Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Chrystia Freeland pitches tariff response plan that would target U.S. businesses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2025 12:37 PM
  • Chrystia Freeland pitches tariff response plan that would target U.S. businesses

Liberal leadership candidate Chrystia Freeland said Monday that Canada can avoid massive U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods by scaring the Americans away from the idea.

In a media statement, the former finance minister called on the federal government to release a list of $200 billion in retaliatory tariffs to prepare for U.S. President Donald Trump to make good on his threat to impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian imports.

She said Ottawa must immediately consult with industry and put together a detailed, dollar-for-dollar retaliation plan that targets prominent American imports such as Florida oranges, Wisconsin dairy products and Michigan dishwashers.

"Donald Trump is using uncertainty to unsettle Canadians. We must do the same," she said in a statement emailed to supporters. "U.S. exporters need (to) worry whether their businesses will be the ones we hit."

Freeland, who is seeking to frame herself in the Liberal leadership race as the candidate best able to deal with Trump, is calling for a "buy Canadian" response to tariffs that would threaten to cut the U.S. off from Canadian government procurement, with the exception of defence.

Rival leadership candidate Mark Carney told Radio-Canada over the weekend that Canada should retain the option of cutting off Quebec's hydro exports to the U.S. — although that's not the first card he would play.

Trump recently mused about slapping 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian exports to the U.S. as soon as Feb. 1.

Ottawa has opted to keep its full list of retaliatory countermeasures secret for now, and is instead trying to make the case directly to American consumers that tariffs would increase prices.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters on Parliament Hill last Thursday that if the U.S. does move ahead with the tariffs, his government is ready to respond and that every option remains on the table.

"Our efforts are first and foremost to make sure that tariffs don’t come on Canada," he said. "If they do move forward on tariffs, we are ready to respond in a strong way, but in a way that will be stepping up gradually with one goal ... to figure out how to get them removed as quickly as possible."

Liberal leadership candidates only have hours left to sign up party members who can vote in the race; the cutoff deadline is set for 5 p.m. Monday.

They face a Thursday deadline to pay the party a non-refundable $50,000 entry fee.

MORE National ARTICLES

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump
Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland says her promise to repeal changes to the capital gains tax was made in response to Donald Trump's election in the United States. Freeland is running to be the next leader of the Liberal party and the next prime minister.

Freeland says she's abandoning capital gains tax change because of Trump

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus
Construction is underway on additional student housing on the Vancouver Island University campus in Nanaimo. BC's Ministry of Post-Secondary Education says the addition will provide 266 new beds along with study rooms, lounge areas, shared kitchens and a 200-seat dining hall.

Additional housing for Nanaimo campus

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured
A suspect has been charged with second-degree murder in a shooting in British Columbia's northeast that left one person dead and another injured. Mounties in Dawson Creek say a 23-year-old man has been arrested and remains in custody pending a court appearance Thursday.

Man charged with murder in B.C. shooting that left one dead, another injured

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum
U.S. President Donald Trump told an elite global audience today that he is going to ask the OPEC+ alliance of oil exporting countries to bring down the cost of oil. He made the comments in a wide-ranging address to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Trump calls on OPEC to bring down cost of oil at World Economic Forum

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog
British Columbia's ombudsperson says he's satisfied the provincial government has fixed a problem that shortchanged caregivers of children with disabilities to the tune of more than $1 million in federal funding.

Payments to shortchanged caregivers of kids with disabilities satisfy B.C. watchdog

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire
Mounties in Hope say two recreational vehicles were destroyed in a fire that also damaged two others last night. They say officers, firefighters and paramedics responded to the fire in the area of the American Creek Forest Service Road.

2 recreational vehicles destroyed in fire