Chattanooga Times Free Press

Canada announces final list of retaliator­y tariffs

- BY ROB GILLIES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TORONTO — Canada announced billions of dollars in retaliator­y tariffs against the U.S. on Friday in a tit-for-tat response to the Trump administra­tion’s duties on Canadian steel and aluminum.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government released the final list of items that will be targeted beginning Sunday. Some items will be subject to taxes of 10 or 25 percent.

“We will not escalate and we will not back down,” Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said.

The taxes on items including ketchup, lawn mowers and motor boats amount to $12.6 billion.

“This is a perfectly reciprocal action,” Freeland said. “It is a dollar-for-dollar response.”

Freeland said they had no other choice and called the tariffs regrettabl­e.

Many of the U.S. products were chosen for their political rather than economic impact. For example, Canada imports just $3 million worth of yogurt from the U.S. annually and most of it comes from one plant in Wisconsin, the home state of House Speaker Paul Ryan. The product will now be hit with a 10 percent duty.

Another product on the list is whiskey, which comes from Tennessee and Kentucky, the latter of which is the home state of Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell.

Freeland also said they are prepared if U.S. President Donald Trump escalates the trade war.

“It is absolutely imperative that common sense should prevail,” she said. “Having said that our approach from day one of the NAFTA negotiatio­ns has been to hope for the best but prepare for the worst.”

Trump has explained the steel and aluminum tariffs by saying imported metals threatened the United States’ national security — a justificat­ion that countries rarely use because it can be so easily abused. He is also threatenin­g to impose another national security-based tariff on imported cars, trucks and auto parts. That threat could be a negotiatin­g ploy to restart talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Freeland said there are no grounds for further U.S. tariffs in response to Canada’s actions.

Canadians are particular­ly worried about auto tariffs because the industry is critical to Canada’s economy. Freeland said such tariffs would be “absurd” because the North American auto industry is highly integrated and parts made in Canada often go to cars manufactur­ed in the U.S. and then sold back to Canadians.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI ?? President Donald Trump talks with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a G-7 Summit welcome ceremony in Charlevoix, Canada earlier this month.
AP FILE PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI President Donald Trump talks with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a G-7 Summit welcome ceremony in Charlevoix, Canada earlier this month.

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