Medicine Hat News

Trump vows to lower tariff hammer on steel, aluminum; Canada braces for impact

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WASHINGTON The United States will impose widerangin­g tariffs on steel and aluminum, President Donald Trump declared Thursday, prompting allies to fume, stock markets to fall and analysts to fret about long-term consequenc­es that could rattle the internatio­nal trading system.

After months of suspense, the president released only the barest of details about his plans: a 25 per cent tariff on steel and a 10 per cent tariff on aluminum, numbers that in both cases were higher than had been expected.

“We’ll be signing it next week,” Trump told a gathering of industry leaders. “And you’ll have protection for a long time.”

Several American allies have already said they would retaliate, including the European Union. News of the tariffs sent stock markets plunging, along with the Canadian dollar. One major unknown lingers: whether Canada — the No. 1 supplier of both steel and aluminum to the U.S. — is on the hit list.

Trump was known to be weighing a variety of options — massive tariffs on just a few countries believed to ship dumped Chinese steel, a quota limiting imports or a tariff on the entire world, including Canada, around 24 per cent. The penalty he announced Thursday sounded most like the latter.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland described the idea of tariffs on Canada as “absolutely unacceptab­le.”

“Should restrictio­ns be imposed on Canadian ... products, Canada will take responsive measures to defend its trade interests and workers.”

The drama started with the Trump administra­tion unsheathin­g a weapon rarely used in the trade world: a so-called national security exception. American law allows the president to order tariffs if it’s declared a matter of national security.

Trump technicall­y has until next month to make a decision. But he had already made clear he was itching to pull the trigger on tariffs. U.S. news reports described a vigorous battle within the White House between the free-traders and the protection­ists who share the same impulses as the president.

Some of Trump’s political allies were livid.

The issue appeared to split the president from prominent Republican­s. He drew condemnati­on not only from the establishm­ent wing of his party, including powerful senator Orrin Hatch, but also from anti-establishm­ent conservati­ves, like Mark Meadows, who leads the right-wing caucus on Capitol Hill.

Meadows tweeted: ‘’Tariffs on steel and aluminum are a tax hike the American people don’t need and can’t afford.’’

Trump has received multiple pleas to spare Canada.

The Pentagon even published a letter urging him not to target allies. During consultati­ons, witness after witness urged the government to make a special exception for Canada, given the joint auto sector, shared aluminum market and the integrated defence-industrial complex served by the metals.

Even the unions supporting tariffs have lobbied for a Canadian exemption. That includes the well-connected United Steelworke­rs union, which has members in both countries, and a president who is from Canada, Leo Gerard.

Gerard has been urging the administra­tion to leave his home and native land out of it.

“To put Canada in the same boat as Mexico, or China, or India, or South Korea ... doesn’t make sense,” he said in an interview.

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Donald Trump

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