Related News

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

October 21, 2025
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

November 26, 2025
Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

July 3, 2026

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Crypto
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
  • WeMaple news

Related News

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

October 21, 2025
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

November 26, 2025
Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

July 3, 2026

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Crypto
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
  • WeMaple news
WEMAPLE NEWS - Brand Partnerships
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
    • Golf
    • Hockey
    • Running & fitness
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Crypto
  • WeMaple news
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
WEMAPLE NEWS - Brand Partnerships
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
    • Golf
    • Hockey
    • Running & fitness
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Crypto
  • WeMaple news
No Result
View All Result
WEMAPLE NEWS - Brand Partnerships
No Result
View All Result
Home Canadian news feed

Most of Canada’s retaliatory tariffs are gone. Now what?

WeMaple AI by WeMaple AI
September 1, 2025
in Canadian news feed
0
Most of Canada’s retaliatory tariffs are gone. Now what?
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Most of the counter-tariffs Ottawa slapped on U.S. goods earlier this year have now been removed, with a few exceptions.

You might also like

StubHub sold ‘ghost tickets’ for World Cup months before real ones were issued, CBC finds

Fatal crash on Fernie, B.C., mountain bike trail shocks riding community

‘I will kill everyone around you’: Threat to ex by father in double-murder suicide emerges

Canada placed duties on $60 billion worth of U.S. goods in response to American tariffs on various Canadian goods. Those tariffs are gone as of Monday, though some levies remain on non-CUSMA-compliant goods — such as tariffs on steel and aluminum products to counter U.S. tariffs targeting those industries.

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Aug. 22 the tariffs would be coming off, arguing they were a sticking point in negotiations with the U.S. and that doing so was in Canada’s economic interest.

Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc travelled to Washington last week — the first time since July — to meet with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

It’s time to ‘stickhandle’ with U.S., Carney says, after dropping the gloves early in trade war

Although he characterized the conversation as constructive, LeBlanc told Radio-Canada host Patrice Roy on Wednesday that the two countries aren’t on the verge of an agreement.

The trip “helped us move forward in the sense that we better understood the work that remains to be done,” LeBlanc said in French.

“We are not on the verge of having an agreement, but we are making progress.”

LeBlanc reports ‘productive’ trade talks with U.S.

The minister didn’t offer details on what needs to be resolved, but the government is under pressure to make progress with the Americans after dropping the counter-tariffs.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has accused Carney of showing “weakness” on the international stage.

The move was “yet another capitulation and climb-down by Mark Carney,” Poilievre said the day Carney announced the counter-tariffs would end.

“His elbows have mysteriously gone missing.”

Poilievre says Carney ‘has not thrown one elbow since he took office’

Carney and his government have also faced criticism from workers and producers still impacted by sectoral U.S. tariffs.

Catherine Cobden, president and CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, said in a statement last month that removing counter-tariffs was a “disappointment.”

“Reciprocal tariffs protect Canada’s industries and workers during this trade war,” the statement read.

Marty Warren, national director of the United Steelworkers (USW), criticized the move in his own statement.

“The federal government must remain steadfast in working to not only safeguard and protect Canadian workers but aggressively build Canadian economic resiliency,” he said.

U.S. President Donald Trump had been signalling he wanted new tariffs even before he returned to the White House in January.

Days after being sworn in, Trump signed an executive order taxing Canadian exports to the U.S. at 25 per cent, except energy, critical minerals and potash, which were hit with a rate of 10 per cent.

Those tariffs took effect on March 4 and Canada immediately hit back with tariffs on $30 billion worth of U.S. goods. Two days later, Trump amended the tariffs to exclude products that comply with the terms of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).

A week later, Trump put a 25 per cent tariff on all steel and aluminum imports. Canada responded with further counter-tariffs on an additional $29 billion worth of U.S. goods — including steel and aluminum products.

In April, after threatening to impose a 25 per cent tariff on automobiles and auto parts from outside the U.S., Trump watered down the levy so it only applies to parts that aren’t CUSMA-compliant and the non-U.S. portion of assembled vehicles. Canada responded in kind with a 25 per cent tariff on vehicles imported from the U.S. that are not CUSMA-compliant.

In June, Trump doubled his tariffs on steel and aluminum to 50 per cent. While the tariffs apply to all imports, Canada is the top supplier of both metals to the U.S.

Canada and the U.S. set an Aug. 1 deadline to reach some sort of agreement on tariffs, but the deadline passed without a resolution. Trump then upped tariffs on non-CUSMA-compliant goods to 35 per cent and added a 50 per cent tariff on certain copper imports — again, a product where Canada is a major U.S. supplier.

Whether or not the U.S. or Canada have broken the trade deal signed during Trump’s first term seems to depend on who you ask.

Trump’s sectoral tariffs — which cover goods under CUSMA’s umbrella — use national security justifications.

Carlo Dade, the international policy director at the University of Calgary’s school of public policy, said national security exemptions are in most trade agreements.

“You’re not going to sacrifice your security for the sake of honouring a trade agreement. It’s just common sense,” he told CBC News.

Mark Warner, an international trade lawyer, said CUSMA’s national security exemption is a bit unique in that it relies on “self-judgment” for what constitutes a national security concern.

“It can’t be second-guessed by a dispute settlement panel,” he said.

Dade said that Trump’s national security claims on Canada are pretty flimsy and that the U.S. is violating the “spirit” of CUSMA, if not the letter.

For example, Trump has referred to fentanyl coming into Canada — despite the northern border accounting for a tiny fraction of the drug seized by U.S. authorities — as a reason for taxing some Canadian products. The president has also said that ensuring steel and aluminum is manufactured in the U.S. is a security priority.

Dade calls this a loophole “that you could drive a tractor-trailer through.”

But Warner suggested that from the American perspective, Canada hasn’t always held up the spirit of the agreement either, pointing to disputes over how Ottawa has implemented dairy quotas as an example.

“I don’t find it all that useful to try and figure out who’s to blame here,” he said. “It’s just like arguments between kids in the playground.”

It is unclear when or if Canada and the U.S. will reach an agreement.

Warner estimates that Canada will have to accept a “tariff-rate quota” on steel, aluminum and copper — where the U.S. agrees to import a certain amount of those Canadian products before duties are applied.

Some of Trump’s tariffs are also facing legal challenges in the U.S., which — if successful — may help the Canadian cause, Dade said.

“It doesn’t mean that the tariff threat is gone. But it means that the machine gun is taken away and the president is left with the 9-mm,” he said.

But those cases are still working their way through the courts. On Friday, an appeals court deemed Trump’s fentanyl-related tariffs unlawful, but allowed the levies to remain in place while the case likely makes its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

A challenge under CUSMA would also take time — and Warner argues might not be effective.

“The only way out of this is to sort of get through some kind of a negotiation,” he said.

The trade agreement is also up for review next year. Carney said the government is preparing for those CUSMA talks but that his priority is the current tariff spat.

Read Entire Article
Tags: Canada NewsCBC.ca
Share30Tweet19
WeMaple AI

WeMaple AI

Recommended For You

StubHub sold ‘ghost tickets’ for World Cup months before real ones were issued, CBC finds

by WeMaple AI
July 3, 2026
0
StubHub sold ‘ghost tickets’ for World Cup months before real ones were issued, CBC finds

A CBC News investigation into resale website StubHub has found evidence the company advertised and allowed speculative listings for World Cup tickets months before FIFA actually released any...

Read more

Fatal crash on Fernie, B.C., mountain bike trail shocks riding community

by WeMaple AI
July 3, 2026
0
Fatal crash on Fernie, B.C., mountain bike trail shocks riding community

A man has died after a mountain biking crash on a popular trail in Fernie, BC, on Canada Day, according to Elk Valley RCMP Const Mike Wilson says...

Read more

‘I will kill everyone around you’: Threat to ex by father in double-murder suicide emerges

by WeMaple AI
July 2, 2026
0
‘I will kill everyone around you’: Threat to ex by father in double-murder suicide emerges

WARNING: This story contains details of intimate partner violencePolice have identified the man who is believed to have killed his seven- and 12-year-old sons in his south Ottawa...

Read more

Nearly 600 wildfire evacuees from Kasabonika Lake First Nation staying in Toronto

by WeMaple AI
July 2, 2026
0
Nearly 600 wildfire evacuees from Kasabonika Lake First Nation staying in Toronto

Kasabonika Lake First Nation in northwestern Ontario has paused an evacuation of its most vulnerable members, as a cluster of five wildfires surrounding the community have stabilized for...

Read more

How can Canada beat Morocco? It could be found in Promise David’s sublime group-stage goal

by WeMaple AI
July 2, 2026
0
How can Canada beat Morocco? It could be found in Promise David’s sublime group-stage goal

If there’s a reason for Canada’s men to believe they can beat Morocco on Saturday, it’s most easily found in Promise David’s singular moment against SwitzerlandHis goal, from

Read more
Next Post
Melt tightness and boost mobility with this 10-minute active recovery workout

Melt tightness and boost mobility with this 10-minute active recovery workout

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

SpaceX Moves 2,395 BTC Amid Bitcoin Slump, Is Musk Selling or HODLing?

October 21, 2025
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen answers your questions

November 26, 2025
Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

Solana Prediction Market World Adopts Chainlink Price Feeds via Phantom Wallet

July 3, 2026

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Crypto
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
  • WeMaple news
WEMAPLE NEWS – Brand Partnerships

Wemaple will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

CATEGORIES

  • Canadian news feed
  • Crypto
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
  • WeMaple news

BROWSE BY TAG

AZO Clean Tech Bitcoinist Bitcoinmagazine Canada News CBC.ca Celebrity News Christian Post CoinPedia Corporate Knights Crypto Cryptoslate Faith Geothermal Golf Hockey Lifehacker Ludwig-van.com NcrOnline newsbtc Skateboarding tomsguide.com Utah news dispatch

© 2025 wemaple.canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Sports & Fitness
    • Golf
    • Hockey
    • Running & fitness
  • Faith
  • Geothermal
  • Crypto
  • WeMaple news

© 2025 wemaple.canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.