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Trade talks with U.S. to continue over coming weeks, LeBlanc says

Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc, pictured in June alongside Prime Minister Mark Carney, says negotiations with U.S. officials will continue after the two countries failed to reach a deal by deadline.

Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said talks with the Americans will continue over the coming weeks, after the two sides failed to reach a deal by Friday, which would have averted the imposition of 35-per-cent tariffs on some Canadian goods.

But a new deal in the short term isn’t likely, Mr. LeBlanc said in an interview with The Globe and Mail on Friday from Washington. He said he’ll be speaking to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick next week, and the two will meet in person later in August.

© PATRICK DOYLE

<p>President of the King’s Privy Council for Canada Dominic LeBlanc speaks at a press conference while Prime Minister Mark Carney listens, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Thursday, June 19, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Patrick Doyle</p>
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Premiers’ meeting expected to focus on tariffs and trade

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Doug Ford after the First Minister’s meeting in Saskatoon on June 2.

The premiers will be gathering in Ontario cottage country this week for a meeting focused on Canada’s continuing response to President Donald Trump’s tariff threats, and an update from Mark Carney on the state of trade and security negotiations with the U.S.

It will be the first sit down between the Prime Minister and provincial and territorial leaders since Mr. Trump threatened to impose 35-per-cent tariffs on Canadian goods outside the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which are currently subjected to 25-per-cent tariffs.

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First Nations leaders split on progress made after meeting with Carney

First Nations leadership were required to submit questions in advance at their meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney Thursday, raising concerns about how the summit came together.

A landmark meeting between Mark Carney and First Nations leaders ended the way it began Thursday, with a divergence of views on display that signalled a long road ahead for the Prime Minister’s plan to fast-track major projects.

Some leaders emerged with a sense that Mr. Carney had listened thoughtfully to their points of view.

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Softwood deal a top priority in trade talks, Carney says

Prime Minister Mark Carney says trade talks with the U.S. are continuing.

Prime Minister Mark Carney says securing a truce in the long-running Canada-U.S. softwood-lumber dispute is a top priority as Canadian producers brace for even heftier U.S. levies as early as September.

Mr. Carney said he hopes this could be part of an overall agreement to end the trade war with the United States – a deal he conceded earlier this week would likely not remove all of President Donald Trump’s tariffs from Canadian goods.

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