The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/09/05 at 08:00 EDT
Episode Date: September 5, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/09/05 at 08:00 EDT...
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A lot of news podcasts give you information, the basic facts of a story.
What's different about your world tonight is we actually take you there.
Paul Hunter, CBC News, Washington.
Margaret Evans, CBC News, Aleppo.
Jerusalem.
Ottawa.
Prince Albert.
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Correspondents around the world, on the ground, and at the source where news is happening.
So don't just know, go.
Your world tonight from CBC News.
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From CBC News, it's the world this hour.
I'm Joe Cummings.
We're expecting an announcement today from Prime Minister Mark Carney
on the Liberals plan to help some Canadian industries
hardest hit by U.S. and Chinese tariffs.
Janice McGregor reports.
While the biggest headlines on future federal spending
are probably going to wait for his budget in October.
Mark Carney's cabinet knows it can't wait on some other moves
to help the sectors that are under the most pressure right now,
starting with the automotive industry,
which has been begging the liberals for months
to rethink its electric vehicle mandate,
which, starting next year,
is otherwise going to require car companies
that don't meet sales targets for electric vehicles
to pay credits to automakers who do.
The government's also under pressure
to prop up the agriculture industry.
that continues to bear the brunt of Chinese tariffs that were slapped on in retaliation for Canada
going along with U.S. demands for high tariffs on imports like electric vehicles that are made in China.
The Prime Minister has asked his parliamentary secretary to join Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe on a trade mission that starts this weekend
trying to ease tensions with Beijing, but canola farmers in particular are desperate for help in the meantime.
Janice McGregor, CBC News, Ottawa.
Still on the economic front. Also today, the latest employment numbers are coming out. This is the jobs report for last month. The previous report from July saw a loss of more than 40,000 jobs. Even with that, Canada's unemployment rate this summer has held steady at 6.9%. Two Canadians are now confirmed to be among the dead in this week's finicular crash in Lisbon. Portuguese police say 11 of the 16 people killed in the incident were foreign tourists. The finicular went off the rails.
Wednesday night. The crews have now removed the wreckage with government officials scheduled to
release a preliminary report at some point today. Russian President Vladimir Putin is insisting he is
willing to talk to his U.S. counterpart about ending the hostilities in Ukraine.
President Trump and I have an open dialogue. There is an arrangement in place that if needed,
we can get in touch, talk to one another. President Trump knows that I am open to those
dialogues. I know that he is also open. That's Putin speaking today at an economic forum where
he was asked about this week's meeting of the Coalition of the Willing and the possible
deployment of troops to Ukraine once the fighting is over. Should any troops be placed in Ukraine,
especially now in the course of the military action, we would treat those as righteous goals
for an attack, a righteous target that we will aim for. Putin adds that he is fine with Ukraine
joining the European Union, but not NATO.
The United States has issued a warning to Venezuela.
It comes after two Venezuelan warplanes flew over an American Navy vessel in the Caribbean Sea.
The U.S. is calling it provocative.
It comes as the U.S. military has stepped up its presence in the region.
Willie Lowry has more.
So, John, this is all an extension of President Donald Trump's long-held desire to curb the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S.
Now, the administration has been pretty clear in recent days that it's willing to go on the offensive.
Earlier this week, Trump released footage that he said showed a strike on a boat allegedly full of drugs.
Now, that strike raises serious legal questions, and it's unclear what authority the U.S. has to take actions like that in international waters.
Here's Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth defending the strike.
If you're trafficking drugs and you're a known cartel entity, a designated designation,
terror organization, and they're headed for the United States or part of a process that would
head to the United States, that will have lethal consequences. The poisoning of the American
people is over. There's been a bit of a war of words between Washington and Caracas,
and this incident where two jets flew near U.S. ships appears to be the latest escalation.
Willie Lowry, CBC News, Washington.
And that is the world this hour. For news anytime, go to our website, cbcnews.ca.
For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.
