Venture for Canada CEO urges Ottawa to mobilize diaspora to strengthen economic resilience
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Pierre Poilievre Warns China Cannot Replace U.S. Ties
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AME launches national campaign to make mineral exploration a strategic priority for Canada
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre proposed using Canadian energy and critical-mineral exports as bargaining chips to press the U.S. for tariff relief, framing resource access as strategic leverage amid a broader dispute sparked by Ottawa’s targeted tariff compact with Beijing. His comments layer a resource-security argument onto an episode that has already seen sharp U.S. rhetoric followed by narrower technical qualifications, opening a pathway for managed diplomatic bargaining and market recalibration.

Aéro Montréal says federal Industrial Defense Strategy can channel defence contracts to Québec aerospace
Aéro Montréal welcomes the federal Industrial Defense Strategy as a real opportunity to steer defence procurement and investment toward Québec firms, and urges Ottawa to pair procurement signals with financing channels such as the Defence Investment Agency and a BDC ‘Defence Platform’ to de-risk supplier scale‑up. The cluster highlights procurement simplification, ITB policy modernization and faster security‑clearance and facility accreditation as immediate levers to turn national targets (C$500B and ~70% domestic sourcing) into local jobs, technology and exports.

Canada pivots procurement to domestic firms, unveils C$500B defense-industrial plan
Ottawa will channel roughly C$500 billion of projected defense-related investment into the domestic supply chain over the next decade, targeting 70% of procurement for Canadian firms and measurable export and jobs goals. Early market signals — from specialist firms recruiting international talent to a spike in investor interest and private financing for suppliers — suggest demand is already reshaping industry behavior, but delivery will hinge on workforce development, financing and cross‑border coordination.

Canada and South Korea sign MOU to deepen cooperation in EVs, batteries and critical minerals
Canada and South Korea signed a memorandum to expand industrial cooperation across electric vehicles, battery supply chains, critical minerals and AI, and to create a bilateral committee and mobility forum to coordinate work. The agreement aims to attract Korean manufacturing investment and increase value-added processing in Canada, but it functions as a framework that will require concrete follow-through to generate factories and jobs.