Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Carney to meet with cabinet, premiers following Trump's latest tariff threat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2025 10:08 AM
  • Carney to meet with cabinet, premiers following Trump's latest tariff threat

Prime Minister Mark Carney will be meeting with his cabinet and Canada's premiers to discuss U.S. President Donald Trump's new threat to slap 35 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods next month. 

The Prime Minister's Office announced there will be a cabinet meeting on Tuesday to discuss ongoing Canada-U.S. trade negotiations. Carney's office said he also will meet with the premiers on July 22 as they gather for the annual Council of the Federation conference in Huntsville, Ont.

Carney said Thursday his government will "steadfastly" defend workers and businesses. In a late night post on social media, Carney said Canada will continue to work to secure a trade deal with the U.S. by a revised deadline of Aug. 1.

In a letter to Carney on Thursday, Trump threatened to impose 35 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods by that date — evidently setting a new deadline for the trade talks that were supposed to wrap up by July 21.

Asked about the tariff threat while leaving the White House Friday morning, Trump told reporters that "it was sent yesterday. They called. I think it was fairly well received."

A spokeswoman for the Prime Minister's Office said Carney and Trump did not speak Thursday night. She said that while officials from both countries meet daily as trade talks continue, Thursday's meeting took place before Trump sent his tariff letter.

Trump's letter said if Canada works to stop the flow of fentanyl into the United States, he may consider a tariff adjustment.

Fentanyl seizures are up slightly this year at the shared border. U.S. Customs and Border Protection has seized about 26 kilograms of the drug at the Canada-U.S. border to date this fiscal year, up from 19.5 kilograms last fiscal year.

That still pales in comparison to fentanyl seizures at the United States' southern border, where U.S. border agents have seized nearly 3,700 kilograms so far this fiscal year.

A White House official said the 35 per cent tariff rate is only expected to be applied to goods already hit with a 25 per cent import tax. This would exempt goods compliant with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, plus energy and potash imports that face a 10 per cent tariff rate.

The official said no final policy paper has been drafted and Trump has not yet made a final decision.

Canada also faces additional U.S. tariffs on steel, aluminum and automobiles, as well as a U.S. plan to introduce tariffs on copper on Aug. 1.

In a post on social media, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said that in the face of Trump's latest tariff threat, "we need to come together" and develop a plan to protect Canadian workers, business and communities.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith discouraged Ottawa from imposing retaliatory tariffs, saying it would "constitute a tax on Canadian consumers and businesses and only weaken Canada’s economy further."

In a post on social media, Smith said the federal government should also drop "Trudeau-era anti-resource development laws."

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said on social media that his party supports increasing trade ties with the European Union. He also accused Carney of "failing" by focusing on investments in the oil and gas sector, which he said would only affect trade "well after Donald Trump's departure."

Lana Payne, national president of Unifor, said on social media there's only one word to describe Trump's tactics — "extortion." Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre called the latest tariff threat an "unjustified attack on Canada's economy." 

The tariffs would mean higher prices for Americans and continued damage to the "most productive trade relationship two countries have ever had," said Candace Laing, CEO of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

"Rather than public threats and ultimatums, the Canadian Chamber hopes to see both governments continue their ongoing talks in good faith and behind closed doors, with the aim of reaching a real and reliable economic and security relationship in the near term," Laing said in a media statement.

The "consistent attacks" on Canada have damaged a "vital relationship," said United States Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, adding "this action even undermined his own Administration’s negotiations to reach a trade deal."

The Democrat from New Hampshire said she's heard many complaints about tourists not coming from Canada and lost business due to Trump's trade war.

"The American people and the overwhelming majority of my colleagues in Congress reject this short-sighted and costly trade war with Canada," Shaheen said in a news release.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

MORE National ARTICLES

Texas flood to create safety planning 'ripple effect' at Canadian camps: organizers

"I would be shocked if there aren't a lot of people that are looking at this and taking pause, even reflecting on their own policies," said Brad Halsey, an Alberta summer camp director and board vice chair of the Alberta Camping Association.

Texas flood to create safety planning 'ripple effect' at Canadian camps: organizers

One of two student pilots killed in Manitoba crash was from India: consulate office

One of two student pilots killed in Manitoba crash was from India: consulate office
The consulate general of India in Toronto, in a social media post, identifies the man as Sreehari Sukesh.

One of two student pilots killed in Manitoba crash was from India: consulate office

Defence expected to find operational savings even as budget balloons: Ottawa

Defence expected to find operational savings even as budget balloons: Ottawa
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne sent letters to ministers on Monday asking them to find savings of 7.5 per cent in their budgets starting in fiscal 2026.

Defence expected to find operational savings even as budget balloons: Ottawa

Alberta has highest measles cases per capita in North America as summer travel gets underway

Alberta has highest measles cases per capita in North America as summer travel gets underway
The province’s former chief medical officers of health Dr. Mark Joffe says that’s twice the rate of confirmed cases in Ontario.

Alberta has highest measles cases per capita in North America as summer travel gets underway

The Conservative party raised a record amount in 2024 — and spent even more

The Conservative party raised a record amount in 2024 — and spent even more
The Tories brought in $42 million in donations and another $5 million in membership fees last year.

The Conservative party raised a record amount in 2024 — and spent even more

Fire sparked by RCMP trailer near Lytton, B.C., is being held and will be downgraded

Fire sparked by RCMP trailer near Lytton, B.C., is being held and will be downgraded
The BC Wildfire Service says the change is due to "significant efforts" of firefighters with the help of favourable weather, which means the Izman Creek blaze will no longer be considered a wildfire of note.

Fire sparked by RCMP trailer near Lytton, B.C., is being held and will be downgraded