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CTV National News: Tensions soar as Israel and Iran exchange strikes in escalating conflict

CTV National News: Tensions soar as Israel and Iran exchange strikes in escalating conflict

CTV News16 hours ago

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CTV's Jeremie Charron speaks with a Canadian trapped amid relentless attacks in the escalating Israel-Iran conflict.

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Trump rejected Israel's plan to assassinate Iran's supreme leader, official says
Trump rejected Israel's plan to assassinate Iran's supreme leader, official says

National Post

time26 minutes ago

  • National Post

Trump rejected Israel's plan to assassinate Iran's supreme leader, official says

President Donald Trump vetoed a plan presented by Israel to the U.S. to kill Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, according to a U.S. official familiar with the matter. Article content The Israelis informed the Trump administration in recent days that they had developed a credible plan to kill Khamenei. Article content After being briefed on the plan, the White House made clear to Israeli officials that Trump was opposed to the Israelis making the move, according to the official who was not authorized to comment on the sensitive matter and spoke on the condition of anonymity. Article content Article content The Trump administration is desperate to keep Israel's military operation aimed at decapitating Iran's nuclear program from exploding into an even more expansive conflict and saw the plan to kill Khamenei as a move that would enflame the conflict and potentially destabilize the region. Article content Asked about the plan during an interview on Fox News Channel's 'Special Report with Bret Baier,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not directly address whether the White House rejected the plan. Article content 'But I can tell you, I think that we do what we need to do, we'll do what we need to do. And I think the United States knows what is good for the United States,' Netanyahu said. Article content Israeli Prime Minister @netanyahu with a message to Iran's supreme leader and the Iranian people #foxnews #SpecialReport #Israel #Iran — Bret Baier (@BretBaier) June 15, 2025 Article content Article content Netanyahu also said regime change 'could certainly be the result' of the conflict, because the Iranian regime is very weak.' Article content Trump's rejection of the proposal was first reported by Reuters. Article content Netanyahu's office declined to comment on the reports. Article content Trump on Sunday issued a stark warning to Iran against retaliating on U.S. targets in the Middle East while also predicting Israel and Iran would 'soon' make a deal to end their escalating conflict. Article content The president in an early morning social media posting said the United States 'had nothing to do with the attack on Iran' as Israel and Iran traded missile attacks for the third straight day. Iran, however, has said that it would hold the U.S. — which has provided Israel with much of its deep arsenal of weaponry — for its backing of Israel. Article content ( @realDonaldTrump - Truth Social Post ) ( Donald J. Trump - Jun 15, 2025, 12:32 AM ET ) The U.S. had nothing to do with the attack on Iran, tonight. If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the U.S. Armed Forces will come down on you… — Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸 TRUTH POSTS (@TruthTrumpPosts) June 15, 2025

Buy Canadian movement sours sales at one Edmonton candy store
Buy Canadian movement sours sales at one Edmonton candy store

Globe and Mail

time35 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Buy Canadian movement sours sales at one Edmonton candy store

