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To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1535759)4/29/2025 3:30:25 AM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

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Eric

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FU trump: CANADA's LIBERAL PARTY WINS AGAIN THANKS TO POS trump..
Canada will ‘never’ yield to Trump’s threats as Prime Minister Carney declares election victory
edition.cnn.com
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said his country would “never” yield to the United States as he declared victory in federal elections early Tuesday, following a campaign overshadowed by relentless provocations and steep trade tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump.

The Liberal Party leader issued a stunning rebuke to Trump as he sent a message of unity to a divided nation, promising to “represent everyone who calls Canada home.”

“As I have been warning for months, America wants our land, our resources, our water, our country. But these are not idle threats. President Trump is trying to break us so that America can own us,” Carney said. “That will never ever happen.”

?Carney reiterated statements he made on the campaign trail about the vastly changed nature of Canada’s relationship with the US.

“We are over the shock of the American betrayal but we should never forget the lessons. We have to look out for ourselves. And above all we have to take care of each other,” he said.

Voters have returned Canada’s Liberal Party to power for a fourth consecutive term but it remains to be seen whether Carney has won a majority or will need coalition partners to govern.

A party needs 172 seats to form a majority. CNN affiliates CTV is projecting a minority government while fellow affiliate CBC says it is too early to tell whether they can clinch a majority.

Conservative opposition leader Pierre Poilievre conceded defeat early Tuesday, saying Carney had won enough seats to form a “razor thin minority government.”

Former central banker Carney, 60, has led a wave of anti-Trump sentiment since winning his party’s leadership contest in a landslide after former prime minister Justin Trudeau stepped down last month. He has rallied the public against the US president’s threats to annex the country as “ the 51st state” and made the defense of Canada a central part of his platform.



Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks at the Liberal Party election night headquarters in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada April 29, 2025.
Blair Gable/Reuters

Poilievre had been the favorite to win when Trudeau announced his resignation in January in the wake of dire polls, a serious cost of living crisis and an internal revolt in his cabinet.

But Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods and threats to its sovereignty dramatically transformed the race into something of a referendum against the US president.

Poilievre said his Conservatives will work with Carney and other parties in “defending Canada’s interests” and “protecting our sovereignty.”

“We will always put Canada first as we stare down tariffs and other irresponsible threats from President Trump,” he said.

Carney had never held political office before becoming prime minister. His decades in finance saw him steering governments through major global crises and periods of upheaval, including shepherding Canada’s economy through the 2008 financial crisis. As governor of the Bank of England, he helped the United Kingdom navigate Brexit – which he said mirrors what could happen to the US in the face of tariffs.





Related article‘No friend anymore’: Days from a national election, Canadian voters focus on the US relationship

The idea that Canada needs to forge its own path outside of US influence has been central to Carney’s messaging since he took office.

Carney pitched himself throughout the campaign as an experienced professional from the political center who can steward Canada’s economy through a period of profound turbulence.

“I understand how the world works,” Carney told podcaster Nate Erskine-Smith in October. “I know people who run some of the world’s largest companies and understand how they work. I know how financial institutions work. I know how markets work … I’m trying to apply that to the benefit of Canada.”

Trump’s tariffs against Canadian exports pose a grave threat to the country’s economy and lasting stability. The US president’s decision to levy a 25% duty on Canadian steel and aluminum, cars and car parts, and threats to tariff pharmaceuticals and lumber have shaken Canadian businesses and pushed the country toward recession. It’s a reality Carney has not sugarcoated, warning of “tough days ahead” with pressure on Canadian employment.

But the prime minister has pledged to “build things in this country again” to make Canada less reliant on the US: new homes, new factories, and new sources of “clean and conventional energy.”

Carney has not ruled out continued talks with Trump, but he has also been moving to deepen ties with more “reliable” allies. In an unusual move, his first prime ministerial trip abroad was to Europe, where he spoke to French and British officials about deepening security, military and economic ties.

In his victory speech early Tuesday, Carney said that when he does sit down with Trump, “it will be to discuss the future economic and security relationship between two sovereign nations.”



Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre speaks to his supporters alongside his wife Anaida Poilievre on April 29, 2025 in Ottawa, Canada.
Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images

“And it will be with the full knowledge that we have many, many other options than the US to build prosperity for all Canadians,” he said.

?Many Canadians see Carney as someone well-placed to navigate a trade war with a long-standing ally, experts say.

“In a crisis it’s important to come together and it’s essential to act with purpose and with force. And that’s what we will do,” Carney said earlier this month as he positioned himself as the leader to take on Trump.

Another upset on Tuesday was the future of the National Democratic Party, which has so far not won enough seats to keep its party status. The NDP, a centre-left party, has played a key role during previous Liberal Party minority governments. Party leader Jagmeet Singh announced he would step down after failing to retain his seat.

“He has an important job to do, to represent all Canadians and to protect our country and its sovereignty from the threats of Donald Trump,” Singh said of Carney.

This is a developing story and will be updated.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1535759)4/29/2025 3:36:04 AM
From: sylvester802 Recommendations

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Eric
zax

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FU trump: US FARMERS IN "FULL-BLOWN CRISIS" AS CHINESE ORDERS FOR PORK, SOYBEANS PLUNGE ON TRUMP TARIFFS
By Taylor Herzlich and Lisa Fickenscher
Published April 28, 2025, 7:21 p.m. ET
nypost.com
President Trump’s tariffs have sent the US agricultural industry into a “full-blown crisis” as canceled orders from China are forcing farmers to lay off workers or shut down their businesses, according to a trade group.

