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Tag: Prevail
Canada will prevail against Trump’s tariffs but ‘we’ve got to go through it’: finance minister
The Current19:59Canada will prevail against Trump tariffs: finance minister
Federal Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc says things could get “very tough” under sweeping U.S. tariffs, but it will help Canada’s case when that pain is felt on both sides of the border.
“I’m convinced in the end [Canada’s argument] will prevail, because it’s in the American economic interest to not sort of get into this rabbit hole,” LeBlanc told The Current’s Matt Galloway.
“But now that we’re in it … we’ve got to go through it and we’ve got to do it in a way that supports Canadian businesses and the Canadian workers.”
U.S. President Donald Trump slapped 25 per cent tariffs on a wide range of Canadian goods Saturday, with a lower rate of 10 per cent on the country’s energy products. Ottawa retaliated with 25 per cent tariffs on $155 billion of U.S. goods.
Trump also placed 25 per cent tariffs on Mexico, and 10 per cent tariffs on China. But on Monday Trump delayed tariffs on Mexico by a month, after Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum agreed to deploy 10,000 Mexican national guard troops to the U.S. border.
WATCH | Trudeau responds to U.S. tariffs:After announcing Canada’s response to U.S. tariffs, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the coming days will be ‘difficult for Canadians, and they’ll be difficult for Americans.’ Trudeau said Canada will levy a 25 per cent tariff on $155 billion worth of U.S. goods in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s 25 per cent tariffs on most Canadian goods.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with Trump Monday morning. They are expected to speak again at 3 p.m. ET. LeBlanc spoke to Galloway before that initial call, to discuss what the federal government is doing to win this fight and support Canadians.
The Bank of Montreal says Trump’s tariffs hammer will come down hard on the Canadian economy. How bad is this going to be?
I think it’s going to be very tough. Provincial governments and the Department of Finance have looked at various scenarios. What we don’t yet know is how quickly Canadian businesses will be able to respond.
I’m talking to you from Moncton, New Brunswick this morning. People are fishing lobster in the Bay of Fundy now, and 70 or 80 per cent of that catch gets sent to Boston. So you can see the price will go up by 25 per cent tomorrow. So big and small sectors of our economy are going to be hit.
Our government, of course, responded with some counter tariff measures that we can escalate over time. We’re convinced that in the end, the Americans will conclude that it’s not in their economic interest to continue this kind of back and forth.
WATCH | Canada hits back after Trump imposes 25% tariffs:The federal government announced retaliatory 25 per cent tariffs on U.S. goods — ranging from juice to appliances and cars — after President Donald Trump followed through on his tariff threats. The trade war has people being urged to buy Canadian as the scope of the economic fallout waits to be seen.
There has been endless kind of shuttle diplomacy back and forth…. Why [do] you think the efforts of Canada failed to persuade [Trump] to change his mind?
I’ve asked myself that question, Matt, and I think my colleagues have as well, because you’re right, we made a considerable effort. Premiers made a very considerable effort to speak directly to Americans [and] American leaders. We think we have a good story to tell on border security, on the increased work that the RCMP and CBSA [Canada Border Services Agency] have done in recent weeks with their American partners.
There’s no daylight between Canada and the United States in wanting to fight that kind of criminal activity [around fentanyl] or the horrible effects it has in Canadian and American communities. So you’re right, if that was the pretext for these tariffs, we think that that argument should be rationally resolved. So then therefore, one asks the question, well, why did they go ahead with this decision on the weekend?
The focus for us, Matt, has to be, “OK, they’ve done it.” What do we need to do to respond to get Canada out from under this circumstance as quickly as possible and as we go through it? What do we need to do with provinces and territories and other partners to support Canadian businesses? So we’re really going to focus on that.
Is there any wiggle room, do you think, to avoid these tariffs coming into place tomorrow?
We don’t think so. We took note of what [Trump] said publicly at the end of last week … that there’s nothing that Canada or Mexico could have done to avoid this.
He said that himself, which … is a bit contradictory from the idea that if we could show them and work with them to tell the good story about border security … they would be reassured and these tariffs wouldn’t happen. So there’s a lot of contradiction in much of what is said publicly. But we can spend a lot of time being distracted by that.
WATCH | Trump says ‘nothing’ Canada can do to stop tariffs tomorrow:U.S. President Donald Trump says there’s nothing Canada can do to stop 25% tariffs as Ottawa prepares to retaliate with a ‘forceful but reasonable’ economic response.
The prime minister will make the case to the president this morning why this is putting at risk decades of economic and security partnership and will hurt Canadian and American businesses in a way that’s totally unnecessary.
We’ll continue to make that argument. I’m convinced in the end it will prevail because it’s in the American economic interest to not sort of get into this rabbit hole. But now that we’re in it … we’ve got to go through it and we’ve got to do it in a way that supports Canadian businesses and the Canadian workers.
