shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 38,041
- 36,556
- 2,905
The U.S know WAY too much about Canadas covert abuses in their corporations now. The party is over for Canada, particularly Ontario.
Some will steal my home as they stole my life but it will be the most costly home in Canadian history
It seems to me that Trump clearly wants to take the auto industry back. Canada didn't get the support from England some expected, they know very well that Canada hasn't evolved. I've reached out to them myself years ago with granular details.
Doug Ford's new budget is awash in red ink, with a $14.6-billion deficit planned for the next fiscal year largely to deal with the economic pain of a trade war with the United States.
The $232-billion budget delivers on a promise the premier made during his reelection campaign in February to spend big on tariff relief programs. It also presents a starkly different picture of Ontario's financial future than the one shared in the 2024 fall economic statement, with a longer path to balance.
"Now is the time to invest in business and workers as we face this challenge, it is not the time to take our foot off the pedal of building infrastructure," Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said to reporters at Queen's Park.
Some will steal my home as they stole my life but it will be the most costly home in Canadian history
It seems to me that Trump clearly wants to take the auto industry back. Canada didn't get the support from England some expected, they know very well that Canada hasn't evolved. I've reached out to them myself years ago with granular details.
Doug Ford's new budget is awash in red ink, with a $14.6-billion deficit planned for the next fiscal year largely to deal with the economic pain of a trade war with the United States.
The $232-billion budget delivers on a promise the premier made during his reelection campaign in February to spend big on tariff relief programs. It also presents a starkly different picture of Ontario's financial future than the one shared in the 2024 fall economic statement, with a longer path to balance.
"Now is the time to invest in business and workers as we face this challenge, it is not the time to take our foot off the pedal of building infrastructure," Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said to reporters at Queen's Park.