Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 1, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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W
ASHINGTON — U.S. President
Donald Trump said Friday he
is considering a lower tariff
on Canadian oil as the White House
confirmed he is going forward with 25
per cent levies on imports from Canada
today.
As he signed executive actions in
the Oval Office on Friday, Trump was
asked directly if he intends to hit Can-
adian crude with tariffs.
“I’m probably going to reduce the tar-
iff a little bit on that,” Trump said. “I
think we’re going to bring it down to 10
per cent on the oil.”
While answering a different question,
Trump also floated the idea of oil tar-
iffs coming on Feb. 18. It was not clear
if that statement was in relation to Can-
ada.
The prospect of a lower levy on oil
likely offers little relief to Canadian
officials in Washington, D.C., making
a final diplomatic push to convince Re-
publican lawmakers and Trump’s team
to sway the president.
The president said there is nothing
that Canada, Mexico or China can do
to prevent the tariffs from being imple-
mented.
“We have big deficits and it’s some-
thing we are doing. We’ll, we’ll possibly
very substantially increase it or not,
we’ll see how it is,” Trump said.
While the president wasn’t clear on
the details of his tariff plan, he repeat-
ed his complaints about trade deficits
and again linked the duties to fentanyl
entering the United States.
Earlier Friday, Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau said Canada is ready to deliver
a “purposeful, forceful but reasonable
immediate” response to the tariffs.
The federal government has said it has
multiple options for retaliatory tariffs
ready to deploy, depending on what
Trump ultimately does.
The Prime Minister’s Office said he
did not personally discuss the tariffs
with Trump on Friday.
Trudeau met with a Canada-U.S.
cabinet committee Friday as Foreign
Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, Public
Safety Minister David McGuinty and
Immigration Minister Marc Miller
met with Republican officials in Wash-
ington, D.C., including Trump’s border
czar Tom Homan, in a last-ditch at-
tempt to avert the tariffs.
“We continue to believe that we have
a very strong case when it comes to,
first, our border, and second, also to our
trade relations,” Joly said.
Despite the extensive outreach on the
eve of the tariff deadline, the ministers
said they don’t know what might hap-
pen. If the tariffs are imposed, Canada
will have a “strong retaliation plan,”
Joly said.
White House Press Secretary Karo-
line Leavitt on Friday denied Trump’s
tariffs would cause a trade war.
It will be up to the president to decide
when or how to roll the tariffs back,
Leavitt said.
Trump claimed tariffs don’t cause
inflation. He acknowledged Friday that
“there could be some temporary short-
term disruption” but said “people will
understand that.”
Trump initially claimed his 25 per
cent tariff threat was in response to
what he called the failure by Canada
and Mexico to curb the illegal flow of
people and drugs across the border.
His complaints have since expanded
far beyond border security.
The volume of drugs entering the
United States from Canada is minus-
cule compared to the amounts coming
from Mexico and China.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
figures show that officials seized 9,930
kilograms of fentanyl at American bor-
ders between October 2023 and Sep-
tember 2024.
Only 20 kilograms of that amount
came from Canada.
Canada responded to Trump’s con-
cerns with a $1.3 billion border secur-
ity plan.
Some officials and experts have sug-
gested the damaging duties are part of
Trump’s strategy to rattle Canada and
Mexico ahead of a mandatory 2026 re-
view of the trilateral trade pact.
Trump has denied the recent threat
of tariffs was part of a plan to expedite
negotiations.
Miller said he does not believe the
duties are actually about border con-
cerns, migration and fentanyl. The
minister said, “we need to convince the
Americans that it isn’t.”
He said part of that effort involves
presenting key Republicans with facts
about the border in the hope it will sway
Trump.
“We went into these meetings with
no guarantees and we certainly can’t
guarantee that to Canadians tonight,”
Miller said in Washington Friday. “But
I think Canadians would want us to
make that effort.”
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio
said Thursday the tariffs are “not hos-
tile moves,” adding he doesn’t think
Canada poses a strategic threat to the
United States. Pointing to his meeting
with Joly earlier this week, Rubio said
Canada and the U.S. have shared inter-
ests along the border.
“They’re good friends. I mean, we
work with them on a lot of things,” Ru-
bio said on The Megyn Kelly Show. “We
have a deep partnership with them …
but there are some issues we’re going
to need to address.”
Speaking before the meeting of the
Council on Canada-U.S. Relations in To-
ronto on Friday, Trudeau said Canada
“could be facing difficult times in the
coming days and weeks.”
“I won’t sugar-coat it,” he said.
Premiers have disagreed on how
Canada should respond if Trump fol-
lows through on his threats. Alberta
Premier Danielle Smith and Saskatch-
ewan Premier Scott Moe have said ex-
ports of oil and other resources should
not be included in retaliation plans.
Smith’s office said Friday that the
premier is waiting, along with everyone
else, to see the details.
“The premier has been clear from the
start that any tariffs imposed by the
U.S. on Canadian goods will hurt Amer-
ican and Canadian consumers, workers
and businesses,” the statement said.
Ontario Progressive Conservative
Leader Doug Ford called for a dol-
lar-to-dollar tariff response during a
campaign stop in Niagara Falls, Ont.
Ultimately, Ford said, provincial and
territorial leaders remain united.
“We have to show strength, being
united, and emphasize to the federal
government that we have to retaliate
hard. Not soft, hard,” Ford said.
— The Canadian Press, with Associated Press files
NEWS
VOL 154 NO 70
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers remarks Friday at the Council on Canada-U.S. Relations meeting at the Ontario Investment and Trade Centre in Toronto.
EVAN VUCCI / AP PHOTO
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of
the White House Friday in Washington.
Trump says 25% tariffs set to start, but oil might get reduced rate
Canada ready to respond, ministers make final U.S. push
KELLY GERALDINE MALONE
;