China last week made its largest cancellation of pork orders since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, halting a shipment of 12,000 tons of pork, according to the Department of Agriculture.

Meanwhile, China dropped its soybean orders to just 1,800 tons’ worth in the week ending April 17 – down massively from 72,800 tons purchased the week before, the USDA said.

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President Trump’s tariffs have already sent the US agricultural industry into a “full-blown crisis,” according to a trade group.Leigh Trail – stock.adobe.comWes Shoemyer, who runs a family farm in Clarence, Mo. that raises cattle and grows grains, said he’s nervous about whether US exporters will find foreign markets for his crops.

“We are all still planting but it’s on a leap of faith that there will be a foreign market to export it to,” he told The Post.

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Trump’s 145% tariff on Chinese goods and the nation’s retaliatory 125% rate on the US have thrown a major wrench into trade across the board between the world’s two largest economies.

In response, there has been a drastic increase in canceled sailings by Chinese vessels to US ports, with China to US vessel traffic down 44% compared to a year earlier, according to the Vizion Global Ocean Bookings Tracker.

The impact of cancelled Chinese orders will be felt across the industry – starting with farms forced to shutter, then slamming the longshoremen out of work from cancelled sailings, then the truck drivers who transport goods from the ports, said Peter Friedmann, executive director of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition.

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Ana Gioia/NY POST DESIGN
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Farmers across the country have been hit hard by massive order cancellations from China.AFP via Getty Images“It’s already happening,” Friedman said. “Unlike toys and television, so forth, it’s pretty dramatic. If nobody’s buying, you may harvest it because you got to get it off the trees, like cherries and fruit – but what do you do with it if you can’t sell it?”

Shoppers may see a temporary influx of cheaper produce at supermarkets – like cherries that cost a quarter of what they used to – but that’s just a sign of US farmers going out of business and giving away their excess supply, Friedmann said.

A wood pulp and paperboard exporter received an immediate cancellation of 6,400 metric tons of goods – and a hold on 15 railcars sitting in “demurrage,” when fees are charged for a delayed movement of goods, according to the AgTC.

The exporter has 9,000 metric tons of product already on the water, headed for China and expected to arrive May 13 – and the company worries it could be forced to divert that shipment to a costly warehouse if buyers refuse the cargo at port.

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Farm workers labor in the fields south of Bakersfield in California.AFP via Getty ImagesMeanwhile, a grass seed exporter told AgTC that it received just two weeks’ notice that eight loads were being canceled by Chinese customers, even though vessel bookings were already in place.

The Chinese market would be a huge loss for American farmers, who exported more than $27 billion worth of US agricultural goods to the country last year, according to the USDA.

US farmers across the country are already in crisis mode – from hay farmers to fruit and nut exporters to those growing cotton and hardwood lumber, according to Friedmann.

US soybean farmers, in particular, will lose out on a crucial market. China is the world’s top buyer of soybeans, importing nearly $13 billion worth from the US last year, according to the USDA.

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There has been a drastic increase in canceled sailings by Chinese vessels to US ports.AFP via Getty ImagesBut Zhao Chenxin, a top Chinese official with the development and reform commission, on Monday said the country will be fine without its supply of US grains like soybeans, corn and sorghum, which “can be easily substituted and the supplies on the international market are quite sufficient.”

The nation is expecting a huge shipment of the oilseed from South America as it continues to shift supply over to Brazil.

“Other countries have been treating us – our exports – unfairly for a long time. It is true,” Friedmann said.

“However, these are problems that have been generated over decades. They’ve developed gradually over decades. We cannot eliminate them with a snap of the fingers, with a sudden announcement, with a quickly imposed tariff,” he said.

“If nobody’s buying the soybeans, you can’t just cut hours – you have to eliminate hours. You can’t afford to pay people if nobody’s buying your products,” Friedmann told The Post.

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The impact of cancelled Chinese orders will reverberate throughout the industry, according to Peter Friedmann, executive director of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition.Thomas – stock.adobe.comUS soybean farmers lost a good chunk of their share of the Chinese market to Brazilian counterparts during the 2018 trade war, during Trump’s first administration, according to The American Soybean Association.

Shoemyer, the farmer from Missouri, is doubly concerned over a contract he signed with the US government to grow cover crops – rye, wheat and grasses – on his land to help prevent runoffs during the winter.

He invested $45,000 to plant the crops, but said DOGE has cut funding for the Soil and Water Outcomes Fund, which administered the grants to farmers, who are supposed to be paid later this month.

“I never thought I’d sign a contract with my own government and not get paid,” Shoemyer said.

The White House did not respond to The Post’s request for comment.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1535759)4/29/2025 4:17:50 AM
From: sylvester802 Recommendations

Recommended By
Eric
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1575465
 
Under POS trump 1, the US FARMER BAILOUT COST MORE THAN THE TARIFFS... you would think this MORON POS trump would learn from history but noooooo... phaking POS... trump=WORST POTUS IN US HISTORY...