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Biden calls for ‘fair deal’ for striking Hollywood writers

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Biden calls for ‘fair deal’ for striking Hollywood writers

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden referred to as for a “honest deal” for Hollywood’s placing writers on Monday as he hosted a White Home screening of the the upcoming streaming sequence “American Born Chinese language” to mark Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.

Biden made his first public feedback on the strike, which hits the one-week mark Tuesday, in remarks forward of the pilot’s screening. He was joined by an overflow crowd of lots of of neighborhood leaders, elected officers and solid members and producers from the present within the East Room and the State Eating Room.

“Nights like these are a reminder of tales and the significance of treating storytellers with the dignity, respect and the worth they deserve,” Biden mentioned. “I sincerely hope the writers strike in Hollywood will get resolved and the writers are given a good deal they deserve as quickly as doable.”

He added: “That is an iconic, significant American business. And we’d like the writers and all the employees and everybody concerned to inform the tales of our nation and the tales of all of us.”

“American Born Chinese language” is an adaptation of a graphic novel of the identical identify by Gene Luen Yang, and stars Oscar winners Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan. It’ll premiere on Disney+ Could 24.

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Biden used his transient remarks onstage to stipulate his administration’s efforts to spotlight the accomplishments of the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities and to talk out towards prejudice and violence focusing on them.

“Hate can haven’t any secure harbor in America,” Biden mentioned. “Silence is complicity and we won’t stay silent”

Quan, who launched Biden, mirrored on his journey from arriving within the U.S. as an 8-year-old refugee from Vietnam to creating his first go to to the White Home months after successful an Oscar.

“I don’t take this second flippantly, as a result of I do know this constructing is a monument to a rustic that opened its arms to me,” he mentioned.

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Three people killed in an avalanche in Italy's Leopontine Alps

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Three people killed in an avalanche in Italy's Leopontine Alps

A group of five skiers was hit by the avalanche above the village of Trasquera in the Piedmont region. Two survived and were helicoptered to hospital.

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The avalanche broke away around 12.30pm on the eastern face of Punta Valgrande, a summit in the Leopontine Alps, on the border between Italy and Switzerland.

The skiers who died were dragged down the snowy mountain for several hundred metres from where they had been skiing at over 2,800 metres. The bodies have not yet been recovered because they are awaiting authorisation from the local magistrate.

An alert had been issued in the area above 2,100 metres, which warned of “considerable danger of avalanches.” The alert was at level 3, with 5 being the most dangerous.

It is not yet clear whether the rescuers were alerted by a skier who saw the avalanche sweeping away three people, or by the other two people who managed to save themselves. According to reports, the group was going uphill with crampons and then descending with skis.

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US slaps new sanctions on Venezuela officials as Maduro inaugurated

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US slaps new sanctions on Venezuela officials as Maduro inaugurated
The United States on Friday imposed sanctions on eight Venezuelan officials and increased to $25 million the reward it is offering for the arrest of President Nicolas Maduro on the day of his inauguration to a third term following a disputed election last year.
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Influential leader of Canada's Ontario province seeks Trump, Musk meeting: US 'needs us like we need them'

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Influential leader of Canada's Ontario province seeks Trump, Musk meeting: US 'needs us like we need them'

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OTTAWA-After President-elect Trump mused about using “economic force” to acquire Canada as the 51st state during his Mar-a-Lago news conference on Tuesday, outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded on social media that “there isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.”

However, as Trudeau announced on Monday his plan to resign as prime minister once the Liberal Party that he leads chooses his successor, the biggest pushback to Trump’s pitch to annex Canada – and his planned 25% tariffs on exports from the country – has come from the premier of Canada’s most populous province, Ontario.

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Doug Ford, a former businessman and conservative like Trump who has served as Ontario’s 26th premier since 2018, told Fox News Digital in an interview that the president-elect’s targeting Canada is both “crazy” and “ridiculous.”

He said the bilateral focus should be on “strengthening” what the Canadian government calls a nearly trillion-dollar two-way trade relationship to “make the U.S. and Canada the richest and most prosperous jurisdiction in the world.”

WHO IS PIERRE POILIEVRE? CANADA’S CONSERVATIVE LEADER SEEKING TO BECOME NEXT PRIME MINISTER AFTER TRUDEAU EXIT

Doug Ford, Ontario’s premier, speaks to members of the media as he arrives for a meeting in Ottawa, Canada, on Feb. 7, 2023. (James Park/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

At a Toronto news conference on Monday following Trudeau’s resignation announcement, Ford chided Trump with a “counteroffer” to his Canada-as-a-51st state idea. 

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“How about if we buy Alaska and throw in Minnesota?” the premier said at Queen’s Park, Ontario’s legislature.

Ford jokingly told Fox News Digital that he heard from Canadians after making those remarks that he should have chosen “somewhere warmer, like Florida or California.”

“California never votes for him anyway,” he added.

At his Monday news conference, Ontario’s premier said that “under my watch,” annexing Canada “will never, ever happen.”  

Ford is also taking Trump’s tariff threat seriously.

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U.S. President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

President-elect Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talk prior to a NATO meeting in Watford, Hertfordshire, England, Dec. 4, 2019. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)

Last month, his Progressive Conservative government launched a multimillion-dollar U.S. ad campaign on television and streaming apps touting Ontario as an “ally” to generate “more workers, more trade, more prosperity, more security.”

