Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Doug Ford eyes Ontario electricity exports as way to 'hit back' against U.S. tariffs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2025 12:20 PM
  • Doug Ford eyes Ontario electricity exports as way to 'hit back' against U.S. tariffs

Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford is musing about making Americans pay more for the electricity Ontario sends to the United States, in response to any levies President Donald Trump imposes on Canadian goods and services.  

"We're reviewing the cost of electricity we're sending down there. And if he puts tariffs on anything in Canada or Ontario, they're getting a tariff on their electricity," Ford said at a campaign stop in Ottawa on Tuesday. 

"And then we'll go to the next stage and we'll wait to see that happens from there."

Ford gave no further details on the proposed measure, or how it would fit in with his previously announced plan to cut off energy exports to the U.S. should Trump move forward with sweeping tariffs now set to kick in next week.

Trump said Monday the tariffs, which were pushed back to March 4 after Canada agreed to introduce new security measures at the border, are "going forward on time, on schedule."

His executive order calls for 25 per cent tariffs on all Canadian imports, with a lower 10 per cent levy on Canadian energy.

Ford said Tuesday that he doesn't want a tariff war, "but if someone comes in and starts attacking our families, attacking our businesses and attacking everything we do in Canada, that's it, I'm full in there. 

"I'm in the ring and I'll do whatever it takes to make sure that we hit back and they feel the pain like we feel the pain." 

Ford has made economic stability in the face of possible tariffs the centrepiece of his campaign, arguing he needs a stronger mandate to navigate the next four years of a Trump presidency.

But the other party leaders have called the snap election unnecessary given that the Progressive Conservatives already held a majority and would have received support for stimulus measures.

Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie said Tuesday that Ford should have diversified Ontario's economy and worked to eliminate interprovincial trade barriers a long time ago, once again accusing him of calling the election for personal gain. 

Asked whether she would, as premier, leverage Ontario's electricity exports in a potential trade war, Crombie said it's important to remember how integrated the province's energy grid is with states across the border.

"It’s something we have to look at very closely, the impact of our energy grid," she said at a campaign stop in Toronto on Tuesday. 

Crombie spent most of her news conference fielding questions about her endorsement of federal Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney, two days before the provincial election.

She said the presumed front-runner is "the right person for this moment in time."

"He is a leader that can stand up to Donald Trump and speak with some authority and experience on tariffs," she said. 

Carney thanked Crombie for her endorsement in a social media post, writing: "Wishing you the best this Thursday, and let's keep building!"

Asked whether she interprets that as an explicit endorsement from Carney in return, Crombie said, "I certainly do."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trump signs order imposing 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum

Trump signs order imposing 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum
U.S. President Donald Trump has signed executive orders slapping 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports into the United States, including Canadian products. U.S. President Donald Trump is slapping 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports into the United States, including Canadian products.

Trump signs order imposing 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate
Liberal leadership candidate Ruby Dhalla says that while she's still working on her French skills, she plans to ask for a translator to help her in the party's upcoming French-language debate. Dhalla is one of the five leadership candidates who will face off in two debates in Montreal later this month, one in French and another in English.

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says
The Assembly of First Nations says children and their families who lived under Canada's First Nations child welfare system from 1991 to 2022 can apply for a class action settlement starting in March. National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak says the settlement is an acknowledgment of the harms First Nations people experienced under a "racist system that has broken so many lives and families."

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada should charge 100 per cent tariffs on Tesla vehicles for as long as its trade war with the United States continues. He also says in a new release today that a government led by him would revive the federal government's incentive program for electric vehicle purchases.

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving
A male pedestrian is dead after he was struck by what police are describing as an impaired driver in Abbotsford..... Police say the crash happened this morning in the 30000 block of Harris Road, where a white Dodge pickup truck had struck a power pole with enough force to shear off the pole.

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey
Police in Surrey are on the lookout for a suspect involved in two unprovoked attacks in the city that sent one person to hospital. Surrey police say the attack took place at an unspecified business on 120 Street, where the suspect began by physically assaulting a staff member.

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey