The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/06/06 at 01:00 EDT
Episode Date: June 6, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/06/06 at 01:00 EDT...
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From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Claude Fague. Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S.
President Donald Trump are having talks out of the spotlight to reach a trade agreement
and lift tariffs. This is industry leaders push of the spotlight to reach a trade agreement and lift tariffs.
This is industry leaders push the federal government to make a deal before it's too
late.
Raffi Boudja-Canyon has more.
Are you any closer to reaching a deal?
Industry Minister Melanie Jolie revealing little about ongoing trade negotiations with
the U.S.
I won't answer that question.
We won't negotiate in public.
But a source with knowledge of the talks tells CBC News and Radio Canada Prime Minister Mark
Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump have been chatting on the phone and texting each other,
ever since their meeting in Washington about a month ago.
How are they going with the...
Very well then.
Sources say there could be some sort of Canada-U.SUS trade deal by the time the two leaders meet
at the G7 in Alberta later in June. That could not come soon enough for steel and aluminum
companies, bracing after Trump doubled tariffs on all imported products from those industries,
now at 50%. Whatever the government does decide, the pressure to act is mounting.
Rafi Boudjikan, YonCBC News, Ottawa.
The weather is a challenge in fighting wildfires in Saskatchewan, but officials have lifted
the evacuation order in one northern community.
Alexander Silberman is there.
In Wayaquin, Saskatchewan, helicopters are working around the clock to battle wildfires
from the air.
As crews race to put out hot spots.
It used to be nice out here actually. There's a lot of green.
There's nothing but black around here now.
Firefighter Jordan Lavallee helped save the hamlet from widespread damage.
The forest around it charred.
But homes, including the one he grew up in, are safe.
It got pretty close actually. Just down the road, it's right on the perimeter. It's maybe
five feet in and it's all burned up there.
So it stopped feet away from the edge of town?
Yeah.
More than 10,000 people have now been forced to evacuate in Saskatchewan with 27 active
wildfires. The area burned is nearly double the size of Prince Edward Island.
Alexander Silberman, CBC News, Wayaquin, Saskatchewan. Donald Trump and Elon Musk
are engaged in an unprecedented public feud, trading accusations and insults on
social media. Alexander Panetta has more. With Germany's Chancellor seated right
next to him, Trump started taking digs at Musk, basically calling him bitter since leaving the
administration. Elon and I had a great relationship. People leave my
administration and they love us and then at some point they miss it so badly and
some of them embrace it and some of them actually become hostile. And then it took
off. The men started firing salvo after salvo
on their respective social media platforms.
Musk, on his site X, demanded a little more gratitude.
Without me, Musk said, Trump would have lost the election.
Then on his site, Truth Social,
Trump issued a veiled threat to cancel government contracts
with Musk's companies.
And as it spiraled over the afternoon,
Musk made it eye-poppingly personal. Without offering any proof or any specifics, he seemed to
suggest that the real reason the US government hasn't released all the files
on sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein is because Trump's name appears in those
files. The CBC's Alexander Panetta reporting in Washington. The Indiana
Pacers have won the opening game of the NBA Finals.
The Pacers scored the winning basket with under a second remaining
to beat the Thunder 111-110 in Oklahoma City.
The Thunder were led by NBA MVP and Hamilton, Ontario native Shea Gildjus Alexander,
who scored a game-high 38 points and says his team will lean on past playoff experience to try and bounce back.
As much as we can, we just got to treat it like every other game. Every other situation we've been in,
yes we haven't been in this situation, but it doesn't mean our character has to change or what we did last time.
It's still basketball, still the game of basketball that we grew up playing. The rules don't change just because we're in the finals.
Game two is set for Sunday night back in Oklahoma City. And that is your World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Claude
Pagg.