Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump’s trade actions inspire Canadians to boycott U.S. goods

- Zlati Meyer

Natalie McLellan no longer stocks Heinz ketchup, Florida oranges or any other foods that come from the U.S. at her home in LaSalle, Ontario.

The 42-year-old autism consultant is one of a growing number of Canadians who are boycotting U.S. products, a decision motivated by President Donald Trump’s anti-Canadian sentiments and tough trade stance.

“I really don’t feel comfortabl­e supporting our neighbors,” McLellan said. “It seems Trump and the politician­s and the people of your country who stand behind him don’t want to have a global community.”

The U.S. has imposed tariffs on Canadian lumber, steel and aluminum. As Trump left the Group of 7 meeting of industrial nations in Quebec last week, he criticized Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a tweet, calling him “very dishonest & weak” for pushing back against the tariffs.

Trump withdrew the United States from a joint document that summarized what was agreed to at the G-7 summit.

Now, hashtags such as #BoycottUSA, #BuyCanadia­n and #VacationCa­nada — and their French equivalent­s in the bilingual nation — are bubbling among patriotic Canadians. Some are avoiding everything American, whether it is fresh and packaged food, U.S.based retailers and chain restaurant­s, appliances, cars or travel destinatio­ns.

For household staples, McLellan opts for either similar Canadian-made products or does without.

She has turned to the internet to help her find non-American products. She’s canceling plans for trips to see Detroit’s

profession­al sports teams, such as MLB’s Tigers, the NFL’s Lions and the NHL’s Red Wings.

Canada is the U.S.’ second-largest trading partner behind China.

U.S. goods and services trade with Canada totaled an estimated $673.9 billion in 2017 – $341.2 billion in exports and $332.8 billion in imports – according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive.

The U.S. is Canada’s biggest trading partner, so a boycott risks veering into “this will hurt me more than it’ll hurt you” territory.

Yet some Canadians are determined to see it through.

For Toronto property developer Vivienne Grace Ziner, the commitment to avoid American building materials and plumbing fixtures for her real-estate projects means spending as much as 50 percent more. Her purchases include Canadian-produced goods targeted by the U.S., such as steel or lumber.

“Trump changed the rules. He started slapping on tariffs. It’s illogical, and its detrimenta­l to all of us,” Ziner said. “The more intransige­nt he would get, the more intransige­nt I would get.”

Tony Woodcock of Salmon Arm, British Columbia, hopes he can make a dent on behalf of Canada. He has been looking for a new car and a new computer. But instead of purchasing the Jeep and the Microsoft Surface laptop he has been eyeing, the 70-year-old insurance broker is considerin­g a Toyota or Nissan SUV — “but not one manufactur­ed in the U.S.A.” — and a Lenovo computer from China.

“I will put off my purchases until the Trump administra­tion deletes the tariffs on Canadian goods,” he said in an email.

He also is avoiding Walmart, Costco, Home Depot and Starbucks and is thinking about replacing the Hawaiian vacation he has planned at year’s end with a trip to Cuba.

Robyn Berry, 56, of Courtenay, British Columbia, is shopping for a washer and dryer, but brands such as GE and Whirlpool now are off the table.

Recently, when she couldn’t find nationally sourced blueberrie­s, she opted for blackberri­es grown in Mexico. Berry buys strawberri­es produced in the province for $6.99 — instead of containers twice as big from California that retail for $3.99.

“I’m not very happy with what’s going on,” the retired bingo caller said. “The only way I can speak is with my dollars.”

There’s even talk of more countries joining Canada in a more generalize­d boycott.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States