Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Wednesday
(26 Mar ’25) said that US President Donald Trump's auto tariffs are a
"direct attack" on his country and that the trade war is hurting
Americans, noting that American consumer confidence is at a multi-year low. Trump said earlier on Wednesday that he was
placing 25 per cent tariffs on auto imports and, to underscore his intention,
he stated, "This is permanent."
"This is a very direct attack. We will defend
our workers. We will defend our companies. We will defend our country,"
Carney responded.
Carney said
he needs to see the details of Trump's executive order before taking
retaliatory measures. He also called the move unjustified and said he will
leave the election campaign to go to Ottawa on Thursday to chair his special
Cabinet committee on US relations. Carney earlier announced a $1.4 billion “strategic
response fund” that will protect Canadian auto jobs affected by Trump's
tariffs.
Autos are
Canada's second largest export, and Carney noted it employs 125,000 Canadians
directly and almost another 500,000 in related industries. “Canada will be there for auto workers,” he said.
Trump previously granted a one-month exemption on
his stiff new tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada for US automakers...“His
trade war is hurting American consumers and workers and it will hurt more. I
see that American consumer confidence is at a multi-year low,” Carney said
earlier while campaigning in Windsor, Ontario, ahead of Canada's April 28
election.
The tax hike on auto imports starting April means
automakers could face higher costs and lower sales.
“He wants to
break us so America can own us. And it will never ever happen because we just
don't look out for ourselves we look out for each other," Carney said.
Carney, a former two-time central banker, made the
earlier comments while campaigning against the backdrop of the Ambassador
Bridge, which is considered the busiest US-Canadian border crossing, carrying
25 per cent of all trade between the two countries. It plays an especially
important role in auto manufacturing.
Carney said
the bridge carries $98 billion in goods every year and $281 million per day. "Now those numbers and the jobs and the
paychecks that depend on that are in question. The relationship between Canada
and the United States has changed. We did not change it," Carney said...“President
is calling it Liberation Day. I call it Termination Day for American workers. I
know President Trump likes to tell people 'You're fired!' I didn't think he
meant US auto workers when he said it,” Ford said...
Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre
said the tariffs will damage American auto workers just as they will damage
Canadian auto workers.
"The message to President Trump should be to
knock it off. He's changed his mind before. He's done this twice, puts them on,
takes them off. We can suspect that may well happen again," Poilievre
said.