World Byte News

Canada’s ready to fight Trump’s tariffs, Carney says​on March 27, 2025 at 7:37 pm

OTTAWA — Canada’s ready to fight. Read More

​”We will protect our workers and our industries during this difficult period, but above all we will build a new Canadian economy,” Carney said   

“We will protect our workers and our industries during this difficult period, but above all we will build a new Canadian economy,” Carney said

OTTAWA — Canada’s ready to fight.

Advertisement 2

Story continues below

Article content

Article content

Article content

Speaking to reporters Thursday afternoon from West Block, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada is prepared to resist U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest salvo in America’s trade war against Canada.

“The President of the United States is trying to fundamentally restructure his economy — that means our economy, and the global economy as well,” Carney said, adding he understands and respects Trump’s motives but disagrees with how he’s doing it.

“With time, it’ll become apparent that these actions will end up hurting American workers and American consumers.”

On Wednesday, Trump announced sweeping 25% tariffs on all non-U.S. made vehicles, a move that threatens to cripple Canada’s — and possibly North America’s — incredibly-integrated auto industry.

Article content

Advertisement 3

Story continues below

Article content

Canada, he said, will resist Trump’s efforts to wear down and break Canada’s resolve in order to absorb Canada unto the union.

“That will never happen,” Carney said.

Recommended from Editorial

  1. ‘People close to Trump have respect for Poilievre,’ says Tory candidate for Montreal riding

  2. Tariff tracker: Confused by the trade war? Here’s where things stand today

  3. Poilievre calls on Carney to come clean on his investments

Canada’s retaliation against Trump’s tariffs, he said, will be comprehensive and have “maximum impact” on the U.S.

“We will protect our workers and our industries during this difficult period, but above all we will build a new Canadian economy,” Carney said.

Such actions, he said, are only the first step.

Carney wouldn’t say what’s on the table in terms of retaliation, but described the process as a “negotiation” — hinting retaliatory tariffs may come from Canada’s forestry, lumber, semiconductors and pharmaceuticals.

Advertisement 4

Story continues below

Article content

“We have a number of measures that we can take in response to those initiatives,” Carney said.

“We’re going to know a lot more in a week, and we’ll respond then. In a negotiation, it doesn’t make sense to tip your hand and say what you’re going to do going forward.”

RECOMMENDED VIDEO

We apologize, but this video has failed to load.

Try refreshing your browser, or
tap here to see other videos from our team.

Despite media reports suggesting Trump and Carney had already spoken, Carney said on Thursday that the White House reached out on Wednesday evening to schedule a call — but he said that call hadn’t yet taken place.

On Thursday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford received a phone call from U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick assuring him that Canada would see a significant carve-out to those announced tariffs on cars and trucks built under the auspices of the CUSMA trade agreement.

“We don’t back down, we will response forcefully,” Carney said. “Nothing is off the table to defend our workers and our country.”

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume

Article content

 

Exit mobile version