The business model for Laurie Radostits's Edmonton candy store made sense when it opened a little more than a decade ago: bring the city products that were rarely seen in Canada. It is also part of the reason that, in March, she nearly had to close down. Sweet Convenience's shelves are a colourful garden of treats, cereals and sodas: PayDay candy bars, chocolate chip pancake Pop-Tarts, vanilla Coke. The common denominator? They're American. Before President Donald Trump initiated a trade war with Canada, Sweet Convenience fed a craving for American products that were difficult to find elsewhere. Since Mr. Trump introduced the tariffs that have targeted Canadian products, those cravings have been overtaken by a patriotic desire to spend money on more Canadian-produced goods. But Ms. Radostits soon learned that, to some, 'Buy Canadian' did not necessarily mean support Canadian businesses, particularly if their products didn't bear a Canadian flag. When the one-two punch of tariffs and 'Buy Canadian' landed against Sweet Convenience in February and March, Ms. Radostits said she felt 'lots of panic.' She had only felt that worried during the COVID-19 pandemic, she said, when she faced problems sourcing cross-border products. 'We've been through COVID. Okay. Can we get through Trump?' In the past, customers had requested Ms. Radostits special order their favourite American treats. But in late February and March, some were asking her to remove U.S. products from her store shelves. If she did cut her American products, she estimated 90 per cent of her stock would be eliminated. Trying to get a step ahead of tariffs, Ms. Radostits stockpiled inventory to maintain pretariff prices for as long as possible. In hindsight, it was a bad business move. She was met with an unexpected 'Buy Canadian' boom. Her sales dwindled and she could not pay the rent, although she was able to make a deal with the landlord to keep the store open. The small Canadian business was, ironically, suffering from an unofficial campaign to support Canadian businesses. 'Support Canadian and Buy Canadian are very different,' she argues. At her most dire moment, Ms. Radostits made an online plea for customers to buy from the shop in April, suggesting the store would otherwise have to close. The candy shop's fan base and former patrons returned and carried the business through Easter. While that wave has since ebbed, it hasn't disappeared. She's not as worried about having to close, but the fear remains. Sweet Convenience is enduring a 'double squeeze,' said Melise Panetta, a marketing lecturer at the Lazaridis School of Business at Wilfrid Laurier University who has also held senior positions at large consumer companies like PepsiCo. and S.C. Johnson. The candy store is dealing with the rising cost of operations and goods that other retailers are facing, but is also losing out to the Buy Canadian consumer sentiment that other Canadian retailers are seeing as a benefit. 'Even if it's a local business owned by local individuals – and even if it's cherished – they could still be at risk of having the negative perception of the products that they carry over to their overall retail image,' Ms. Panetta said. There are other stores dotted across Canada that, like Sweet Convenience, carry American treats. At Snack Passport, in Barrie, Ont., owner Jenna MacIsaac said U.S. products made up about 80 per cent of the store's revenue. That has since dropped to less than 20 per cent, she said. Ms. MacIsaac said the store rarely brings in American products now. An analysis from the Angus Reid Institute in February found 48 per cent of Canadians had already replaced, or planned to replace, U.S. products with Canadian alternatives. Sweet Convenience's unique situation is also a test of consumers' tolerance for American products though, Ms. Panetta warned, that shunning a domestic retailer has negative effects on the Canadian economy. 'That's still people that are working in our local economy. They are contributing to the local economy, and they're Canadians.' Ms. Radostits defends stocking American products by saying her profits stay in Canada because most of her orders come through Canadian third-party importers. The prices for some of her products have risen, but she has also tried a new strategy to make the price changes seem more subtle. Instead of raising prices on familiar items, where customers may visibly notice a price spike, she has chosen to order products she hasn't stocked before. That way, customers won't feel inclined to compare prices even if the new items are also subject to tariffs. It's a more subtle sticker shock. Ms. Radostits has also started labelling U.S.-licensed items to show if they had been made elsewhere, like Mexico or the Netherlands. She is also considering ordering a wider variety of foreign items, including from places in Europe. 'I don't want to go that route, so I'm kind of hoping something will change soon,' Ms. Radostits said. European products are a niche, she said, that has already been taken. Ms. Panetta, however, said choosing other countries might be the safer option and recommends the store could also start marking tariffed items with a 'T' like grocery retailer Loblaws has done.

Eastern Canadian premiers, U.S. governors to meet in Boston Monday
Eastern Canadian premiers, U.S. governors to meet in Boston Monday

CTV News

time41 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Eastern Canadian premiers, U.S. governors to meet in Boston Monday

The flags of Canada and the United States fly outside a hotel in downtown Ottawa, on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang Eastern Canadian premiers and U.S. state governors will gather in Boston Monday to discuss trade and tariffs. The meeting, announced last month, is expected to focus on energy, manufacturing, and tourism in face of U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war. Attending the meeting from Canada will be Newfoundland and Labrador Premier John Hogan, Prince Edward Island Premier Rob Lantz, Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston, New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt, Quebec economic minister Christine Fréchette, and Ontario Premier Doug Ford. The premiers were invited to the meeting by Maine Gov. Janet Mills, Vermont Gov. Phil Scott, Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul. Canada is the largest single trading partner for Massachusetts and Maine. Mills said Trump's tariffs have damaged her state's economy and relationship with Canada. 'I understand, their feelings are hurt,' said Mills about Canadians, in an interview with CTV News Atlantic's Todd Battis Friday. 'My feelings are hurt too. The people who have a deep seeded relationship with Canada are all hurt by this. We share that feeling.' Mills and Holt have held multiple discussions about trade over the past several months. Holt, along with Lantz, travelled to Boston in March to meet with Healey. Holt said she planned to focus on energy development at Monday's meeting. 'New Brunswick supplies a lot of energy products to New England,' Holt said to reporters Thursday. 'I think 90 per cent of the cars in Boston are driving with gas that comes from the Irving refinery and us. They are keen to make sure we will continue to be a reliable supplier of energy to them.' With files from CTV's Todd Battis and Avery MacRae For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.

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