Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trudeau set to speak with premiers to tackle Trump's tariff plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2024 11:04 AM
  • Trudeau set to speak with premiers to tackle Trump's tariff plan

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is set to meet with provincial and territorial premiers Wednesday afternoon to talk Canada-U.S. relations.

The premiers will virtually discuss a plan to tackle the threat of 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian imports by incoming U.S. president Donald Trump.

"We have to have a strategy that serves Canadians. There's no room for freelancing here," Liberal MP Yasir Naqvi told reporters on his way into a caucus meeting on Wednesday. "That's why I think the meeting that's happening today is extremely important."

Canada has vowed to beef up border security in the face of Trump's trade threats, despite a lack of evidence for Trump's claims about illicit fentanyl pouring into the U.S. from Canada.

Liberal MP Sean Casey said it's not a problem if it appears Canada is bending to Trump's pressure.

"Whether it looks like we're caving to his demands is completely irrelevant," he said as he also headed into the caucus meeting. "If his demands are aligned with the best interest of Canada, the perception of the relationship doesn't matter."

The meeting is the first time Trudeau will address the premiers after his dinner with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate.

It comes a day after Trump made a social media post referring to Trudeau as governor of "the great state of Canada" — a nod to his ribbing that Canada should join the U.S. as its 51st state.

The meeting also comes as the countdown begins for an extended winter break for the House of Commons that is set to start next week.

MPs cleared a hurdle Tuesday night by approving $21.6 billion in additional spending in a vote that came down to the wire to meet a deadline for Parliamentary to give a green light to the government.

The additional cash will fund various programs including First Nations child and family services, dental care and compensation for Quebec for the costs of caring for asylum seekers.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital
Family of an Indigenous man whose braids were cut and thrown away while he was staying in an Edmonton hospital want answers. Eve Adams says this past spring she went to visit her husband Dexter at Edmonton’s Royal Alexandra Hospital only to find the 84-year-old's braids, his eagle feather and some medicine had been put in the garbage can.

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown
Police in Vancouver say a 29-year-old man has been charged for allegedly sucker-punching a stranger in the city's downtown last month. It happened on November 28th outside the Hudson's Bay on West Georgia Street.

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown

Eight-year-old killed after crash with snowplow near Castlegar

Eight-year-old killed after crash with snowplow near Castlegar
Police in British Columbia's southern Interior say a crash between an SUV and a snowplow dump truck has killed an eight-year-old boy. A statement from the RCMP's highway patrol division says the collision happened on Highway 3 near Castlegar, B.C., on Saturday around 8 a.m., when road conditions were "cold and icy with freezing rain."

Eight-year-old killed after crash with snowplow near Castlegar

Inmate dies in at Mission Institute

Inmate dies in at Mission Institute
Correctional Service Canada says an inmate at Mission Institute has died while in custody. It says 33-year-old Tyler Damien Van Basten had been serving a nearly four-year sentence that began in January. 

Inmate dies in at Mission Institute

Fifteen fisheries charges laid a decade after Mount Polley dam breached in B.C.

Fifteen fisheries charges laid a decade after Mount Polley dam breached in B.C.
A statement from the B.C. Conservation Officer Service says it worked with the Department of Fisheries and Environment and Climate Change Canada to investigate possible contraventions of the act. 

Fifteen fisheries charges laid a decade after Mount Polley dam breached in B.C.

Sturko refuses to meet former police board vice-chair, defying B.C. Opposition leader

Sturko refuses to meet former police board vice-chair, defying B.C. Opposition leader
Sturko says in an interview she's not "challenging" Rustad, but it's "disappointing" he didn't tell her he was going to publicly post on social media that he met Comfort Sakoma-Fadugba, and Sturko should too.

Sturko refuses to meet former police board vice-chair, defying B.C. Opposition leader