Times Colonist

Canada planning $3.6-billion retaliatio­n against U.S. goods

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland delivered a blistering rebuke of U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest trade tirade Friday, calling his decision to bombard Canada with new tariffs on aluminum absurd, useless and unjustifie­d.

Freeland said Canada will retaliate within the next 30 days with $3.6 billion in import tariffs on American goods that contain aluminum, after consulting with industry in Canada on which products to hit.

Freeland was speaking in Toronto a day after Trump announced he was reimposing a 10 per cent import tax on Canadian raw aluminum because Canada had broken a promise not to flood the U.S. market with the product. Freeland said that was not true and imposing trade penalties in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic is “unnecessar­y, unwarrante­d and entirely unacceptab­le.”

“In imposing these tariffs, the United States has taken the absurd decision to harm its own people at a time its economy is suffering the deepest crisis since the Great Depression,” she said. “Any American who buys a can of beer or a soda or a car or a bike will suffer.”

In fact, the washing machines that formed a backdrop for Trump during his announceme­nt at a Whirlpool factory in Ohio Thursday, will cost more because of the tariffs, she said.

Washing machines are on a list of more than five dozen aluminum-containing products that Canada is considerin­g for retaliator­y tariffs. So are bicycles, golf clubs, hockey sticks, playground equipment, and aluminum foil.

Freeland said the goal is to inflict the least damage on Canada while having the “strongest possible impact” on the United States. She said the retaliatio­n will be “reasonable” but match the U.S. tariffs “dollar for dollar.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who the Liberals used to enjoy comparing to Trump, echoed Freeland’s criticisms of the U.S. president. The two spoke early Friday about the tariffs. Freeland said she thanked Ford for his support and his friendship.

Ford encouraged Canadians to buy made-in-Canada products over U.S.-made ones to remind Trump that Canadians are Americans’ biggest internatio­nal customers.

“Who does this?” Ford, said. “In times like this, who tries to go after your closest ally, your closest trading partner, your No. 1 customer in the entire world? President Trump did this.”

He also raised the spectre of Trump going after Canadian steel with tariffs as well. In 2018, the Trump White House slapped a 25 per cent tariff on Canadian steel and 10 per cent on aluminum. Those were lifted in May 2019.

Freeland said the White House would need to answer any questions about steel but noted that in the last couple of months the threats coming out of Washington, and the conversati­ons Canada was having with them, were related only to aluminum.

The U.S. says Canadian producers increased the amount of raw aluminum going into the U.S. more than 80 per cent since the tariffs were lifted in 2019. The Aluminium Associatio­n of Canada said raw aluminum shipments increased because the COVID-19 pandemic shut down factories, cancelling orders for processed aluminum products such as car parts for auto manufactur­ers.

Because smelters cannot just be turned off, they continued to produce the raw products. It was shipped to the U.S. for storage for use later on. The associatio­n said as factories resumed operations in June and July, more valueadded goods were exported and less raw aluminum.

Bruce Heyman, a former U.S. ambassador to Canada, said he has not heard specifical­ly that steel will be targeted. He said he does worry Trump is “trying to pick a fight” because he is trailing in the polls ahead of the November presidenti­al election.

“This is just so bad,” said Heyman, who is backing Trump’s Democratic opponent Joe Biden in the presidenti­al race.

“It so clearly has the stench of pure politics and it affects real jobs and real lives.”

Heyman said Canada had no choice but to retaliate and it seems to be an equivalent response, but he does worry it will provoke Trump into a trade war that he thinks will help him woo American voters.

In 2018, when the first tariffs were applied to steel and aluminum, Canada hit back with $16.6 billion in tariffs on products. Many were politicall­y aimed to hurt factories and workers in electoral districts held by key Republican­s. Heyman said there were many Republican­s who complained to the White House about that.

This time, he said, he doesn’t think those voices will mean anything to Trump. “He’s fighting for his own survival right this minute,” Heyman said.

Jack Mintz, president’s fellow in the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, said retaliator­y tariffs are politicall­y attractive, but may wind up hurting Canada as much as they do the United States.

He said the U.S. tariffs are opposed by some members of the aluminum industry in the U.S. and Canada should work with those allies to try to head off such antifree-trade moves. He also noted that Trump and Biden are both promoting “U.S.-first” policies as they try to enlist voter support.

Biden said this week he would re-evaluate U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, but has not weighed in on the aluminum tariffs yet.

Heyman said he thinks that if Democrats gain control of both the White House and Congress, there could be a review of the White House’s use of national security as an excuse to impose tariffs on imports.

 ??  ?? Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland at a news conference in Toronto on Friday.
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland at a news conference in Toronto on Friday.

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