Trump
Says U.S. Ending Trade Talks With Canada
The
president said he would cease negotiations and impose new tariffs because of
Canada’s imminent, new digital services taxes.
Tony Romm Andrew DuehrenMatina Stevis-Gridneff
By Tony Romm Andrew Duehren and Matina
Stevis-Gridneff
Tony Romm
and Andrew Duehren reported from Washington, and Matina Stevis-Gridneff from
New York.
June 27,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/27/business/trump-ends-canada-trade-talks.html
President
Trump on Friday said that the United States would terminate all trade
discussions with Canada, “effective immediately,” over the country’s plan to
begin collecting digital services taxes from U.S. technology giants.
Mr. Trump
described those taxes as a “blatant attack,” and promised on social media that
he would inform Canada within the next seven days about the duties “they will
be paying to do business with the United States of America.”
In ceasing
talks, Mr. Trump once again upended the increasingly fraught relationship
between the United States and Canada, which has traditionally been one of
America’s closest allies and largest trading partners.
Those
relations had seemed to be improving after Canada’s new prime minister, Mark
Carney, took office. The two nations even appeared to be on track to announce a
trade deal in July, having huddled at length earlier this month on the
sidelines of the Group of 7 summit, which was hosted in Alberta.
“We have all
the cards. We have every single one,” Mr. Trump said in the Oval Office, adding
that “economically we have such power over Canada.”
Canadian
officials did not respond to requests for comment on whether Mr. Carney would
try to call Mr. Trump or step back from collecting the digital tax. But Mr.
Carney’s office said in a statement that his government would “continue to
engage in these complex negotiations with the United States in the best
interests of Canadian workers and businesses.”
A decision
by Mr. Trump to follow through and increase tariffs on a North American
neighbor could unleash chaos on both sides of the border, with U.S. companies
and consumers facing the brunt of higher import costs. Financial markets
briefly recoiled over the breakdown in negotiations, though the S&P 500
recovered and reached a new high Friday.
Canada’s 3
percent digital services tax has been in place since last year, but the first
payments are only due beginning on Monday. Because the tax is retroactive,
American companies were preparing to turn over roughly $2.7 billion to the
Canadian government, according to a trade group for large American tech
companies.
U.S.
officials from both parties have long chafed at taxes like the one Canada has
imposed, calling them unfairly targeted at services provided by American
companies like Google, Apple and Amazon. The foreign policies target the
revenue that businesses earn from online advertising, the sale of user data and
other services, even if the firm is headquartered elsewhere.
Countries
around the world have pursued them as a way to capture revenue from the largely
American companies that play increasingly important roles in their economies.
On Friday,
Mr. Trump singled out Europe, where several countries have imposed versions of
the tax, describing them as “very nasty.” But he did not suggest that he
planned to halt ongoing trade negotiations with the European Union.
Our
economics reporters — based in New York, London, Brussels, Berlin, Hong Kong
and Seoul — are digging into every aspect of the tariffs causing global
turmoil. They are joined by dozens of reporters writing about the effects on
everyday people.
Here’s our
latest reporting on tariffs and economic policy.
To try and
defuse the threat of major new taxes on American companies and economic
conflicts, officials have, in the past, worked to reach broad, multilateral
agreements on international corporation taxation. Canada and the United States
now appear headed to a much more direct confrontation over the issue.
The U.S.
government has previously announced a 25 percent tariff on all Canadian
exports, except for those that are subject to a trade deal with Canada and
Mexico brokered during Mr. Trump’s first term. Like other countries, Canada is
also subject to a 50 percent tariff on its exports of steel and aluminum.
Mr. Trump
has frequently brandished imminent plans to penalize other countries with high
levies, only to later back down, especially if markets panic over the potential
interruptions to commerce. The president’s newest threat arrived just weeks
before he is expected to reimpose sky-high tariffs on nearly every U.S. trading
partner — a set of so-called “reciprocal” rates that he first announced, and
quickly suspended, in early April.
Mr. Trump
and his top aides initially pledged to broker 90 deals during that 90-day
window, though the administration has made minimal progress toward that goal.
Earlier Friday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent signaled new flexibility in
the deadline, suggesting the administration hopes to complete much of its work
on trade by Labor Day.
“We have 200
countries, you could say 200 countries plus, we can’t do that,” the president
said later during a news conference at the White House. “So, at a certain
point, over the next week and a half or so or maybe before, we’re going to send
out a letter. We talked to many of the countries, and we’re just going to tell
them what they have to pay to do business in the United States.”
Canada and
the United States had announced earlier this month that they would get to a new
trade deal “within 30 days” — namely, around July 20. But despite the friendly
atmosphere and obvious gestures that show Mr. Trump likes Mr. Carney, there
were signs that the trade talks were far from uncomplicated.
The digital
services tax is only one of many problems in the trade relationship between the
two nations. At various points in time, Mr. Trump has complained about barriers
for American companies to compete in the country’s dairy and banking sectors,
for example. Mr. Trump has also repeatedly flirted with the concept of Canada
becoming the 51st state, an idea Canadian officials have repeatedly rejected.
“I think
it’s a much better deal for Canada, but you know, it’s up to them. They’re
going to have to pay a lot of tariffs, and they’re going to have to pay a lot
of money for the dome,” he said, referring to his offer to include Canada in
his air defense system known as Golden Dome, in exchange for $71 billion.
In recent
days, though, the Trump administration had appeared to back off its other
aggressive threats to hit back at countries for their plans to tax American
companies. For weeks, Republican lawmakers had planned to include a new,
so-called “revenge tax” aimed at deterring countries like Canada from targeting
American corporations with new taxes.
The
Republican provision would have targeted companies based in countries that
collect taxes the United States considers discriminatory against American
firms, including digital services taxes. But Wall Street investors panicked
over the revenge tax, and Mr. Bessent ultimately asked Congress to strip out
the provision after he reached a deal with advanced economies to spare American
companies from a separate set of foreign taxes.
The Group of
7 agreement on corporate taxation did not extend to digital services taxes, and
the Canadian government has for weeks held firm on their desire to collect
money from American firms with the levy.
François-Philippe
Champagne, Canada’s finance minister, said last week that the Canadian
government had explained the tax to American counterparts in “fairly long,
extensive discussions” at the Group of 7 summit, and previously during meetings
in Washington.
“We’re going
to continue to have these discussions and make our case,” Mr. Champagne told
reporters in Ottawa.
Vjosa Isai
and Ana Swanson contributed reporting.
Tony Romm is
a reporter covering economic policy and the Trump administration for The Times,
based in Washington.
Andrew
Duehren covers tax policy for The Times from Washington.
Matina
Stevis-Gridneff is the Canada bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
the country.


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