There are people who are very, very anxious about what the next few days will hold…. What is your government going to do to help support Canadians who could be out of work, perhaps even temporarily, by the end of this week?
There are existing federal programs, Matt. Employment insurance is obviously one of them. We can adjust some of the criteria, some of the access to benefits. There’s changes we can make around work sharing to allow more workers to remain employed to share, in other words, the economic risk with the businesses.
All of those programs are being looked at, like, literally on the weekend and today. We have the ability to immediately put in a number of flexibilities in existing programs. I can, as the finance minister, ensure that there’s liquidity in the economy, that businesses have access to the money they need to continue to operate.
WATCH | Canadians sound off on Trump’s trade war:We asked Canadians: How concerned are you about Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods?
What about for people who worry about their rent? I mean, will there be direct supports to people who worry that if they’re not working, they can’t keep the lights on in their house?
There are programs that exist now to support those workers. And if we need to have different programs that meet a particular need, we will. So we’ll do what is necessary to ensure, to your exact question, that these workers are not through no fault of their own in an untenable economic position.
The good news is a lot of those programs exist now. And if we have to have different ones in partnership with provinces that will very much want to step up, then we absolutely will do that as well.
What do you make of how Canadians are responding, not just booing anthems, but … in terms of talking about cancelling vacations to the states, looking at Buy Canadian policies? What do you make of how we as Canadians have responded to this?
It’s quite touching, to be honest. It’s quite moving to see how people who aren’t policymakers or business leaders or representatives of large groups of workers in their own daily routines and in their own decisions as consumers are wanting symbolically and substantively to do something to support the common cause.
Everybody’s trying in their small way to say to the Americans: You know what? Decades of friendship and partnership economically and from a security perspective can’t be thrown out because a particular president decides for a reason that’s not particularly clear … to do this to the Canadian and American economy.
Canada will prevail against Trump’s tariffs but ‘we’ve got to go through it’: finance ministerIn the face of escalating trade tensions with the United States, Canada’s finance minister remains optimistic about the country’s ability to weather the storm.
Speaking to reporters, the finance minister acknowledged the challenges posed by President Trump’s tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, but expressed confidence in Canada’s resilience. “We’ve been through tough times before and we will prevail against these tariffs,” he said.
However, he also emphasized the need for Canadians to brace themselves for a bumpy road ahead. “We’ve got to go through it,” he added, alluding to the potential economic impacts of the trade dispute.
Despite the uncertainty surrounding the future of Canada-US trade relations, the finance minister urged Canadians to remain steadfast. “We will come out stronger on the other side,” he said. “We’ve got to stay united and stay strong in the face of these challenges.”
As Canada prepares to navigate the choppy waters of international trade, it seems clear that the country is determined to stand firm against protectionist policies and safeguard its economic interests.
Tags:
- Canada economy
- Trump tariffs
- Finance minister
- International trade
- Economic impact
- Canada-US relations
- Trade negotiations
- Tariff dispute
- Economic resilience
- Global market trends
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Florida on the cusp of a winter storm of the centuries: Will snow or ice prevail?
North Florida is little more than 24 hours away from the start of what has the potential to be one of the most impactful winter storms in Gulf Coast history.
And while uncertainty about precipitation type in the eastern Panhandle is likely to go right down to the wire, colder trends aloft are tilting the odds away from rain, and towards a messy mix of ice, sleet, and snow Tuesday night into early Wednesday morning.
Winter Storm Warnings, the first in seven years for Florida, are in effect from Pensacola to Gainesville and Jacksonville.
Looking at the meteorological set-up, the seven keys I discussed on Thursday needed to square the circle of Florida snow are turning at the same time. Over the last few days, the uncertainty regarding the presence of these ingredients— Arctic airmass, triggering trough, and storm track — has decreased.
Because of that, both global and regional weather models have converged on a scenario with few precedents in Florida weather history, one in which an impressive amount of precipitation falls mostly in frozen form from eastern Texas to Florida’s Big Bend.
The unknowns to a historic Florida storm: Snow or Ice? And how much?
There are two major uncertainties to discuss for Florida. The first is precipitation amount.
Model ensembles have trended higher over the last few days and are now in good agreement that the Panhandle will see anywhere from 0.25” to 1” of liquid-equivalent precipitation (that means if you melted down snow or ice), heaviest towards Jacksonville and lighter towards Pensacola. Tallahassee sits on a sharp gradient in expected totals, with around 0.5” most probable, but some models showing closer to 1”.
That amount of precipitation falling as all or mostly snow or ice in North Florida is borderline unprecedented. For instance, in the December 1989 snowstorm, Tallahassee and Jacksonville saw 1” and 2.5” of snow from 0.1” and 0.35” of liquid equivalent, respectively. No matter where we fall in the forecast range, we’re really working with a lot of moisture for how cold it will be, which means a lot of potential for wintry mischief.
