Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne says he shares the same economic vision as Mark Carney, and he's throwing his support behind the former central banker to become the next Liberal leader and prime minister.
François-Philippe Champagne, the federal industry minister, is calling for a review of Ottawa's "business relationship" with Amazon after the company said it will close all seven of its warehouses in Quebec.
Amid turmoil in his own government, one veteran Canadian leader is trying to build a case against President-elect Trump's trade war saber-rattling.
Global News reported that New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh said of the closures: “What is happening in Quebec is very clearly Amazon trying to union-bust. These are workers that were trying to unionize, and Amazon is shutting down operations in the complete region, just to stop them from demanding fairness."
“You will undoubtedly understand that such action calls for a review of the business relationship that exists between Amazon and the Government of Canada,” Francois-Philippe Champagne said in ...
Plans to close all seven of Amazon warehouses in Quebec are unchanged even as the federal industry minister called for a review of Ottawa's "business relationship."
LANSING — Canada's industry minister met with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Thursday, eager to highlight the essential trading relationship between his country and Michigan amid President-elect Donald Trump's threat to impose a 25% tariff on Canadian goods.
As Trudeau prepares to exit and Trump takes helm in U.S., policies that helped prop up the industry are being scaled back or cancelled
Amazon is willing to discuss the closures of its Quebec warehouses with Canadian and provincial officials, confirmed Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Public Services and Procurement of Canada — on Friday afternoon.
They'll have me fighting to make sure that this is not going to go unanswered in Canada, Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne said. The closure will eliminate 1,700 permanent jobs and ...
Guelph, Ont.-based auto parts manufacturer Linamar Corporation announced Tuesday it is expanding its operations across the province and creating thousands of jobs by investing $1 billion into the automotive industry.
Two Canadian corporate competitors in ongoing conflict over parcel delivery made headlines last week. One involved government-owned Canada Post’s continuing struggle for existence and its failure to reach a labour agreement with 55,