Trudeau
calls emergency meeting over Trump’s Canada tariff threat
US
president-elect posted on social media about plan to impose 25% tariff on
Mexico and Canada over immigration
Leyland
Cecco in Toronto
Tue 26 Nov
2024 18.32 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/nov/26/trudeau-canada-trump-tariff
Justin
Trudeau has called an emergency meeting with provincial premiers across Canada
after the US president-elect, Donald Trump, threatened a 25% tariff on the
United States’ northern neighbour.
Trump posted
on social media that he would “sign all necessary documents” to charge Mexico
and Canada a 25% tariff on all goods products coming into the United States,
adding the levy would remain in place until “such time as drugs, in particular
fentanyl, and all illegal aliens stop this invasion of our country!”
The Canadian
prime minister said on Tuesday he had held a “good” conversation with Trump
shortly after the social media post, working to tamp down fears of an immense
economic hit to Canada. He did not say if Canada would impose retaliatory
tariffs, as it did during a previous round of trade hostilities during Trump’s
first presidency.
“We talked
about how the intense and effective connections between our two countries flow
back and forth,” he told reporters. “We talked about some of the challenges
that we can work on together.”
Given the
United States, Canada and Mexico renegotiated a trade pact in 2018 and have
deeply intertwined supply chains, a levy of 25% would prove devastating to
Canada’s economy. The United States remains Canada’s biggest trading partner,
with nearly C$600bn in goods exported to the US last year.
Canadian
ministers reacted with measured skepticism over the key claims made by Trump on
immigration and drug trafficking.
While a
small but growing number of migrants are using Canada as a way into the US, far
more people enter through Mexico. Canada’s immigration minister, Marc Miller,
likened the 23,000 interceptions by US officials at the northern border last
year to a “significant weekend at the Mexico border”, where 1,530,523
“encounters” were recorded last year.
When it
comes to the movement of fentanyl across the continent, so little enters the US
through its northern border that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
does not even mention Canada in a report from 2020, instead citing Mexico,
China and India.
“The amount
of fentanyl that crosses the US-Canadian border is basically homeopathic!”
wrote Toronto-based journalist John Michael McGrath on X, critiquing people who
“sanewash” Trump’s demands. “This isn’t a serious demand! You don’t have to be
stupid in public!”
But the
rightwing premier of the oil-rich province of Alberta said Trump had valid
concerns over illegal activities at the shared border.
“We are
calling on the federal government to work with the incoming administration to
resolve these issues immediately, thereby avoiding any unnecessary tariffs on
Canadian exports to the US,” Danielle Smith said in a social media post.
“The vast
majority of Alberta’s energy exports to the US are delivered through secure and
safe pipelines which do not in any way contribute to these illegal activities
at the border,” said Smith, whose relations with Trudeau are icy.
For Trudeau,
the tariff saga is likely to revive bitter memories of the trade feud with the
US during Trump’s first term, when Canadian officials worked to minimize damage
to the prized relationship with the US. At one point, Trump said he was “very
unhappy” with the negotiations, singling out Canada’s chief negotiator, the
then foreign minister Chrystia Freeland, who now serves as finance minister and
deputy prime minister.
The threat
of Trump’s tariffs pushed Canada’s main stock exchange down on Tuesday and
Candace Laing, the head of Canada’s chamber of commerce, warned that “being
America’s ‘nice neighbour’ won’t get us anywhere” in a sign of the potential
shift in relations between the longtime allies.
“To [Trump],
it’s about winners and losers – with Canada on the losing end,” said Laing in a
statement on Tuesday. “Canada’s signature approach needs to evolve: we must be
prepared to take a couple of punches if we’re going to stake out our position.
It’s time to trade ‘sorry’ for ‘sorry, not sorry.’”
Trevor
Tombe, an economist who authored a report on the consequences of US tariffs on
Canada’s economy, warned a recession was likely if Trump followed through on
the 25% tax.
Canada’s
premiers have also warned a trade war would cause immense damage to their
respective economies. Trudeau said provincial leaders will meet on Wednesday in
an emergency meeting, calling for a “Team Canada” approach.
The Ontario
premier, Doug Ford, who oversees Canada’s largest provincial economy, called
Trump’s threats “unfair” and said it was “insulting” to compare Canada to
Mexico when it came to immigration and potent drugs.
“It’s like a
family member stabbing you right in the heart,” Ford told reporters Tuesday. He
also warned that if the president makes good on his promise, Canada might have
little choice: “We have to retaliate.”
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