The main uncertainty, as always, is precipitation type, which is notoriously difficult to forecast until a winter storm is underway.
The reason for that is because a powerful storm like this one turns the atmosphere into a complex layer cake of above and below freezing levels, into which snowflakes aloft fall, melt, and then potentially refreeze. Freezing rain occurs when a relatively thin layer at the surface is below freezing, while ice pellets occur when the surface cold layer below a so-called “warm nose” about a mile up in the air is thicker.
Snow needs temperatures near or below freezing at all levels of the atmosphere.
This is going to be a historic storm any way you slice the cake, but the worst impacts will be if the majority of precipitation falls as a freezing rain that ices over surfaces like roads, powerlines, and trees that have been repeatedly pulled this way and that in the past decade by hurricanes, tornadoes, and severe thunderstorms.
The good news is that ensemble guidance through mid-day Monday has a slight colder trend in temperatures aloft as the event approaches. However, even factoring in this trend, North Florida will be the battleground between multiple precipitation types Tuesday night into Wednesday morning.
Let’s take a look at some rough moisture and precipitation type forecasts by region, keeping in mind: 1) these forecasts are uncertain and can change before go-time and 2) hyper-local variability in how the storm plays out could well be extreme here.
Western Panhandle, including Pensacola: Snow on the beach likely
For Pensacola and surrounding areas, the forecast is a little easier to make, because the consensus of data suggests that snow will be the dominant precipitation type west of the Apalachicola River and away from the immediate coast, perhaps starting as a little ice.
The expected liquid-equivalent precipitation is lower here, as the western Panhandle exchanges less moisture for a colder airmass both at the surface and aloft.
The National Weather Service said 2-4 inches of snow is possible in Pensacola on Tuesday.
In general, this region can look for the onset of occasional light mix or snow Tuesday morning, with the heaviest snow moving through Tuesday afternoon and evening. In general, 1-2” total snow accumulations inland are the best bet, though local totals to 3” or even more wouldn’t be surprising.
Snow on the beach in the western Panhandle is probable, though accumulations will be lower on the coast. For what it’s worth, Florida’s all-time single-storm snow record is 4”, set in Milton on March 6, 1954. Snow should taper to flurries and end by very early Wednesday morning.
Eastern Panhandle, including Tallahassee: On the razor’s edge of snow and ice
The forecast is the least certain in the Big Bend and eastern Panhandle, the most probable region of overlap between deeper moisture and temperatures one to two miles up in the atmosphere right around freezing during the peak of the storm.
The colder trend in the models over the last 24 hours has continued to diminish the odds that the Capitol region sees significant rainfall, at least east to the Suwannee River.
Tallahassee, that means we should see some combination of freezing rain, sleet, and snow. A few aesthetic flurries (or mix) are possible Tuesday morning, with the main event starting Tuesday evening and continuing through the overnight hours and tapering before daybreak Wednesday.
Possibly conservative estimates for snow and ice in the Tallahassee, Florida area ahead of the 2025 winter storm.
With the freezing line aloft likely cutting right through the Big Bend, I hesitate to put a fine point on the precipitation type and amounts forecast yet.
If the precip can manage to stay snow more of the time, the potential for 1-3” snow totals (or more? Am I really typing this???) is there – particularly closer to the Apalachicola River or Florida-Georgia line.
Realistically, especially in the eastern Big Bend, some snow is a good possibility at the beginning and end of the storm, but a period of mixing to freezing rain or sleet is likely overnight as temps at the surface are below freezing but a warm nose above the surface pokes above freezing.
If that happens, up to 0.25” of glaze or ice pellets is possible. Basically, It’s going to go right down to the wire for precipitation type in the eastern Panhandle, so please manifest and visualize snow. Let’s hope for more Snolepocalypse, less Tallahassleet or ice.
Northeast Florida, including Jacksonville
Further south and west towards Gainesville and Jacksonville, liquid-equivalent precip will be in the 0.75” or more ballpark, while temperatures aloft are likely to be above freezing for most of the storm.
That means precipitation will probably start out as some rain Tuesday evening, with freezing rain likely to be more prominent in the wintry mix in the back half of the event early overnight into Wednesday, and perhaps some snow as the event concludes by Wednesday late morning.
Glaze or ice totals of 0.1-0.25” are probable here, especially further north and west. Don’t expect significant frozen precipitation much south of a line Gainesville to Saint Augustine, though only a fool would be confident in a Gulf Coast precipitation type forecast.
A dream of winter with some BIG caveats
Finally, some forecast caveats.
