Trump’s ambassador predicts Canada trade deal — with a catch

29 May 2025
Trump’s ambassador predicts Canada trade deal — with a catch

Assahafa.com

There’s some good news and some bad news for Canada from U.S. President Donald Trump’s ambassador to Ottawa.

First, the good news: He suggests a new Canada-U.S. agreement is achievable in the not-too-distant future, and it would benefit both countries.

The bad news? Don’t count on tariff-free trade again.

Pete Hoekstra made the remarks Wednesday at a conference in his home state of Michigan, where he also bemoaned what he described as recent anti-Americanism in Canada.

“The president and the prime minister would like to get to a resolution sooner rather than later,” Hoekstra said during a panel at the Mackinac Policy Conference.

“We will get through this.”

He predicted a stronger Canada-U.S. relationship in the end.

Tariffs won’t fully disappear, ambassador says

As a specific example, he mentioned the auto sector, declaring that Canada and the U.S. are not competitors — China is the competition, he said.

But there’s a catch. Based on the ambassador’s remarks, Canada should not assume tariffs will disappear entirely.

“The president has made it very clear: There will be tariffs for every country wanting to do business in the United States,” Hoekstra said.

Investors are poking fun at U.S. President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again tariff threats, calling it ‘TACO’ trade — which stands for ‘Trump Always Chickens Out.’ When asked about the term, Trump called it a ‘nasty question.’ CBC’s Katie Simpson reports.

This actually leaves Canada in an advantageous position, Hoekstra said: Depending on how these negotiations go, Canada could have the best trade access to the U.S. of any country.

He said Trump has already dropped most tariffs on Canada. Indeed, Canada does not have an across-the-board 10 per cent levy Trump imposed on most countries.

But it does have a 25 per cent steel and aluminum tariff, like most of the world, as well a 25 per cent tariff on certain products not traded under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico pact.

Based on remarks from both countries, it sounds like Ottawa and Washington envision trade talks happening in two phases. They’re now discussing a deal to resolve a limited set of grievances, then, in several months, plan to start working on an update to the broader Canada-U.S.-Mexico pact.

Hoekstra out of step with Trump

It’s unclear how much weight to place on the ambassador’s predictions.

Events this week demonstrated that he isn’t always in sync with the boss. Even on a fundamental question, perhaps the most fundamental one: Will his country keep talking about annexing the neighbour?

Hoekstra said one thing, and the U.S. president contradicted him within days.

Heading into his first question period Wednesday, Prime Minister Mark Carney was asked by a reporter if he was considering an ‘offer’ by the U.S. president for Canada to spend $61 billion US on a new missile defence system. Carney said ‘it’s not an offer’ as he walked past.

Last week, the ambassador even sounded annoyed Canadians keep mentioning annexation: “Move on,” Hoekstra told CBC. “I’m not talking about it; Donald Trump is not talking about it.”

That position barely lasted through the weekend.

On Tuesday, Trump made another pitch for Canadian annexation, promising savings on a missile-defence system if Canada joins the U.S.

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But Hoekstra continued Wednesday to suggest Canadians are being overly emotional. He called it outrageous that provinces have banned U.S. liquor sales.

He lamented that there has been no constituency in Canada expressing pro-U.S. opinions over the last four to six months — not even the business community.

“Both political parties kind of ran on a platform of anti-Trump, anti-America. That’s an obstacle,” he said.

“You had both parties running basically an anti-American agenda. The business community has largely been silent.”

His stated timeline — four to six months ago — coincides with when Trump mused about impoverishing Canada, using economic force to pressure it to join the U.S.

Source: cbc

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