Trump
says he’s ‘terminating’ all trade discussions with Canada
The
president blamed the move on Canada’s Digital Services Tax, which goes into
effect on Saturday, and said he’d announce new tariffs.
By Mickey
Djuric
06/27/2025
02:13 PM EDT
Updated:
06/27/2025 05:33 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/06/27/trump-canada-trade-talks-00429665
President
Donald Trump said Friday he is “terminating” all trade discussions with Canada,
effective immediately, because of its Digital Services Tax, and that he would
announce new tariffs on the country within the next seven days.
“We have
just been informed that Canada, a very difficult Country to TRADE with … has
just announced that they are putting a Digital Services Tax on our American
Technology Companies, which is a direct and blatant attack on our Country,”
Trump said in a Truth Social post.
The decision
came after Canada refused to delay the implementation of the tax for 30 days
while the two countries negotiate a trade deal, White House National Economic
Council Director Kevin Hassett said Friday afternoon on Fox Business Network.
“They’re taxing American companies who don’t necessarily even have a presence
in Canada,” Hassett said, calling the tax “almost criminal.”
“They’re
going to have to remove it,” he said. “And I think they know that.”
Canadian
Prime Minister Mark Carney and Trump had previously agreed to securea new
economic and security deal by July 16, in which Canada was hoping Trump would
lift tariffs on the country.
“We’ll
continue to conduct these complex negotiations in the best interest of
Canadians,” Carney said to reporters as he left his office Friday, after Trump
had published the initial post. The prime minister’s office did not immediately
comment on Hassett’s claim.
The
president reemphasized his message later in the day.
“We have all
the cards. We have every single one. We don’t want to do anything bad, but …
economically we have such power over Canada. It’d rather not use it,” Trump
said to reporters Friday in the Oval Office.
“Most of
their business is with us,” he added, “and when you have that circumstance, you
treat people better.”
A White
House official said the president was “rightfully” angry. “We had been
negotiating with Canada for them to lower their trade barriers, and then they
go and erect a brand new one,” said the official, who was granted anonymity to
discuss a sensitive issue. “So it’s obviously not helping their case.”
Canada has
been working on its Digital Services Tax law since 2021, a process that
included extensive public consultations before it came into law over a year
ago. The law, which imposes a 3 percent tax on large foreign and domestic
digital companies that make over C$20 million in revenue, is expected to come
into force on Saturday. It applies to certain Canadian profits that companies
make from online advertising, social media, online marketplaces and the sale
and licensing of user data.
First
payments are due Monday, but because the bill applies retroactively, U.S.
companies such as Amazon, Google and Meta could be faced with a bill up to $3
billion, according to the Computer & Communications Industry Association.
Earlier this
week, a Canadian official told POLITICO two meetings were scheduled with U.S.
officials to discuss a deal. As of Friday afternoon, there was no announcement
scheduled regarding the tax.
Trump’s post
came as Carney was meeting with his Council on Canada-U.S. Relations. Carney,
who texts Trump regularly, said he didn’t speak to Trump on Friday. His office
did not get a heads-up that the president was going to call off trade talks,
according to a senior government official who was granted anonymity to discuss
a sensitive issue.
Carney faced
immediate pressure from industry groups that called on him to drop the tax.
“Canada’s
digital services tax unfairly targets U.S. companies, defies its USMCA
commitments, and attempts to ring-fence the digital economy — undermining the
global tax system,” Megan Funkhouser, senior director of the Information
Technology Industry Council, said in a statement.
CCIA CEO
Matt Schruers thanked the U.S. administration for its “decisive response” and
called for an investigation into Canada’s digital tax.
About 90
percent of what Canada would collect under its Digital Services Tax Act would
be from U.S. companies, members of Congress have argued.
“If Canada
decides to move forward with this unprecedented, retroactive tax, it will set a
terrible precedent that will have long-lasting impacts on global tax and trade
practices,” 21 members of Congress wrote in a letter to Trump on June 11.
Last week
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said Canada wasn’t going to pause
the tax despite pressure from Congress, business groups and industries.
“This was
voted by Parliament so we’re going ahead with the DST,” Champagne told
reporters.
“We had
fairly long, extensive discussions at the G7 about the different [tax] regimes
that you find in different parts of the world. The [digital services tax] is
not unique to Canada, by the way,” he said. “Let’s put that into context. This
is not the big thing. The big thing is all the other types of taxes you have
around the world.”
Ontario
Premier Doug Ford had been urging the federal government to delay the tax over
concerns that it would derail negotiations between the two countries.
“For our
American partners, this is nothing but an unfair tax that’s putting millions of
Canadian jobs at risk,” Ford said in October.
Doug Palmer
and Megan Messerly contributed to this report.

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