The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/03/17 at 10:00 EDT
Episode Date: March 17, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/03/17 at 10:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, it's the World This Hour. I'm Joe Cummings.
Just a matter of days after being sworn in as Prime Minister,
Mark Carney has flown to Paris
for talks today with French President Emmanuel Macron.
With you, Mr. President,
I want to ensure that France and the whole of Europe works
enthusiastically with Canada, the most European of non-European countries, determined like
you to maintain the most positive possible relations with the United States.
Aaron Ross Carney's comments tee up that the Trump administration's ongoing tariff campaign
on Canada and on countries
around the globe dominated his talks today with Macron.
But the war in Ukraine was also on the agenda, with Carney again pledging to maintain Canada's
support for the Ukrainian war effort.
From Paris, Carney is now flying to London for similar talks with British Prime Minister
Keir Starmer.
And Carney will also have an audience as well at Buckingham Palace with King Charles.
Speaking of the war in Ukraine, the White House has confirmed that US President Donald
Trump will be speaking tomorrow with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A US ceasefire agreement, which Ukraine has agreed to, is on the table, but Russia has
yet to sign off on it.
Meanwhile, President Trump is defending his use of a law that dates back to 1798 to
deport more than 200 Venezuelans to El Salvador.
And these are criminals, many, many criminals, murderers, drug dealers at the highest level,
drug lords, people from mental institutions. That's an invasion. They invaded our country.
In that sense, this is war.
Speaking last night in Air Force One, that's Trump justifying his use of the Alien Enemies Act.
It's a wartime power that allows the U.S. to deport non-citizens without legal recourse.
On Saturday, a judge ordered the deportations be stopped, but the White House is insisting that the order carries no legal authority.
With the end now in sight, the Hudson's Bay Company, the historic retailer, is in court
today, formally applying to liquidate its 80 stores.
Lisa Shing has more.
It's an institution Canadians say they'll miss.
This was one of the last of the department stores that reflected a Canadian identity.
That's too bad, because I grew up with Hudson's Bay so.
A week ago Hudson's Bay Company applied for creditor protection hoping to keep the business
afloat in some capacity.
Then a dramatic development.
It will start liquidating its entire business as soon as this week, putting more than 9,000
jobs at risk with no guarantee of severance or
pension. Toronto lawyer Andrew Hatnay represents some employees. For the company
to announce a potential liquidation so fast after filing before the court is
unusually quick and very troubling. In its court application, Hudson's Bay said
it was struggling because of the drop in store traffic post-pandemic, people spending less and Canada-U.S. trade tensions. Pending court approval, the retailer
plans to liquidate its inventory and close-up shop by June 15. Lisa Sheng, CBC News, Toronto.
A series of deadly storms across multiple states claimed at least 39 lives over the
weekend in the U.S. Steve Futterman has more.
The worst of the violent and deadly storms is over. In states like Mississippi, Alabama,
Missouri and Oklahoma, they are assessing the damage and retelling stories of how they
survived.
We jumped up and ran to the bathroom.
This woman in Alabama is just happy to be alive.
I knew it was bad when I heard
this big kind of explosion and there was that large tree that came down right across where
we were at. This young woman spent hours trying to find her grandmother. We searched for her
all night. We found her at 4 a.m. this morning. Not every story has had a happy ending. Dozens have died. This man
in Missouri lost a friend. She lost her life protecting her mother and then two
other people further down on the same property they lost their lives. In some
places entire neighborhoods have been wiped out. You can't even tell that
there was a house there. There's no structure of the house. Steve Futterman
for CBC News, Los Angeles. And that is the
world this hour. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.