“You can rely on Ontario for energy to power your growing economy, and for the critical minerals crucial to new technologies,” says the 60-second ad.

Ford said the 25% tariff against Canada, which Trump plans to implement on his first day in office on Jan. 20, would hurt millions of American and Canadian workers.

“Nine million Americans produce products for Ontario alone every single day,” he said. “The problem is China shipping goods into Mexico and Mexico slapping a made-in-Mexico sticker.”

JUSTIN TRUDEAU’S RESIGNATION MET WITH GLEEFUL REACTION FROM CONSERVATIVES ONLINE: ‘THE WINNING CONTINUES!’

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Elon Musk at Congress

Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are heading the Department of Government Efficiency. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Ontario is ready to take retaliatory measures “that will really send a message to the U.S.” in response to the imposition of U.S. tariffs, said Ford, who was involved in the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement during the first Trump administration, but would now like Canada to have separate deals with the U.S. and Mexico.

“It’s unfortunate because retaliation is not good for either country,” he offered, noting that Ontario is the top exporter to 17 states and the second largest to 11 others. 

“The last thing I want to do is hurt those people,” said Ford. “I want to create more jobs in the U.S., more jobs in Canada. And we can do that by making sure that we toughen up and put tariffs on places like China.”

By way of example, he said that “someone in Texas who purchased a GM pickup truck made in Oshawa, [Ontario] might have paid between $50,000 and $60,000,” and with a tariff, “would be paying 70 some-odd thousand.”

“It just doesn’t make sense whatsoever,” Ford said. 

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Ambassador Bridge

Tractor trailers drive across the Ambassador Bridge border crossing from Windsor, Ontario, to Detroit, Michigan, on Feb. 14, 2022. (Geoff Robins/AFP via Getty Images)

He would like to have a face-to-face meeting with Trump and said he has reached out to U.S. senators and governors to make that happen. A sit-down with SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk – whom Trump appointed to co-lead, with former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, the proposed “Department of Government Efficiency” – is also on Ford’s wish-list.

Ford said Trump “doesn’t realize” that Ontario is the U.S.’s third-largest trading partner, amounting to about US$344 billion in 2023, “split equally down the center.”

Ontario’s premier said he wants to ship more electricity and critical minerals to the U.S., which “needs us like we need them.” 

TRUMP REACTS TO TRUDEAU RESIGNATION: ‘MANY PEOPLE IN CANADA LOVE BEING THE 51ST STATE’

In 2012, the premier and his late brother, Rob, who was mayor of Toronto at the time, met Trump, along with his daughter, Ivanka, when they were in the city to open the former Trump International Hotel and Tower, now unaffiliated with The Trump Organization and known as The St. Regis Toronto.

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Ford, who ran a Toronto-based family business, Deco Labels & Flexible Packaging, before entering municipal politics as a city councilor in 2010, considers Trump “a shrewd operator” and “a smart businessperson.”

The incoming president “knows about Ontario,” the premier said.

“Not one senator, not one governor, not one congressperson or businessperson, has said that Canada is a problem,” said Ford, who opened a Deco branch in Chicago in 1999.

He said Trump has not set his sights on such other U.S. allies as the United Kingdom and France, but “wants to target” the U.S.’s “closest friend,” Canada. 

“I’m not too sure if it’s personal against Trudeau, but Trudeau is on his way out, so hopefully we’ll have a better conversation,” said Ontario’s premier, who added that he would consider taking a run at federal politics in the future.

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On Monday, Trump posted on Truth Social that “the United States can no longer suffer the massive Trade Deficits and Subsidies that Canada needs to stay afloat.” 

Doug Ford skips the Provincial Leaders debate hosted by the Black Community to campaign in Northern Ontario including this a rally attended by approximately 300 people at Cambrian College in Sudbury, on April 11, 2018.

Doug Ford campaigns at Cambrian College in Sudbury, northern Ontario, on April 11, 2018. (Steve Russell/Toronto Star)

“Justin Trudeau knows this, and resigned,” said the next, and 47th, U.S. president.

But Trudeau is still the prime minister, and Ford and the premiers of the other nine provinces and three territories will meet with him next Wednesday in Ottawa to address the Trump tariff issue.

Despite his departure as prime minister sometime over the next two months when the next Liberal leader is expected to be chosen, Trudeau should not think “he’s off the hook” and Canadian premiers “will hold his feet to the fire” in ensuring that Canada is ready to respond to the Trump administration’s imminent and punitive trade measure, said Ford.

He chairs the Council of the Federation – a gathering of Canada’s premiers, which has kept Canada-U.S. relations top of mind and has made avoiding U.S. tariffs “a priority,” according to a statement issued last month.

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“Canada and the U.S. form one of the largest integrated markets in the world, with more than C$3.5 billion [about US$2.4 billion] worth of goods and services crossing the border each day. The U.S. sells more goods and services to Canada than it sells to China, Japan and Germany combined.”

To help assuage Trump’s concerns over border security, Ford’s government launched on Tuesday “Operation Deterrence,” to crack down on illegal crossings, and drugs and guns – 90% of which are entering Ontario from the U.S., the premier told Fox News Digital.

On drugs, he said his government is also collaborating with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to identify the source of fentanyl ingredients – and whether they originated in “China or Mexico or the U.S.”

Last month, the Trudeau government announced its own border-security plan.

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