‘We will not back down’: Canada to retaliate against U.S. tariffs by targeting $155 billion of American goods: Trudeau

OTTAWA — Canada marched into a trade war against its greatest ally on Saturday, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announcing 25-per-cent retaliatory tariffs against $155-billion worth of American goods, precisely matching President Donald Trump’s move to tax Canadian imports.


Trudeau is preening for the cameras and playing a silly game that serves no worthwhile purpose. He is in fact making things worse for Canadians.

Ratio’d

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Trump threats are inspiring Canada to tackle trade war from within

Canadians who want to protest U.S. tariffs by purchasing local products face an ironic yet unfortunate reality: Buying Canadian isn’t always so easy.

Interprovincial trade barriers, which hinder the movement of goods and workers within the country, are a decades-old aggravation for the economy. These hurdles can make it more challenging for Canadian businesses to sell their products to other parts of the country than to the United States. Even as Canada faces the prospect of crippling U.S. tariffs, it is fighting another trade war – with itself.

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Donald Trump says U.S. tariffs on imports from Canada will begin today

OTTAWA—It’s a brief reprieve. But for Donald Trump’s doubters, or Canadians living in hope who thought he wouldn’t act on his tariff threat, the White House says forget that.

The U.S. president said Friday he will fulfil his threat to impose 25 per cent surcharges on Canadian and Mexican imports starting Feb. 1, in order to halt fentanyl and illegal immigrants at America’s northern and southern borders, and to correct what he calls unfair trade deficits.

However, Trump suggested there would be a staggered rollout, telling reporters he will target Canadian oil and gas shipments with a lower 10 per cent tariff rate, setting a later date for implementation of Feb. 18.

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Canada ‘will stand up to a bully’, says WEF totalitarian Carney over Trump tariffs

Mark Carney, the frontrunner to be the next Canadian prime minister, has said his country is “going to stand up to a bully” after US President Donald Trump announced tariffs of 25% on Canada.

Speaking exclusively to BBC Newsnight, 59-year-old Carney said Canada will “match dollar for dollar the US tariffs”.

As well as levying a 25% tariff on Canadian imports on Saturday, the White House has announced tariffs of 25% on Mexico and 10% on China.

Carney and the very left BBC seem good friends.

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Canada’s Anti-Money Laundering Agency Isn’t Serious About Real Estate

Canada’s newfound reputation as a money laundering hub hasn’t motivated much action. FINTRAC, Canada’s anti-money laundering watchdog, announced only administrative monetary penalties for real estate firms in 2024. All of the firms were located in Toronto and Vancouver, and appear to be entirely over minor compliance issues. Considering the agency took up to 3 years to fine real estate firms over minor filing infractions, the agency doesn’t seem to be motivated to actually crack down.

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Flesh-eating bacteria is on the rise in Canada and ‘scaring the living daylights’ out of ER doctors

Rapidly spreading, harrowing and potentially lethal, a necrotizing soft tissue infection — so-called flesh-eating disease — “scares the living daylights” out of doctors, as several shared on a Canadian Medical Association Journal podcast that dropped this week.

The infections are often caused by invasive group A streptococcus, a bacterium that is increasing in Canada and globally, for reasons that remain unclear.

No doubt due to our xenophobia.

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Canada Can’t Afford to Play Trade Chicken With the US

Canada and the United States share one of the world’s most extensive and intertwined trading relationships. In 2022, bilateral trade in goods and services exceeded $900 billion annually. Canada exported 75 percent of its goods to the United States. Beyond trade, bilateral investment is immense, with over $1 trillion in two-way direct investment (All amounts in Canadian dollars).

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Most Canadians want Parliament recalled, but split on why: poll

OTTAWA — Most Canadians want Canada’s prorogued Parliament recalled, but for different reasons.

That’s according to new polling released Thursday by Angus Reid, suggesting that 77% of respondents want to see Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reverse his Jan. 6 decision to prorogue Parliament — 47% of those want the House recalled so opposition parties can immediately trigger an election, while 30% say they’d like to see Parliament recalled, but only if the parties agree ‘not’ to topple the government.

Trudeau and Jaggy will do their best to deny Canadians an election.

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Briefings to Liberal Government on Chinese Infiltration of Vancouver Port and Canada’s Opioid Scourge Ignored

OTTAWA, Canada – As President Donald Trump readies sweeping tariffs against Canada on Saturday—citing Ottawa’s failure to secure its shared North American borders from fentanyl originating in China—The Bureau has obtained a remarkable December 1999 document from a senior law enforcement official, revealing Ottawa’s longstanding negligence in securing Vancouver’s port against drug trafficking linked to Chinese shipping entities.

Canada’s China Class at work.

h/t XC

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Donald Trump is driving a wedge between Canada and the United States. Could we join the EU?

Canada is on the other end of the Atlantic — but that still might not stop it from becoming the 28th member state of the European Union, some experts believe.

As U.S. President Donald Trump‘s talk of tariffs and annexation continues to sour U.S.-Canada relations, some — including, reportedly, Germany’s former foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel — have floated the idea of Canada joining the EU.

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Booze, oil and orange juice: How Canada could fight Trump tariffs

Canada has been weighing its options in response to a threat of tariffs from US President Donald Trump.

Trump has said he could levy a 25% tariff on Canadian imports as soon as Saturday.

Tariffs are a central part of the economic vision of the returning US president. He sees them as a way of growing the US economy, protecting jobs and raising tax revenue.

Economists suggest that such a move could have devastating immediate impacts on Canada’s economy – while also leading to higher prices for Americans.

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Trump’s press secretary says report of March 1 tariffs ‘false’; Canadian source says no word

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says reporting indicating U.S. President Donald Trump intends to delay imposing tariffs on Canada until March 1 is “false.”

“I was just with the president in the Oval Office, and I can confirm that tomorrow, the Feb. 1 deadline that President Trump put into place… continues,” she said.

“The president will be implementing tomorrow a 25 per cent tariff on Mexico, 25 per cent tariffs on Canada, and a 10 per cent tariff on China for the illegal fentanyl that they have sourced and allowed to distribute into our country which has killed tens of millions of Americans. These are promises made and promises kept by the president.”

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