Edmonton Journal

Trudeau warns Trump over auto tariffs

PM questions Trump’s bid to connect national security to alleged trade threat

- DAN HEALING

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he plans to tell U.S. President Donald Trump that his threat to slap tariffs of up to 25 per cent on vehicle imports would have an “incredibly negative effect” on the American economy.

The president’s request on Wednesday that U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross consider whether the imports of automobile­s and auto parts threaten national security is likely linked to troubled negotiatio­ns to rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement, the prime minister said.

“We know everything is tied to the ongoing negotiatio­ns with NAFTA,” Trudeau told reporters in La Malbaie, Que., site of the upcoming G7 Summit in early June.

“It’s clear we don’t take anything lightly but it’s certain that to try and understand what the links are between the national security of the U.S. and cars potentiall­y made in Ontario, it’s starting to become less and less pertinent or justified in any kind of rigorous or intellectu­ally logical way.”

Tariffs that hurt Canada will hurt the competitiv­eness of the U.S. auto industry as well, Trudeau said, adding some automobile pieces cross the border six times before they end up in an assembled car.

“We will continue to be very firm in our defence of Canadian auto workers while underlinin­g that to attack Canada, it will end up hurting the U.S. too, and no one wants that,” the prime minister said.

The tariff threat is “perplexing ” because it would make cars more expensive in the United States if imposed, said David Adams, president of Global Automakers of Canada, which represents Japanese car manufactur­ers Honda Motor Company, Ltd. and Toyota Motor Corp.

“The prospect of a tariff on imported vehicles is obviously disconcert­ing and I would think particular­ly so for American consumers who would end up paying more for their vehicles,” he said Thursday.

The harm in Canada caused by tariffs would vary depending on how severe and wide ranging they are, he said.

“Maybe other countries were in mind when the president was contemplat­ing that but the reality is the two largest importers into the United States are Canada and Mexico,” he said.

The Canadian auto sector supports about 500,000 direct and indirect jobs, according to the Canadian Vehicle Manufactur­ers Associatio­n. About 95 per cent of Canadian-made vehicles are exported to the United States.

A vehicle tariff that includes Canada could penalize American manufactur­ers Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Corp., which have assembly plants in Canada, as well as Italian-American Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV.

The tariffs could be devastatin­g, but it’s doubtful the U.S. will go through with them because the resulting higher costs would give competitor­s in Europe and elsewhere a competitiv­e advantage, said Sui Sui, an associate professor at Ryerson University’s Ted Rogers School of Management.

“From Canada’s side, higher tariffs mean higher prices and also less demand,” she said. “In that case, there’s the possibilit­y that factories close down, things move to the U.S.”

The threat is typical of Trump’s “brinkmansh­ip” negotiatin­g style, she added, and not necessaril­y indicative of his intentions.

Talks aimed at rewriting NAFTA have stalled between the U.S., Canada and Mexico, with the discussion­s at an impasse over rules for car production. The initiation of the trade investigat­ion could be seen as an attempt to gain leverage in the talks with the two U.S. neighbours.

Trump said in a statement on Wednesday that “core industries such as automobile­s and automotive parts are critical to our strength as a nation.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said that efforts to renegotiat­e the trade agreement could spill into next year.

Trump brought a little-used weapon to his fight to protect autoworker­s: Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. The provision authorizes the president to restrict imports and impose unlimited tariffs on national security grounds.

The Trump administra­tion used that authority in March to slap tariffs of 25 per cent on imported steel and 10 per cent on aluminum imports, although it gave a reprieve to Canada and Mexico.

Critics fear that other countries will retaliate or use national security as a pretext to impose trade sanctions of their own.

The tariff threat is likely meant to pressure Mexico into accepting U.S. demands for NAFTA changes that would shift more auto production to the U.S. from Mexico, said Daniel Ujczo, a trade lawyer with Dickinson Wright PLLC.

But he questioned whether it would work.

“I do not believe that it will have the desired effect,” Ujczo said. “Everyone knows that (the investigat­ion) will take too long and has no chance of surviving any legal challenge.”

Mexico has so far resisted U.S. attempts to get higher regional content rules in the auto industry and move production to higher-wage U.S. and Canadian factories.

 ?? CHINATOPIX VIA AP ?? Customs officials inspect cars being loaded for export at a port in China. The launch of a U.S. trade investigat­ion into whether the imports of autos and auto parts threaten national security is seen as a possible attempt by the U.S. to gain leverage...
CHINATOPIX VIA AP Customs officials inspect cars being loaded for export at a port in China. The launch of a U.S. trade investigat­ion into whether the imports of autos and auto parts threaten national security is seen as a possible attempt by the U.S. to gain leverage...

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