
Throne speech may have ‘painted a different picture' of Canada for Trump: analyst
Political analyst Lori Williams on how King Charles' throne speech about Canada's identity may impact U.S. President Trump's view of the country.
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CTV News
9 minutes ago
- CTV News
Trump and Musk divided after scrappy online fallout. Follow live updates here.
Left: Billionaire Elon Musk. Right: U.S. President Donald Trump. (The Associated Press) U.S. President Donald Trump and his ex-ally, billionaire business mogul Elon Musk, had a fiery falling out yesterday as the two men lobbed insults, accusations and threats at each other from their respective social media platforms. Their relationship fractured as Trump pushed to pass his 'One Big Beautiful Bill' – the 1,116-page act of proposed tax cuts, Medicaid restrictions, border wall funding and money for the Golden Dome that would spike national deficits by US$2.4 trillion over the next decade, according to one estimate that the White House contests . Musk, one of Trump's chief advocates for cost cutting, had criticized the legislation, arguing that a bill could not be big and beautiful at once. Their disagreement exploded on Thursday, descending into an open-air brawl waged online. Here are the latest updates: Trump not interested in talking to Musk Trump is not interested in talking with his former ally Musk amid a bitter feud over the president's sweeping tax-cut bill, a White House official said on Friday, adding that no phone call between the two men is planned for the day. A separate White House official had said earlier that Trump and Musk planned to talk to each other on Friday. 'I'm not even thinking about Elon. He's got a problem, the poor guy's got a problem,' Trump told CNN on Friday morning. Shares in Musk's Tesla rose 4.5 per cent when markets opened on Friday. In Thursday's session, the stock dived 14 per cent and lost about US$150 billion in value, the largest single-day decline in the electric vehicle maker's history. Musk bankrolled a large part of Trump's presidential campaign and was then brought to the White House to head up a controversial effort to downsize the federal workforce and slash spending. Reuters. Read the full story here . Donald Trump Elon Musk news President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Elon Musk in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) Musk pulls back on threat to withdraw Dragon spacecraft As Trump and Musk argued on social media, the world's richest man threatened to decommission a space capsule used to take astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. A few hours later, Musk said he wouldn't follow through on the threat. After Trump threatened to cut government contracts given to Musk's SpaceX rocket company and his Starlink internet satellite services, Musk responded via X that SpaceX 'will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately.' It was unclear how serious Musk's threat was, but several hours later – in a reply to another X user – he said he wouldn't do it. The capsule, developed with the help of government contracts, is an important part of keeping the space station running. NASA also relies heavily on SpaceX for other programs including launching science missions and, later this decade, returning astronauts to the surface of the moon. SpaceX is the only U.S. company capable right now of transporting crews to and from the space station, using its four-person Dragon capsules. The Associated Press. Read the full story here . SpaceX A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, with a crew of four aboard the Crew Dragon spacecraft, lifts off on a mission to the International Space Station lifts off from pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Friday, March 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Renna) Tesla shares claw back Tesla shares clawed back from steep losses as a war of words between CEO Musk and U.S. President Trump appeared to cool, easing investor worries about the likely political fallout on the electric automaker. Shares rose about five per cent in early trading. Politico had reported Musk and Trump were expected to speak on Friday, but a White House official told Reuters there were no plans for a call. Musk signalled on his X social media platform he was open to easing tensions with Trump, agreeing with comments from hedge fund manager Bill Ackman calling for a detente. The spat between the world's most powerful man and its richest erased more than US$150 billion from Tesla's market value on Thursday, the company's biggest drop in one session.

