Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. senators in Ottawa urge Carney to quickly repeal digital services tax

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2025 10:45 AM
  • U.S. senators in Ottawa urge Carney to quickly repeal digital services tax

A U.S. senator is calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney to move quickly on repealing the digital services tax.

"You all, to your credit, said you're not going to collect it. I asked that Canada move as quickly as possible to get a law passed in Parliament making sure that it's gone permanently," Ron Wyden, a Democratic senator from Oregon, told media Monday following a meeting between Carney and a bipartisan delegation of four U.S. senators in Ottawa.

"The prime minister was receptive to that," Wyden added. "He said he would get on it in the fall."

Carney said in late June he would eliminate the tax — just before a hefty retroactive payment was due that would have cost big U.S. tech companies an estimated $2 billion.

The move came after U.S. President Donald Trump called a halt to bilateral trade talks over the tax, which would have imposed a three per cent levy on tech giants that generate revenue from Canadian users, such as Google, Amazon and Uber.

While the Canada Revenue Agency is not asking for payments to be made through the tax, it has said it will not issue refunds to those who have already paid until Parliament passes a law formally ending the tax. Google also has said it will wait until that law is passed before refunding customers who paid a surcharge it imposed last year in response to the tax.

The House of Commons is currently on summer break and is set to return on Sept. 15.

The senators were in Ottawa to discuss the ongoing trade conflict between Canada and the U.S.

In addition to Wyden, the delegation included Democratic senators Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, and Republican Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.

Carney, who did not stop to talk to reporters after the meeting, remarked that it was a "very good" discussion.

A media advisory from the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance said the four senators planned to "reaffirm the importance of ties between the United States and Canada" in meetings with Carney and other top government officials.

In a letter to Carney on July 10, Trump threatened to impose 35 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods by Aug. 1, setting a new deadline for trade talks that were supposed to wrap up by now.

Carney told reporters last week that a trade deal with the U.S. will likely include some tariffs, and that he expects talks with the U.S. to “intensify” ahead of the Aug. 1 deadline.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told an American television audience on Sunday that Canada will pay tariffs unless it opens its market to the United States.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Ex-Mountie sentenced for 'reckless' cannabis business securities violations in B.C.

Ex-Mountie sentenced for 'reckless' cannabis business securities violations in B.C.
The court ruling says six years after Jasvindar Singh Basi retired from the RCMP he incorporated a cannabis company called GrowX Global Corp., and its business plan was "centred" on building a production facility in Mission, B.C. 

Ex-Mountie sentenced for 'reckless' cannabis business securities violations in B.C.

National employment numbers for June from Statistics Canada, at a glance

National employment numbers for June from Statistics Canada, at a glance
A quick look at Canada's June employment figures

National employment numbers for June from Statistics Canada, at a glance

Health minister says rare-disease funds denied again for B.C. girl Charleigh Pollock

Health minister says rare-disease funds denied again for B.C. girl Charleigh Pollock
Health Minister Josie Osborne says in a statement that she knows the outcome of the review process is not what the family of Charleigh Pollock wanted. 

Health minister says rare-disease funds denied again for B.C. girl Charleigh Pollock

Here's a quick glance at unemployment rates for June, by province

Here's a quick glance at unemployment rates for June, by province
Canada's national unemployment rate was 6.9 per cent in June.

Here's a quick glance at unemployment rates for June, by province

Cyclist struck while training with Mountie for B.C. fundraiser dies of injuries

Cyclist struck while training with Mountie for B.C. fundraiser dies of injuries
Mounties say Shane Kelly was a "community rider" who had been training with an officer from the detachment for the Cops for Cancer Tour de North fundraiser. 

Cyclist struck while training with Mountie for B.C. fundraiser dies of injuries

Surprisingly strong June jobs numbers quash Bank of Canada rate cut odds

Surprisingly strong June jobs numbers quash Bank of Canada rate cut odds
Statistics Canada said Friday that the unemployment rate dropped a tenth of a percentage point to 6.9 per cent in June as the economy added some 83,000 jobs.

Surprisingly strong June jobs numbers quash Bank of Canada rate cut odds