Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

'Elbows up': Canadians angry, defiant as U.S. tariffs take effect

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2025 04:09 PM
  • 'Elbows up': Canadians angry, defiant as U.S. tariffs take effect

In downtown Vancouver, Sandra Mori walked out of a provincial liquor store on Tuesday with B.C. wine, and raised her elbow to the sky.

“Elbows up,” she said, referencing the common hockey term used to signal it's time to fight back. Mori, who is from Ontario and visiting her father in Vancouver, said she has been buying Canadian products from all over Canada.

“Everybody I know in Ontario, in B.C., are buying Canadian,” she said.

From coast to coast, Canadians are remaining defiant in the face of punishing U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods, promising to use their wallets to fight the trade war launched on Tuesday by President Donald Trump.

In downtown Halifax Tuesday, hours after Trump imposed 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs on products from Canada, and a 10 per cent levy on energy, Haligonians said their resolve was strong. Darcy Comeau said people should find as many alternatives as possible to goods from south of the border.

"I think we should really cut them off, and we should stay (buying) 100 per cent Canadian,” he said.

Christopher Hart, a Halifax resident who is a dual Canada-U.S. citizen, said he’s furious with Trump. "He’s done so many things that are just wrong," he said. "I didn’t vote for him, I did vote in the election. I think he’s sowing a lot of uncertainty and division."

Hart said he's a "wine guy" and California wines have long been a favourite, but he won’t buy any wine made with American grapes from now on. "I’m not going to buying any U.S. stuff, frankly. It’s sad, but it’s where I’m at," he said. 

Tom Hetherington, who was holding a Canadian flag in the heavy rain outside of the U.S. Consulate in downtown Vancouver, said he was there to show solidarity amid the trade dispute. Hetherington said his family was buying Canadian products first, and called the tariffs a “wake-up call” for Canada to be more self-sufficient.

“As an individual, I'm here to try and build a better world, a world post Trump, a better Canada, a more sustainable Canada and I'm prepared to pay a little for that,” Hetherington said.

In Edmonton, a dual Canada-U.S. citizen interviewed outside a grocery store Tuesday said she is "mortified" by Trump's behaviour, adding that she also voted against him. "This is very scary economically," Karyn Ball said.

"Canada, along with other countries in the world, needs to start thinking of this as a very urgent threat and figure out a way of defending ourselves against the fascist U.S."

Ken Mutlow, an Edmonton resident out grocery shopping, said nothing in his cart came from the U.S. "I am extremely angry with everything to do with the U.S. these days. We've been trying to buy Canadian for a while … but if it's from the U.S., we are just not buying it." 

In downtown Toronto, Claire Tallarico said she was also trying to avoid purchasing any American products at the grocery store. 

"I just looked at my vegetables a lot more closely to make sure that if I could buy something from Mexico or from Morocco that I inserted that to the shopping list instead of American products," she said. 

Tallarico said she supports removing American goods from Canadian stores, including liquor and wine. "Until this is over, this is a good move," she said. "There are a lot of great Canadian alternatives that people haven't discovered yet."

Halifax-based Narrative Research released a poll Tuesday indicating three-quarters of Canadians have changed at least one purchasing behaviour since Trump began threatening Canada with tariffs since he was elected in November. The online poll conducted from Feb. 12-14 among 1,232 Canadians over the age of 18 asked if residents had sought out Canadian products, looked at labels to avoid U.S.-made items or cancelled a trip south of the border.

Matthew Brown, who manages a restaurant in downtown Halifax, said the tariffs are a huge source of worry, and he's focused on buying local wherever possible. "I’m definitely a proud Canadian, so (I'm) going to do my part where I can to buy products that are Canadian, anything we can do for the economy. But at the end of the day, this is a scary thing," he said. 

Kevin Selch, the founder of Winnipeg-based craft brewery Little Brown Jug Brewing Co., said the national push to buy local is encouraging, but the initiative is ultimately a short-term fix.

The Manitoba government dedicated $140,000 last month to a four-week blitz ad campaign aimed at supporting Manitoba businesses that may be harmed by U.S. tariffs.

Selch said it's too soon to know how impactful the ad campaign has been for the beer industry, adding that the real test will be if people stick to buying Canadian products long term. “It's good people are being super local, but maybe their shopping habits overall change as time goes on or as conditions change. Everybody is price sensitive,” Selch said.

Selch is anticipating the tariffs will create a “huge chill” on the business. While the brewery tries to source local products, it relies on the U.S. for machinery and the aluminum beer cans. Tariffs could work out to a five to six cent increase per can, he said.

“That doesn’t sound like a lot, but it has a big impact,” Selch said. “At the end of the day the consumer will pay for it.”

In response to the across-the-board tariffs, the federal government on Tuesday announced immediate 25 per cent retaliatory tariffs on $30 billion worth of American products, and will expand them to cover another $125 billion in U.S. goods in 21 days. 

MORE National ARTICLES

With the House of Commons prorogued, some key Liberal legislation may not pass

With the House of Commons prorogued, some key Liberal legislation may not pass
Gov. Gen. Mary Simon granted Justin Trudeau's request Monday to prorogue Parliament until Mar. 24, suspending activities of the House of Commons while the Liberals move to replace him as both Liberal Leader and prime minister. The move means the legislative agenda will be reset once the House of Commons reconvenes in March and some key pieces of legislation for the government may die on the order paper. 

With the House of Commons prorogued, some key Liberal legislation may not pass

Trump responds to Trudeau's resignation with dig about 51st state

Trump responds to Trudeau's resignation with dig about 51st state
Trump reiterated his rhetoric about Canada joining the United States in a post on Truth Social after Trudeau’s announcement that he will resign as Liberal leader and prime minister as soon as a new leader is chosen.

Trump responds to Trudeau's resignation with dig about 51st state

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit
The B-C Supreme Court says WestJet must turn over harassment complaint files spanning years covered by a long-running class-action lawsuit launched by flight attendants over alleged sexual harassment by company pilots. The court ruling says WestJet has been slow to hand over documents in the case, which was filed in 2016 by lead plaintiff Mandalena Lewis.

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial
The two men found guilty of human smuggling in the case of a family from India who froze to death while trying to walk across the Canada-U.S. border in Manitoba in 2022 are seeking acquittal, or new trials. The two men, Steve Shand of Florida and Harshkumar Patel, an Indian national arrested in Chicago, were convicted by a Minnesota jury in November on all four counts each were facing.

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank
Edmonton Police have laid charges after a woman was found dead on a bank of the North Saskatchewan River last week. In a news release, police say a 31-year-old man has been arrested and charged with second degree murder.

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019
Government data shows the number of Albertans receiving provincial income support has reached a five-year high. As of October, almost 57,500 residents were getting income support.

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019