Globe and Mail
9 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
B.C. cedes much of Nuchatlitz provincial park to Nuchatlaht First Nation
The B.C. government has quietly ceded a large portion of a provincial park off the west coast of Vancouver Island, in response to a precedent-setting court ruling on an Indigenous land claim. Public access to parts of Nuchatlitz Park is no longer assured, after the B.C. Supreme Court declared last year that the Nuchatlaht, a First Nation with 180 members, has proved Aboriginal title to 1,140 hectares of land on the north end of Nootka Island. The remnants of the park are not marked, and the province says it is up to visitors to ensure they are not trespassing. Kayakers and recreational boaters are only just learning, through word of mouth, that the popular destination is no longer public land. Meanwhile, the First Nation is building a road through the former parkland for its members. The lawyer for the Nuchatlaht says it is the first time parkland has been included in a title ruling from the courts. The title lands include 320 hectares of old-growth forest in Nuchatlitz Park, which was established in 1996 with the primary goal of protecting special natural features. The land, about 110 kilometres northwest of Tofino, includes critical habitat for several at-risk species, including sea otters, the wandering salamander and the marbled murrelet (a small seabird), and features increasingly rare coastal sand ecosystems. The Nuchatlaht argued that the park was created without their approval and brought many visitors to the area without any benefit to the Indigenous community. A spokesperson for the First Nation says that guidance for the public has yet to be determined. 'We know the kayakers and the guys with the four-wheelers will be going there,' said Archie Little, an elder and councillor, 'and so we have to set the policies that they don't harm or damage the land.' Mr. Little said the Nuchatlaht plan to develop their title lands. 'Hopefully we will have some logging to do but with really strict guidelines.' Much of their traditional territory on Nootka Island has already been commercially logged, making the former parkland one of the few pockets of intact forest. Robert Devault, who has lived on a private island adjacent to Nuchatlitz for more than 50 years, is concerned about the road being built. It appears to be designed for resource development, he said. 'I'm hoping that what they're doing now won't be completely destructive, but my main disappointment is the lack of response from the government.' While he supports the Nuchatlaht people in asserting their Aboriginal title, Mr. Devault said the province should have negotiated some protections. 'We have entrusted the government to save those parks for everybody, for the future, not only humans, but for the environment. And so it's a betrayal.' The NDP government has committed to reconciliation with First Nations. Last year, it signed a groundbreaking agreement to recognize that the Haida Nation has Aboriginal title to all one million hectares of the Haida Gwaii archipelago. It has also agreed to temporary close the popular Joffre Lakes Park near Pemberton for parts of this summer, at the request of the Lil'wat and N'Quatqua First Nations. Tamara Davidson, B.C.'s Minister of Environment and Parks, declined to comment on the Nuchatlaht case. A member of her staff said the matter is still before the courts. The Nuchatlaht are appealing the decision because it granted them only roughly 5 per cent of the territory they claim. The appeal, however, does not apply to the existing title lands. The province still promotes Nuchatliz Park as a destination for wilderness camping, although the boundaries of its remaining 175 hectares of parkland are not obvious. The province has simply ceased to apply the law that governs parkland and protected areas for the portion that is now Nuchatlaht land. Jack Woodward, the lawyer who represented the Nuchatlaht, said that the courts have set a precedent establishing that Aboriginal title can supersede park protections on Crown land. 'When you have Aboriginal title, you are entitled to the full economic benefit of the land,' he said in an interview. 'You're unencumbered by a whole bunch of things that would prevent you from using the land.' Jacinthe Goulet, a spokesperson for Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, said there are no Aboriginal title lands outside of British Columbia, although there is active title litigation across Canada. Currently, there is no federal law that defines governance of Aboriginal title lands, but Ottawa asserts that federal laws and provincial laws of general application - statutes that apply to all residents without exception - continue to stand on those lands. Mr. Woodward said the governments of Canada and B.C. have failed to provide legal guidance for Aboriginal title lands. 'We're left in a complete legislative vacuum. There are now two places in Canada where we know that there's Aboriginal title. That is the Tsilhqot'in territory, and also Nuchatlaht territory. We know that there's Aboriginal title there, but there is no legislation guiding this,' said Mr. Woodward, who also won the Tsilhqot'in case in B.C. 11 years ago. Indigenous groups in U.S. and Canada clash over cross-border land claims Thomas Isaac, an expert in Aboriginal law at the Vancouver law firm Cassels, said the province has legislative tools to protect the park, but is not using them. 'The legislative objective of protecting the environment can justifiably infringe an Aboriginal right, including title,' he said. 'The government is negligent, asleep on the job. The Nuchatlaht is not responsible for the public interest‚' he said, adding that it's up to governments to balance Indigenous interests with those of the wider public. Several environmental organizations supported the First Nation in its court battle. 'Colonial governments and corporations have degraded the splendour of Nootka Island,' the Wilderness Committee wrote in a 2022 report about to the case. Torrance Coste, the non-profit's national campaign director, said the Nuchatlaht have the right to manage and access their territories as they see fit. 'While First Nations rights and title are ignored and actively denied by the B.C. government, logging, mining, oil and gas and other industries blast thousands of kilometres of roads every year,' he said. 'This has been and remains our bigger concern.'


CBC
32 minutes ago
- CBC
Quebec mulling over major cuts to immigration
Quebec's immigration minister is laying out his targets for the next four years. Jean-François Roberge is also reiterating calls to Ottawa to cut the number of temporary immigrants to the province.