Prime Minister Justin Trudeau plans to be in New York on Wednesday for a Broadway play "Come From Away" about Gander's welcome to 6,600 stranded Americans on 9-11.
The Girl Guides of Canada says it decided to cancel future trips due to uncertainty over whether all of its members would equally be allowed to enter the U.S.
Most of the migrants who recently crossed the border into Canada were in the United States legally, making the trend hard to explain, says U.S. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, at the Houston energy conference, made it clear he is flatly against a proposed U.S. border adjustment tax as it would hurt the economy in both countries.
Kerry Emanuel, professor of atmospheric science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said Thursday that "Scott Pruitt is just plain wrong on this."
Canadian MPs visiting Washington this week said they kept hearing a familiar message in the U.S. capital: that Canada and other NATO partners will be expected to pony up more money for the military.
Canada's highest court is upholding a lower court ruling in favour of investors who have launched a lawsuit alleging they were misled by U.S. President Donald Trump and a real estate development firm.
The government should be concerned about the publication of secret CIA files that describe its ability to break into computers, mobile phones and smart TVs, , says a former national security analyst.
Canada's national police force and border watchdog say they have the resources they need — for now — to deal with the influx of people entering the country illegally in search of asylum.
"What are they doing over there? What are they thinking?" Mayors, scientists and environmentalists working on Great Lakes cleanup say cuts announced by U.S. President Donald Trump could be disastrous.
A Montrealer who is a Canadian citizen by birth says she was barred from entering the United States and told to get a valid visa if she ever wants to cross the border.
American Indian tribes from around the country are bringing their frustrations with the Trump administration and its approval of the Dakota Access oil pipeline to the nation's capital.
Bundled against bone-chilling cold, asylum-seekers hoping to gain refugee status in Canada have been trudging through ditches and fields along the border with the United States.