Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
International

'I Had No Idea': Trump Says He Made Up Facts About Trade In Meeting With Justin Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2018 01:12 PM
    WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump boasted in a fundraising speech that he made up details about trade in a meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, according to a recording of the comments.
     
     
    The leaked recording provided fodder for the American morning talk shows Thursday, animating discussions in the U.S. not only about the substance of the trading relationship but also the style of the president.
     
     
    Trump was overheard telling donors at an event in Missouri the previous night that he insisted to Trudeau that the United States runs a trade deficit with its neighbour to the north — without any idea of whether this is the case.
     
     
    Trump said on the recording that after Trudeau told him the U.S. does not have a trade deficit with Canada, he replied, "Wrong, Justin, you do," then added, "I didn't even know ... I had no idea."
     
     
     
     
    In the recording, first reported by The Washington Post, the president said staffers from each country were sent out to check the prime minister's claim. He said the staffers concluded Trump was correct.
     
     
    Trump said the staffers came back and said: "Well, sir, you're actually right." He said the U.S. has a deficit once you include energy and lumber trade, "and when you do, we lose $17 billion a year. It's incredible."
     
     
     
     
    His own government's statistics tell a different story. The 2018 White House Economic Report of the President says the U.S. ran a trade surplus of $2.6 billion with Canada on a balance-of-payments basis. The U.S. Trade Representative's office says the goods and services trade surplus with Canada was $12.5 billion in 2016.
     
     
    There are different ways to calculate the final number. Canada's own formula sides with Trump, as it excludes the country of origin in a three-party transaction: Say, a Chinese laptop is shipped through Canada, and into the U.S., the Canadian formula counts it as a Canadian export.
     
     
    The last U.S. ambassador to Canada under Barack Obama calls the whole debate foolish.
     
     
    At dispute is an alleged deficit that amounts to less than two per cent of US$630 billion in annual Canada-U.S. trade, and the final result can be made or broken by a small shift in energy prices and currency values.
     
     
    What bothers Bruce Heyman most is that the president of his country keeps threatening to stifle trade with Canada, and then shows up at meetings without having a grasp of the most basic details.
     
     
    "What has incensed me is that the president is picking a fight with Canada," Heyman said in an interview. "Reckless. It's infuriating to me."
     
     
    He contrasted this approach with the president he served: "(Obama) was highly briefed before entering a meeting with the prime minister... President Obama was a voracious consumer of information before making a decision. It's almost the exact opposite of what I'm seeing now."
     
     
    Trump was roasted on some of the U.S. morning TV shows.
     
     
     
     
    Trump's former NBC colleague and current nemesis Joe Scarborough said he's no fan of Trudeau, but had to admit the prime minister is right and Trump is wrong: "It is a funny story (Trump told). But it is a lie.... He was lying last night — what a surprise — to his contributors.''
     
     
    The story led the next show on MSNBC, where host Stephanie Ruhle said: ''That right there is humiliating for this country... This is pathetic. This is humiliating.''
     
     
    The Washington Post followed up with an item headlined, "Why Trump’s admission that he made stuff up to Justin Trudeau is particularly bad." It expressed concern about what would happen if the president just decides to ''wing it'' in conversations with North Korea.
     
     
    Trump, meanwhile, wasn't giving an inch.
     
     
    ''We do have a trade deficit with Canada,'' he tweeted Thursday. 
     
     
    ''As we do with almost all countries (some of them massive). P.M. Justin Trudeau of Canada, a very good guy, doesn't like saying that Canada has a surplus vs. the U.S. (negotiating), but they do ... they almost all do ... and that’s how I know!''
     
     
    The U.S. does run chronic long-term trade deficits with the world as a whole — but, contrary to the president's claim, it does have surpluses with many countries.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Now United Airlines Misbehaves With Chinese Tennis Star Zhang Shuai!

    Now United Airlines Misbehaves With Chinese Tennis Star Zhang Shuai!
    The United Airlines is again in news for wrong reasons. This time Chinese female tennis player Zhang Shuai has accused the airlines' staff of insulting her on a journey.

    Now United Airlines Misbehaves With Chinese Tennis Star Zhang Shuai!

    U.S.: Muslim Student's Hijab Forcefully Removed At School

    A Muslim high school student in Minnesota has accused the security guard of her school of removing her hijab and handcuffing her following an altercation.

    U.S.: Muslim Student's Hijab Forcefully Removed At School

    India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia

    India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia
    Accusing Pakistan of "nurturing" terrorism, India has told the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHCR) in Geneva, Switzerland, that Islamabad continues to sponsor terrorism and warned that this will ultimately affect the stability of the South Asian region.

    India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia

    London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago

    London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago
    One of the three London attackers involved in last week's attack in the London Bridge area, Khurram Shehzad Butt had travelled to Pakistan four years ago to visit his relatives.

    London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago

    From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees

    From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees
     A Syrian refugee artist has spent 19 months creating a series of paintings of world leaders, with an aim to picture them outside their positions of power.

    From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees

    Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial

    Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Surveillance footage played in a Kelowna, B.C., court Thursday showed two shooters dressed in black running from the Delta Grand Hotel in a chaotic scene that left a gang leader dead.

    Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial