, angering Trump, who said he would end trade talks with Canada. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he would pull the ad after the weekend, and it ran Friday night during the first game of the World Series.