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Los Angeles:Â Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been warned not to be a "Malcolm" when he visits the White House.
Mr Trudeau will meet face-to-face with US President Donald Trump on Monday, the latest world leader entering the real estate billionaire's unpredictable realm.
White House Press Secretary, Sean Spicer, says President Trump had a 'very cordial' conversation with the prime minister of Australia. But he gets one important detail wrong...
US President Donald Trump said during a surprise visit with reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Florida that he was considering "a brand new order" that could be issued as soon as Monday or Tuesday.
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US appeals court upholds suspension of Trump travel ban
President Donald Trump was handed another legal defeat on Thursday when the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled to uphold a lower court's decision to block his controversial travel ban from seven Muslim-majority countries.
A federal appeals court refused Thursday to reinstate President Donald Trump's ban on travellers from seven predominantly Muslim nations, dealing another legal setback to the new administration's immigration policy.
Trump's press secretary Sean Spicer referred to a mysterious Atlanta terrorist attack when justifying the travel ban, but the White House says he "clearly meant Orlando".
White House Press Secretary, Sean Spicer, says President Trump had a 'very cordial' conversation with the prime minister of Australia. But he gets one important detail wrong...
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull infamously felt the Trump sting in their drastically shortened phone call on January 28.
"Don't be a Theresa. Don't be a Malcolm," the Toronto Star newspaper's editorial board wrote on Friday.
"As Justin Trudeau heads to Washington on Monday for his much-ballyhooed first face-to-face meeting with Donald Trump, the prime minister has two clear examples of what not to do."
British Prime Minister was so eager to please that she publicly flattered the president during her White House visit and held his hand – or let him hold her hand – in front of photographers.
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"May hasn't lived it down since," the Toronto Star told its readers. "She's seen in Britain as Donald's poodle."
"... Then there's Malcolm Turnbull, the Australian prime minister who had the bad luck to have his first phone chat with Trump at a moment when the new president was in a particularly testy mood."