First, take ALL precipitation type forecasts before the actual storm starts with huge grains of salt, the kind we don’t have to put down on our roads.
Big forecast changes in terms of who gets what are absolutely possible. Writing this forecast as a snow lover feels like I’m writing weather fanfic, but this forecast is simply my best and hopefully unbiased guess on the general outcome the winter storm as of mid-day Monday.
I could well be wrong. Please refer to the National Weather Service forecast offices in Mobile, Tallahassee, and Jacksonville for the latest.
Overall, though all signs a day out are that a historic winter storm is on its way to the Panhandle. Temperatures in the 30s through the day Wednesday and returning to the 20s Wednesday night mean hazardous travel conditions, including hard-to-see black ice, will begin from west to east on Tuesday and may persist into Thursday morning.
Let’s stay off the roads as much as humanly possible and just all enjoy a nice cup of hot cocoa if you’re adulting, or the sacrament of youth that is a snow day if you’re a kid (or kid at heart).
In general, I wouldn’t count on society to function on Tuesday and Wednesday along the Gulf Coast from Houston to Tallahassee, even by recent low standards.
Stay safe, stay warm, and keep watching the skies… for flakes!
Ryan Truchelut, WeatherTiger
Dr. Ryan Truchelut is chief meteorologist at WeatherTiger, a Tallahassee start-up providing advanced weather and climate analytics, forensic meteorology and expert witness consulting, and agricultural and hurricane forecasting subscription services. For more information, visit weathertiger.com or get in touch at ryan@weathertiger.com.
This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Florida winter storm: Forecast calls for historic amounts of ice, snow
Florida on the cusp of a winter storm of the centuries: Will snow or ice prevail?As Floridians brace themselves for an unprecedented winter storm, the big question on everyone’s mind is whether snow or ice will dominate the forecast. With temperatures plummeting to record lows and a mix of precipitation expected, the Sunshine State is on high alert for what could be a once-in-a-lifetime weather event.
Meteorologists are predicting that a powerful cold front will sweep across the state, bringing with it the potential for heavy snowfall in northern regions and freezing rain in central and southern areas. This rare phenomenon has residents stocking up on supplies and preparing for the worst, as the possibility of widespread power outages and treacherous road conditions looms large.
While snow in Florida is a rare occurrence, the threat of ice accumulation is equally concerning, as it can lead to dangerous conditions and widespread damage. As emergency crews and utility companies gear up for a potential disaster, residents are urged to stay informed and take necessary precautions to ensure their safety.
As Floridians hunker down and await the arrival of this historic winter storm, only time will tell whether snow or ice will prevail. One thing is for certain: the state is in for a wild ride as it faces a weather event of epic proportions. Stay tuned for updates as the situation unfolds.
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- Florida winter storm
- Florida weather update
- Snow in Florida
- Ice storm in Florida
- Winter storm forecast
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#Florida #cusp #winter #storm #centuries #snow #ice #prevail
Who Will Prevail? Bucks and Nets Injury Report Breakdown
The NBA playoffs are in full swing, and one of the most highly anticipated matchups in the Eastern Conference is the showdown between the Milwaukee Bucks and the Brooklyn Nets. Both teams have been considered top contenders for the NBA championship, but injuries have plagued both squads as they head into this crucial series.The Bucks have been dealing with key injuries to two of their star players, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jrue Holiday. Antetokounmpo, the reigning NBA MVP, has been battling a knee injury that forced him to miss several games towards the end of the regular season. Holiday, the team’s starting point guard, has also been dealing with a nagging ankle injury that has hampered his performance on the court.
On the other hand, the Nets have been dealing with their own injury woes, with their superstar trio of Kevin Durant, James Harden, and Kyrie Irving all missing significant time due to various injuries. Durant, who is one of the best players in the league, has been dealing with a hamstring injury that has kept him out of the lineup for several weeks. Harden has been nursing a hamstring injury as well, while Irving has been dealing with an ankle injury.
As the two teams prepare to face off in the playoffs, the injury report will play a crucial role in determining the outcome of the series. The Bucks will need Antetokounmpo and Holiday to be at full strength in order to have a chance against the high-powered Nets offense. Meanwhile, the Nets will need Durant, Harden, and Irving to be healthy and playing at their best in order to overcome the defensive prowess of the Bucks.
It will be a battle of attrition as both teams look to overcome their injury woes and emerge victorious in this highly anticipated series. The health of the key players on both teams will be a deciding factor in determining who will prevail in this matchup of Eastern Conference powerhouses.
In the end, it will come down to which team can overcome their injuries and perform at their best when it matters most. Both the Bucks and the Nets have the talent and the depth to make a deep playoff run, but it will ultimately be the team that can stay healthy and execute on the court that will come out on top. Only time will tell who will prevail in this epic showdown between two of the best teams in the NBA.
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