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Special insurance coverage | Canada removing retributory tariffs on many U.S. Goods
Carney announces Canada testament remove retaliatory tariffs on most U.S. Goods
It's time to 'stickhandle' with U.S., Carney says, after dropping the gloves early in trade war
Trump says it was 'nice' of Carney to remove retaliatory tariffs
It's quite striking how differently Trump speaks of Carney compared to his predecessor, Justin Trudeau.
Over the years, the U.S. President called Trudeau "two-faced," mocked him as the "governor" of the "great state" of Canada and called him and his former deputy, Chrystia Freeland, "nasty" negotiators. It wasn't pretty.
While things have been tense at times as the two sides hash out some sort of trade agreement, Trump has always shown Carney some deference. He hasn't subjected him to that sort of invective that was a hallmark of the Trump-Trudeau relationship.
In their Oval Office meeting in May, just days after the last federal election, Trump said he was happy to see Trudeau gone and the country in Carney's hands now. "This is a big step up for Canada," the president said of Carney. "It's a good step up for Canada."
Trump was on the same message track today, saying he likes the PM "a lot." He says Carney is a "good person" and they've had fruitful conversations, including one yesterday. He said there will be more talks to follow as the two sides continue to work something out on trade.
The question is: what exactly has this gotten Canada?
We're still dealing with crippling tariffs, particularly on the steel, aluminum, auto and lumber sectors.
Carney argued today that, while it may seem bad, Canada is in a comparatively good position when it comes to tariffs. Most of our goods â about 85 per cent, he says â are traded tariff-free thanks to Trump's CUSMA exemptions. Our effective tariff rate is a fraction of what other countries are facing.
Carney suggested that's because he's willing to play ball with Trump. "That puts us in a good position for the next phase of the negotiations."
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is taking a slight step back from his long-running insistence on retaliatory tariffs. Now Ford is making it conditional.
Ford says he spoke with Carney following the prime ministerâs announcement to âstress the need for an agreement with the United States that provides relief to our tariff-impacted sectors, including steel, auto, forestry and copper.
âIf the federal government canât achieve that, they need to hit back hard against U.S. Tariffs and provide additional supports for the workers and businesses in these sectors.â
The Ontario premier also said the federal government âneeds to move fast to ensure Ontario steel is helping to build the future of Canada.
âEverything we make in Canada from ships, military equipment, pipelines to every piece of infrastructure should be made using Ontario and Canadian steel,â said Ford.
At the news conference, reporters asked if Carneyâs trade moves will be perceived as weakness against a U.S. Government that has wounded Canadaâs economy. Carney argued Canada still has a âbetter dealâ with the U.S. Than other countries.
He said Canada must protect the economic arrangement it already has with the U.S., even if the current relationship leaves a lot to be desired.
âLetâs be absolutely clear: Canada currently has the best trade deal with the United States. While it is different from what we had before, it is still better than that of any country.â
âDifferentâ is an understatement. Punishing U.S. Tariffs on steel, aluminum, autos, copper, lumber and energy remain, but Carney noted the United States has exempted goods compliant with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement from similar levies.
In an act of goodwill, Canada is matching those exemptions by removing tariffs from CUSMA-compliant U.S. Goods.
The prime minister added that the overall U.S. Tariff rate on Canadian goods is currently 5.6 per cent, lower than the average 16 per cent rate other countries are facing.
Iâm J.P. Tasker, a senior reporter currently in D.C.
"I think he's a good person and we had a very good talk. I think it will be good," Trump said at an unrelated announcement on the World Cup.
Since Carney's election, Trump has been quite complimentary of the prime minister â even as the two sides struggle to land on a mutually agreeable trade pact.
But he reiterated the central argument of his tariff agenda: he wants more business in the U.S., and if that comes at the expense of Canada and Mexico, so be it.
"Canada and Mexico has taken a lot of our business over the last 25 to 30 years," he said.
Trump has just addressed Canadaâs decision from the Oval Office.
He acknowledged Carney's move, saying he thought it was "nice."
The president said he and Carney had a "very good call" yesterday and that the two leaders would have another call soon.
"I like him. I like him," Trump said, adding he wanted "to be good for Canada" but that he's "fighting for the U.S." and that "business is coming back" to his country thanks to tariffs he's imposed on goods from countries around the world.
Carney is scrapping one specific set of retaliatory tariffs: the ones Canada imposed in response to Trumpâs fentanyl tariffs.
Those U.S. Tariffs only apply to a small portion of Canadian exports because all goods that comply with CUSMA rules of origin are exempt.
Carney is describing todayâs move as matching that U.S. Exemption.
Hereâs a guide to what makes an export CUSMA compliant, describing what the exemption means for Canadaâs trade with the U.S.
It's time to 'stickhandle' with U.S., Carney says, after dropping the gloves early in trade war
Asked if Canada is now 'elbows down,' Prime Minister Mark Carney says the country has 'the lowest tariff rate on average' after showing it's willing to fight. But he says this is a 'big game' that has now moved to a different stage.
The ground government minister is standing by the âelbows upâ posture he repeated on a regular basis during the recent election run, but heâs at present saying thereâs a time in every âbig gameâ when strategies change.
âI have played some hockey over the years,â Mark Carney said.
Thereâs âa time in the game that you drop the gloves in the first period and you send a message â and we have done that. Pretty uniquely in the world,â he said, pointing to Canadaâs choice to hit back with counter-tariffs â an action most U.S.-targeted countries avoided.
âBut there's also a time in a game where you want the puck, you want to stickhandle, you want to pass, you want to put the puck in the net ⦠we're at that time in the game and that's where the engagement is.â
Carney made these remarks after a reporter said the prime ministerâs critics would suggest Canada is effectively taking an âelbows downâ approach to the trade war.
During his news conference, Carney really leaned into the exemptions Canada is getting from Trumpâs tariffs to justify his moves.
Trade expert Laura Dawson says Carney is ensuring that what she calls âCanadaâs CUSMA advantageâ remains sacrosanct.
âIt is not necessary that Canada retains free trade with the United States,â said Dawson, executive director of the Future Borders Coalition, an organization focused on Canada-U.S. Trade relations.
Dawson told Power & Politics host David Cochrane that maintaining better trade access to the U.S. Than anyone else is what Canada needs.
She used the analogy of people running away from a bear. ÂCanada does not need to be the fastest runner,â she said. It just needs to be able to outrun others.
U.S. President Donald Trump hasn't yet commented on the move by Canada. He is taking questions in the Oval Office on an unrelated matter, wearing a red hat that says "Trump was always right about everything." Officials from his administration had repeatedly said Canadian retaliatory tariffs on U.S. Goods were an irritant in negotiations.
Carney announces Canada will remove retaliatory tariffs on most U.S. Goods
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Canada will remove retaliatory 25 per cent tariffs on CUSMA-compliant U.S. Goods.
Today, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced his government would lift many of the counter-tariffs Canada levelled against the United States in a bid to lower the temperature in the trade war.
Carney framed his latest concession as an effort to âmatchâ what the United States has already done, exempting tariffs on all goods covered by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).
However, Canada will maintain its tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos, since the United States is continuing to target those industries with tariffs of its own.
The White House is already commending the move, and Carney said U.S. President Donald Trump told him, in their phone call Thursday, that Canadaâs latest action will kickstart negotiations on the new trade deal the countries are trying to reach.
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