Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

U.S. steel, plastics among items Canada may target with retaliatory tariffs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2025 03:20 PM
  • U.S. steel, plastics among items Canada may target with retaliatory tariffs

Canada is looking to target American steel, ceramics, plastics and orange juice with retaliatory tariffs in response to threats of hefty duties on Canadian imports by the incoming Trump administration.

A senior government official said Ottawa has made no decisions yet on retaliation, and is not prepared to share the full list of items under consideration.

The selective release of certain retaliation plans comes just a week and a half before incoming U.S. president Donald Trump's inauguration, and a week before Trudeau and the premiers meet in Ottawa next Wednesday to discuss Canada's response plan, which includes retaliatory tariffs.

Trump has threatened to impose 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico as one of his first orders of business when he is sworn in on Jan. 20.

Experts said it's the right move for Canada to signal that it's prepared for a fight, since the country would surely lose a wider trade war and risk escalation if Ottawa threatened similar across-the-board tariffs.

Laura Dawson, a trade expert and executive director of the Future Borders Coalition, said it's a decision Ottawa no doubt made reluctantly because Canada has a lot of economic exposure and tariffs are ultimately paid for by consumers and importers.

"By leaking or sharing or hinting about what's on the list, it's trying to signal to the White House that Donald Trump's tariffs will be costliest to Americans," she said.

CBC News first reported this week that a draft list was circulating among a small group of top officials in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government, including by targeting Florida's orange juice.

"The strategy that trade officials take when devising these retaliation lists is that you want to find products that are iconic, that will be recognizable," Dawson said. "That's why they pick things like orange juice because it's something that people can easily understand, and it's something that's localized to a region that Trump cares a great deal about, and that's Florida voters."

But she also said Canada can't slap tariffs on items with such surgical precision, since it's done by product categories. Ottawa can levy tariffs on orange juice, but not something so specific as only Minute Maid or orange juice from Florida without also hiking prices on juice made in California and other states.

Matthew Holmes, executive vice president at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said floating targeted items is a better move than making a full-on blanket threat of across-the-board tariffs, which could invite escalation and kick off a trade war Canada can't win.

"You never want to get into a full competition with the U.S. Treasury," he said. "The scope and scale of their market, their depth of internal trade is a very different economy than the one Canada has, which is premised largely on import/export trade. We're not going to win if it's a pure war of attrition."

When asked to respond to Canada prepping its retaliatory tariff list, the Trump team said the tariffs are in the best interest of U.S. consumers.

“President Trump has promised tariff policies that protect working Americans from the unfair practices of foreign companies and foreign markets," said Brian Hughes, a spokesperson for the Trump-Vance transition team. "As he did in his first term, he will implement economic and trade policies to make life affordable and more prosperous for our nation, while simultaneously levelling the playing field for American manufacturers.”

Canada announced in December a $1.3-billion plan to beef up border security in response to Trump's tariff threats, but that has not deterred Trump, who doubled down on his rhetoric this week.

Canada fought back against U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs during Trump's first term by targeting specific American products like playing cards, ketchup and bourbon to put political pressure on Trump and key Republicans.

Holmes said Canada needs to sell Trump's tariff threat as a "tax on everyday Americans" and target specific supply chains or states that will be critical to Trump in the midterm elections in two years time.

But the midterms, set for November 2026, also give Trump a long runway. The U.S. is still bearing some of the costs of tariffs from Trump's first term, such as those levied on Chinese imports which President Joe Biden didn't remove.

"They can go deep, they can go long. It's really how much the American consumer is willing to tolerate in terms of the affordability prices they're facing because this will up costs," Holmes said.

MORE National ARTICLES

No injuries in Langley plane crash

No injuries in Langley plane crash
Mounties say no one was hurt in a small plane crash in Langley on Thursday. R-C-M-P says officers along with ambulance services responded to a report of a possible plane crash yesterday afternoon.

No injuries in Langley plane crash

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages
They are some of the hundreds — possibly thousands — of Canadian line workers who have been called into service to help rebuild power grids after Helene and now Hurricane Milton have left millions of Americans in the dark.

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post
In a letter to the party and Surrey South candidate Brent Chapman, the association says a statement like the one he posted on Facebook nine years ago "promotes division and hate" and it's imperative he be asked to step down.

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel
The sentencing decision by B.C. provincial court Judge Reginald Harris says 31-year-old Anthony Woods must instead continue to live at a recovery home in the Interior for the first year of his two-year conditional sentence. 

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel

B.C. billionaire posts third large sign criticizing NDP ahead of the election

B.C. billionaire posts third large sign criticizing NDP ahead of the election
British Columbia billionaire Chip Wilson has put up yet another billboard message to voters, his third post outside his multimillion-dollar mansion in NDP Leader David Eby's own riding.  The latest sign outside the Lululemon co-founder's home says that if Eby and his party can't balance B.C.'s budget then “what right does he have to tell us how to live our lives?”

B.C. billionaire posts third large sign criticizing NDP ahead of the election

Trudeau repeats call for Lebanon ceasefire after third Canadian killed in conflict

Trudeau repeats call for Lebanon ceasefire after third Canadian killed in conflict
The prime minister offered condolences today to the family of a Canadian who was killed in the ongoing fighting in Lebanon. Justin Trudeau reiterated Canada's call for a ceasefire in Lebanon and in Gaza when he spoke with reporters at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit in Laos.

Trudeau repeats call for Lebanon ceasefire after third Canadian killed in conflict