Doug Ford’s anti-tariff ad was a waste, whether or not it torpedoed trade talks

Our lovable protagonist, Captain Canada, is at it again. Like our very own Inspector Gadget, who tries to foil Dr. Claw but invariably ends up tangling himself in his helicopter hat, Ontario Premier Doug Ford spent millions of dollars to try to persuade Americans to turn on their President’s tariffs. But somehow, Canada ended up with a 10-per-cent hike on existing tariffs. Whoops. These damn gadgets never seem to work right.

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Despite Reagan Tariff Commercial, Unwise for America To Blunder Into Quarrel With Canada, Its Closest, Most Cordial Ally

The latest round in the very syncopated Canadian-American tariff disagreements and discussions has more the air of oversized children in a sandbox hurling mud balls at each other than statesmen of governments of serious countries attempting to resolve a disagreement. In Canada, the second ring level of jurisdiction between the federal government and municipal governments are called provinces and under the Canadian Constitution, provinces have rather greater powers than American states, including a concurrent jurisdiction in direct personal and corporate income taxes.

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If Mark Carney has a plan for how to deal with Trump, he might want to tell Canadians what it is

At the closing news conference after meeting Asian leaders in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Monday, Mark Carney said something curious.

When asked whether Donald Trump really called off trade talks with Canada because Doug Ford broadcast an antitariff ad quoting former president Ronald Reagan, the prime minister said: “I would suggest you take the president at his word for his reasons.”

This doesn’t make sense.


Makes sense if you’re in the bag of the CCP.

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King Doug Of The Elbow People Demands The U.S. Bow To His Will

Doug Ford urges U.S. ambassador to ‘apologize’ for f-bombs aimed at Ontario diplomat

Premier Doug Ford has denounced the U.S. ambassador to Canada for profanely attacking Ontario’s representative to Washington at a gala reception.

“Absolutely unacceptable. It’s unbecoming of an ambassador,” Ford said Wednesday at Queen’s Park.

The premier said Pete Hoekstra, U.S. President Donald Trump’s ambassador, should “apologize” to David Paterson, Ontario’s Washington point person.

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If Ford wants to help Canada stand up to Trump, there’s only one thing for him to do

It’s time for Doug Ford to focus on being the premier of Ontario. He’ll be sad to hang up the Captain Canada cape, but the best thing he can do to help this country stand up to U.S. President Donald Trump is to make sure our most populous province is running at peak efficiency. Right now, it isn’t.

Let’s get something out of the way right off the top: I don’t blame Ford for the breakdown in trade relations between Canada and the United States. The blame for that lies entirely with Trump. He blew up the last deal, and he could ram a new one through if he wanted. He doesn’t. The commercial that has so angered the president makes for a convenient excuse. Absent that, he’d have found another one.

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John Ivison: Canadians can’t wait much longer for Carney to accomplish something

Veteran British journalist Andrew Marr offered a dystopian view of the U.K.’s politics in this week’s New Statesman magazine. It’s an article that should probably be viewed as a cautionary tale by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberal government.

Marr said that Britain has become ungovernable and the postwar political establishment is collapsing, with the Conservatives and Labour parties haemorrhaging votes, while Nigel Farage’s populist Reform UK party soars in the polls .

“The nation’s patience has snapped,” he said, with repeated failures bringing an end to the politics of management and the emergence of the politics of outrage and disgust.


Ouch.

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Trump says he won’t talk with Carney at APEC summit in South Korea

Donald Trump is playing down the chances of talks with Prime Minister Mark Carney at a South Korean summit this week after he broke off trade talks with Canada and threatened to hike punitive tariffs on Canadian imports by 10 per cent.

Both leaders are in South Korea for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit and were scheduled to attend the same dinner Wednesday.


UPDATE: Carney had ‘very good’ conversation with Trump, he says

I don’t believe Carney.

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LILLEY: Yelling, F-bombs, threats and the breakdown of Canada-U.S. relations

Carney don’t care, he’s gonna eat!

