Close X
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ministers call on Washington lawmakers to scrap tariff threat completely

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2025 03:54 PM
  • Ministers call on Washington lawmakers to scrap tariff threat completely

A month-long pause on Donald Trump's tariff threat has done little to ease Canadian concerns as key cabinet ministers return to Washington hoping to push the devastating duties off the table permanently.

"I do think there are opportunities for conversations to enable us actually to move away from the conversation about tariffs," Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Tuesday.

Wilkinson is making the case among key Republicans for a Canada-U. S. energy and resource alliance — part of an effort to align with U.S. President Donald Trump's goal of making America energy dominant.

He is looking to meet with newly appointed Interior Secretary Doug Burgum — the former North Dakota governor now in charge of Trump's energy agenda — and other Republicans in Washington this week.

The temporary tariff reprieve has prevented — at least until March 4 — a continental trade war that economists on both sides of the border warned would raise prices.

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne and Defence Minister Bill Blair also travelled to the United States capital on Tuesday.

"The Canada-U. S. relationship has withstood the greatest tests of time, and it deserves our every effort to protect it," Champagne said in a social media post.

Wilkinson said he remains hopeful the tariff threat is a "blip" before a swift return to normal relations between the two nations. He also said there is a new and growing sense that this country's dependence on trade with the U.S. could become a point of "vulnerability."

Wilkinson said that if the tariff threats continue for an extended time, Canadians will have to look at building the infrastructure required to export elsewhere. 

The pause on damaging duties brought little comfort to many in Canada's labour and business communities, who say the lingering threat slows investment and causes market insecurity.

The Business Council of Canada said that with the delay on the tariffs "much uncertainty remains." President and CEO Goldy Hyder said it's clear that Canada must "act with urgency to improve our long-term economic prospects."

On Saturday, Trump signed an order to impose 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs on Mexican and Canadian imports, with a lower 10 per cent tariff on Canadian energy. The president linked the import taxes to what he calls the illegal flow of people and fentanyl across the border.

Trump put off the Mexican tariffs for nearly a month after a call with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum around midday on Monday. 

Trump also spoke with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Monday morning and after a second call mid-afternoon, Trudeau announced the tariffs on Canada would be paused in a post on social media that also outlined his government's $1.3 billion plan to address the president's stated concerns about border security. Trudeau's government unveiled most of that plan in December.

Trudeau also said that nearly 10,000 front-line personnel "are and will" be protecting Canada's border, and announced $200 million in new initiatives to address fentanyl trafficking, including a new "fentanyl czar."

In a social media post, Trump said the tariffs will be off the table for 30 days to see if the two countries can reach a "final economic deal."

Experts have suggested Trump's tariffs are a negotiating tactic meant to rattle Canada and Mexico ahead of a mandatory review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement. The trilateral pact was negotiated to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement under the first Trump administration.

Canada's ability to enhance Trump's energy agenda can turn the conversation away from duties back to bilateral co-operation through the trade pact, Wilkinson said.

Any conversations about collaboration have to come with an agreement that the tariffs won't come back, he added.

"At the end of the day, we need to actually have a pathway that allows us to deepen the collaboration, if we agree that that's a good thing, without thinking six months from now we are back into the same conversation that we were in the last few days," he said during a fireside chat at the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Center in Washington Tuesday.

Quebec Premier François Legault complained recently that "what's annoying" about dealing with Trump "is that there's always this sword hanging over our heads." 

He said he believes the events of the last few days demonstrate the importance of diversifying markets and limiting Canadian dependence on American exports.

MORE National ARTICLES

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253
The BC Coroners Service says toxic drug deaths in British Columbia were down 13 per cent last year, with the toll now lower than any year since 2020. Chief Coroner Dr. Jatinder Baidwan says the decline is consistent with elsewhere in Canada and internationally, but doesn't mitigate the fact that 2,253 people died of overdoses in B.C. last year, or the grief felt by their loved ones.

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions
This week's wintry blast of snow in Metro Vancouver will likely remain on the ground, with below-average temperatures forecasted well into next week. Environment Canada meteorologist Alyssa Charbonneau says while temperatures may moderate slightly during the daytime over the weekend, whatever's melted will likely refreeze at night.

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions

B.C. puts its response to U.S. tariffs on hold after 30-day delay

B.C. puts its response to U.S. tariffs on hold after 30-day delay
British Columbia Premier David Eby says his government will pause its response to threatened American tariffs after a 30-day reprieve was negotiated today between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Donald Trump. 

B.C. puts its response to U.S. tariffs on hold after 30-day delay

Ontario PCs pledge billions in stimulus that would flow after election if tariffs hit

Ontario PCs pledge billions in stimulus that would flow after election if tariffs hit
Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford is defending simultaneously wearing two hats — campaigning in a snap election he called and taking anti-tariff actions as premier. This is a bad time for Ontario to find itself in an election, the other political party leaders say, amid the chaos of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threats. 

Ontario PCs pledge billions in stimulus that would flow after election if tariffs hit

B.C. wildfire crews return from California deployment to combat L.A. fires

B.C. wildfire crews return from California deployment to combat L.A. fires
More than 30 firefighters from British Columbia's Wildfire Service have returned home from a deployment fighting large fires that destroyed thousands of homes around Southern California. The Ministry of Forests say the crews are part of two separate groups, the first consisting of 13 technical specialists who were deployed on Jan. 11 to support the effort to combat the Palisades wildfire in L.A.

B.C. wildfire crews return from California deployment to combat L.A. fires

B.C. Court of Appeal orders new trial for husband in 'rape role-play' case

B.C. Court of Appeal orders new trial for husband in 'rape role-play' case
The B.C. Court of Appeal says a man convicted of sexually assaulting his wife deserves a new trial because messages between the pair about a consensual "rape role-play" scenario were wrongfully excluded as evidence. The ruling released on Friday says the complainant and accused, who can't be identified under a publication ban, were married but separated at the time of the alleged sexual assault in November 2019. 

B.C. Court of Appeal orders new trial for husband in 'rape role-play' case