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Politics : Canadian Political Free-for-All

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From: russet3/4/2025 9:11:50 PM
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elmatador
longz

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The reaction of Trudeau and other Canadian politicians is just going to hurt Canadian consumers with higher prices and inflation but solve nothing.

Trump is looking for strutural changes in world markets and wants all manufacturers who sell to Americans to make their goods in the U.S. and employ American workers. If manufacturers want to sell to Americans without tariffs, they have no choice but to build their manufacturing plants in the U.S.

Trump has outlined his reasons for Canadian Tariffs many times in the last two months. We could avoid some of these tariffs but not all.

Tighten up our borders.

Canadians are told that minor amounts of Fentanyl goes from Canada to U.S. This is pure bullshit. In fact Toronto and Vancouver gangs have been importing large quantities of the precursors of fentanyl into Canada and transporting it to labs all over North America because of very leaky borders. The money made by this and other gang related activity in Canada, has been laundered by Canadian Banks, Canadian casinos and by buying Canadian real estate especially in Vancouver and Toronto. Lots of Canadians have benefitted from this illegal activity and lots of Canadians have died from fentanyl poisioning as well. Trudeau has done little to nothing about this.

Restructure the HST so American manufacturers get the same benefit as Canadian manufacturers.

Drop all supply marketing schemes in milk, eggs and other agricultural markets.

Most export goods Canadian manufacturers can do little about avoiding the tariffs, expect get rid of costs to become a lower cost supplier. One big cost we suffer under is massive costs of taxes and government. We need doge here.

Trump wants all auto manufacturing for American markets made in the U.S. We will have to downsize our car manufacturing to only supply Canadian markets.

Trump wants all lumber destined for American markets to be made in America. Similarly for most other agricultural inputs and minerals and oil and gas. Tariffs will be adjusted to allow raw materials that Americans don't have to enter with low tariffs.

Trump is no longer interested in spending money to protect Canada militarily. We will have to take this over unless we join the U.S.

Canadians have some big decisions to make.



Trump Says Canada’s Retaliatory Tariffs Will Be Met With Reciprocal Tariffs

The Canadian government announced counter-tariffs on CA$155 billion worth of U.S. imports.

theepochtimes.com

By Noé Chartier
3/4/2025Updated:3/4/2025

President Donald Trump has reacted to Canada’s decision to enter a trade war with the United States by imposing counter-tariffs, saying this will lead to his administration imposing reciprocal tariffs.

“Please explain to Governor Trudeau, of Canada, that when he puts on a Retaliatory Tariff on the U.S., our Reciprocal Tariff will immediately increase by a like amount!” Trump said on his Truth Social platform on March 4, with the reference to “Governor Trudeau” part of his ongoing “51st state” rhetoric.
Trump’s executive order of Feb. 1 imposing duties on Canada says that if the country retaliates with tariffs or similar measures, the president may “increase or expand” the U.S. tariffs to “ensure the efficacy of this action.”
Along with this order, the Trump administration is also conducting a review of all countries’ trade practices with the United States in order to impose reciprocal tariffs. Trump said related details will come on April 2.

Trump’s comments on Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau relate to the United States slapping 25 percent tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico on March 4, with Canadian energy products subject to 10 percent import duties.

The president said the tariffs have been imposed because the two countries have not dealt adequately with the issue of fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid responsible for thousands of deaths in the United States and Canada.

Related Stories

Trudeau Accuses Trump of Using US Tariffs to Push for ‘Annexation’ of Canada

3/4/2025

In response, the Canadian government announced matching tariffs on CA$155 billion worth of U.S. imports, with a first phase of CA$30 billion being implemented immediately and an additional CA$125 billion in 21 days if the U.S. measures are still in place.

The first phase of Canadian tariffs target a broad list of U.S. goods with a 25 percent surtax, ranging from orange juice to motorcycles.
Two other sets of tariffs could be imposed on Canada within the next month, including U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum set to kick in on March 12, and the reciprocal tariffs planned for April 2.

The reciprocal tariffs could hit as the Trump administration has raised concerns about Canada’s federal sales tax, the GST, its Digital Services Tax affecting U.S. tech giants, and its supply management system for products like dairy and eggs which protects the sector from foreign goods.
“Canada has a national sales tax, another way to say it is a national tariff on our products,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC on March 4. Lutnick also suggested the administration wants to bring car manufacturing back to the United States, as the supply chain is currently tightly integrated with Canada.

“Why do we produce cars in Canada? They’ve had an invitation, Canada and Mexico had an invitation to trade with the amazing economy the United States of America, and they have abused that invitation, and the president is going to reset that,” Lutnick said.

Border Pause Expired
Canada and Mexico had first obtained a 30-pause on the border security-related tariffs as the Trump administration assessed measures taken to address its concerns around drug trafficking and illegal migration. Mexico said it was sending 10,000 troops to the border and Canada announced a $1.3 billion border plan, along with other measures targeting criminal networks.
Trump was asked by reporters on March 3 whether there’s anything the countries could do to avoid the tariffs this time and he responded that there was “no room left for Mexico or for Canada.”
Trudeau said this comment by Trump indicates the tariffs are not about really about stopping fentanyl.

“I think in what President Trump said yesterday, that there is nothing Canada or Mexico can do to avoid these tariffs, underlines very clearly what I think a lot of us have suspected for a long time, that these tariffs are not specifically about fentanyl,” Trudeau said at a press conference in Ottawa on March 4.

Trudeau suggested that Trump is instead using tariffs to provoke a “total collapse of the Canadian economy, because that'll make it easier to annex us.”

After Trudeau met Trump in Mar-a-Lago in late November 2024 to discuss the tariff threat, the president has repeatedly said that Canada should become the 51st U.S. state, where it could benefit from lower taxes and military protection.

Canadian politicians of all stripes have rejected the idea outright. With the ruling Liberal Party undergoing a leadership contest to replace Trudeau, and Canada likely going into a general election soon, Trump’s tariffs have become a central political issue with parties vying to present themselves as the best choice to protect the country.
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