On Monday night, as baseball fans turned their attention to the World Series, a gathering at the National Gallery in Ottawa that was supposed to celebrate the cross-border relationship turned sour.

Pete Hoekstra, Donald Trump’s ambassador to Canada, was seen tearing a strip off David Paterson, Ontario’s representative in Washington. It’s been described by those who witnessed it as a heated exchange, a one-way conversation, and yelling, with plenty of F-bombs.

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‘There’s no industry without U.S. access’: struggling auto sector renews call for trade deal amid latest tariff woes

The Canadian auto industry says a new deal with the United States is needed for its survival, and is urging the government to fully repeal its electric vehicle sales mandate as it braces under threats of an additional 10-per-cent tariff amid souring trade bilateral negotiations.

“Fighting protectionism with protectionism doesn’t work,” Brian Kingston, the head of the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association, told the House’s Industry and Technology Committee at an Oct. 27 meeting. “We are the smaller partner, and we have to work in a new reality.”

“In Canada, you can retaliate. You won’t win that battle. We’ve learned that lesson. So, your second-best option is to make Canada ultra-competitive.”

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Poilievre says Carney ‘approved’ Ontario’s anti-tariff ad that Trump said ended trade talks

OTTAWA — Opposition Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said on Tuesday that Prime Minister Mark Carney “approved” Ontario’s anti-tariff ads, which U.S. President Donald Trump blamed as the reason for ending trade talks with Canada.

It came the day after Ontario Premier Doug Ford told reporters that Carney and his chief of staff, Marc-Andre Blanchard, were shown the ads before they aired.

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‘Canada burned the bridges’: U.S. ambassador doubts tariff deal feasible before new year

The U.S. ambassador to Canada doesn’t foresee a new security and economic deal between Canada and the United States — which could see the reduction or full removal of tariffs amid an ongoing trade dispute — before the new year.

“We have stopped negotiations with Canada,” Pete Hoekstra said in a keynote address to the Coalition of Concerned Manufacturers and Business Canada on Monday. “I don’t see any way that there will be an agreement before American Thanksgiving.”

“I’m not sure what it’s going to take to get people back to the table in a constructive and positive mode,” he added.

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Promethean Action

A wild ride.

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Onus is on Mark Carney to end impasse with Donald Trump, business and union leaders say

OTTAWA — It’s all on Prime Minister Mark Carney to mend the broken Canada-U.S. fence in the eyes of many of tariff-hit business and union leaders.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who said he has no intention to meet Carney, will officially cross paths with the Canadian prime minister Wednesday evening when both attend a leaders’ dinner in Gyeongju, Korea hosted by the Korean president as he hosts the Asia-Pacific annual summit.

What if Xi elects to exert maximum pressure on Carney in light of his failure with Trump.

We’ll all be speaking Mandarin next year.

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Which industry in each province is most threatened by tariffs?

Before U.S. President Donald Trump terminated trade negotiations with Canada late Thursday night, premiers were clashing over which tariff-beleaguered industries should be prioritized.

With Ontario’s auto industry pitted against the canola industry of the prairies, and B.C. raising concerns that the lumber industry is not getting the attention it deserves, Team Canada was looking increasingly splintered.

Trump’s latest actions have resulted in a more united front across provincial borders. But as tariffs remain, so do those underlying tensions.

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Majority of Canadians no longer see America as a friend, study finds

OTTAWA—New research suggests that a minority of Canadians now consider the United States to be the country’s friend, except for Conservative party supporters, more than half of whom still view the U.S. as Canada’s friend.

Data from the Environics Institute shared exclusively with the Star shows that 36 per cent of Canadians currently view the United States as a friend, compared to 60 per cent at the end of 2020 and 89 per cent in 2013, and that 27 per cent of Canadians presently view the U.S. as an enemy, a number that stood at 11 per cent in 2020 and as low as one per cent in 2013.

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