Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
International

Bipartisan Senate resolution introduced to recognize Canada-U.S. partnership

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2025 10:54 AM
  • Bipartisan Senate resolution introduced to recognize Canada-U.S. partnership

resolution with bipartisan support was introduced by United States senators on Wednesday to recognize the U.S.-Canada partnership as the relationship continues to be badly strained by President Donald Trump's tariffs and threats of annexation.

Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota and Independent Sen. Angus King of Maine introduced the symbolic resolution with support from eight other lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. 

"Representing a Northern border state, I recognize the importance of the unique partnership between the United States and Canada,” Cramer said in a news release. "Not only are our neighbours to the north crucial economic and national security partners, but they are literally our closest ally."

Canada was an early target of Trump's taunts and tariff threats following his November election win last year.

He repeatedly called then-prime minister Justin Trudeau a "governor" and has continued to insist he wants to make Canada a U.S. state. His complaints have ranged from defence spending to trade deficits, and he labelled the international border "artificial."

Trump hit Canada with economywide tariffs in March, before partially walking back the duties a few days later for imports compliant with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade. Trump linked those duties to the flow of fentanyl but U.S. government data shows an extremely small volume of the deadly drug is seized at the northern border.

Canada is also impacted by tariffs on steel, aluminum and automobiles. 

King said he knows "that the current situation presents many unfortunate challenges."

"While I am excited to reintroduce this resolution to reaffirm our two nations' commitment to one another, we must acknowledge the close ties between our countries to resolve and mitigate any potential disruptions to our intertwined interests," King said in the news release. 

The resolution recognizes the relationship between the United States and Canada is critical to promoting peace and expanding global economic opportunities, the news release said. 

It also emphasizes shared defence and security commitments, like the North American Aerospace Defence Command, or Norad. The news release pointed to joint border security initiatives and "co-operation in combatting transnational threats such as illegal migration and fentanyl trafficking."

A similar resolution was introduced in the House of Representatives by Mark Amodei, a Republican congressman from Nevada, earlier this year.

Cramer and King are co-chairs of the American Canadian Economy and Security Caucus. The news release said the United States and Canada share three oceans and the world’s longest border — where about 400,00 people and more than $2.5 billion worth of goods cross each day.

The number of Canadians travelling across the land borders into the United States has dramatically decreased as Trump's rhetoric against Canada heightened. 

Preliminary data from Statistics Canada said the number of Canadians returning from the United States by vehicle dropped by 35 per cent in April compared to the same month in 2024.

U.S. media has reported that leaders of tourism agencies are expressing concern about the significant drop in Canadian travellers, particularly in border states. 

The Grand Forks Herald reported that the Fargo-Moorhead Visitors Bureau sent an email to its membership saying "we’ve clearly reached a point where the strained U.S.-Canada relationship is taking its toll on retail sales in northern-tier communities like ours."

Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen from New Hampshire told a Senate Small Business Committee hearing Wednesday that the frayed relationship with Canada, as well as Trump's tariffs, are having a significant impact. 

She told the hearing about a bakery in her state that opened more than 25 years ago and used to do about 85 per cent of its business with Canada

"They used to have 25 employees. Now they have two," she said. "Because the president's tariffs have put them out of business."

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Ben Curtis

MORE International ARTICLES

17 dead as bus with 6 Indians onboard plunges into ravine in Mexico: Report

17 dead as bus with 6 Indians onboard plunges into ravine in Mexico: Report
An official list with the names of survivors published by Mexican newspaper El Financiero identified four of the India nationals as Rajan Singh, 21; Mandip Kumar, 22; Adama Kane, 46; and Hanidou Kane, the British daily reported.

17 dead as bus with 6 Indians onboard plunges into ravine in Mexico: Report

Trump returns to D.C. to face latest charges, steps from scene of Capitol Hill riots

Trump returns to D.C. to face latest charges, steps from scene of Capitol Hill riots
Hundreds of people, most of them either law enforcement officers or media crews, encircled the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse for much of the day in anticipation of Trump's arrival. Just a handful of protesters — some supporting Trump, others decidedly not — showed up, only to find themselves vastly outnumbered by members of the media.  

Trump returns to D.C. to face latest charges, steps from scene of Capitol Hill riots

Uber Eats rider killed in Sydney crash identified as Indian student

Uber Eats rider killed in Sydney crash identified as Indian student
A 22-year-old Uber Eats rider who died after his bike collided with an SUV in Sydney last month has been identified as an Indian student from Mumbai. Akshay Doultani, who came to Sydney in February on a scholarship to study Master’s degree in finance at Macquarie University, died at the Royal North Shore hospital on July 22.  

Uber Eats rider killed in Sydney crash identified as Indian student

British Labour Party MP Dhesi questioned at Amritsar airport

British Labour Party MP Dhesi questioned at Amritsar airport
British Labour Party MP Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi was stopped and questioned by the Indian immigration authorities at the airport in Amritsar in Punjab for two hours on Thursday. The Punjab-origin MP reached Amritsar on an Air India flight from Birmingham.  

British Labour Party MP Dhesi questioned at Amritsar airport

Trump charged by Justice Department for efforts to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss

Trump charged by Justice Department for efforts to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss
Federal prosecutors say Donald Trump was “determined to remain in power” in conspiracies that targeted a “bedrock function of the United States federal government: the nation’s process of collecting, counting and certifying the results of the presidential election.”

Trump charged by Justice Department for efforts to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss

Elderly Sikh man in UK pleads guilty to murdering wife

Elderly Sikh man in UK pleads guilty to murdering wife
On May 2, Singh walked into the Romford police station and told the front desk that he had just killed his wife, following which officers immediately attended the house on Cowdray Way in Elm Park and found Maya unresponsive on the living room floor. The wooden rounders bat was found nearby, and police also found significant amounts of blood staining on the carpet and nearby walls.

Elderly Sikh man in UK pleads guilty to murdering wife