Trump rejects resuming Canada trade talks after Reagan tariff ad dispute
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US President Donald Trump speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Oct 31.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
- Trump refuses trade talks with Canada due to an anti-tariff advert, despite Carney's apology and a "good relationship".
- Trump imposed a 10% tariff increase on Canadian products after ending bilateral trade talks.
- The breakdown reverses relations; sectoral levies impact Canada, causing job losses and squeezing businesses.
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WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump on Oct 31 flatly rejected any resumption of trade negotiations with Canada, one week after interrupting talks amid a dispute over an anti-tariff advertisement.
“I really like him a lot,” the president said, of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, as he addressed journalists aboard Air Force One.
“But what they did was wrong.”
So “no,” discussions will not resume, Mr Trump said in response to a reporter’s question, even though Mr Carney “apologised for what they did with the commercial because it was a false commercial”.
Mr Trump reacted strongly to a Canadian anti-protectionist advertising campaign: after abruptly ending bilateral trade talks, he then imposed an additional 10 per cent increase in tariffs
The Republican nevertheless reiterated that he had a “good relationship” with Mr Carney and that they had had a positive discussion on the sidelines of the Apec summit in South Korea.
A few days earlier, at another summit in Malaysia, Mr Carney had for his part repeated that Canada was ready to resume trade negotiations with Washington.
The breakdown of talks represents a sudden reversal in relations between two historic allies that have been shaken by Mr Trump’s return to power.
Canada is the United States’ second-largest trading partner and a major supplier of steel and aluminium to US companies.
The vast majority of cross-border trade remains exempt from tariffs due to the North American free trade agreement, but sectoral levies – particularly on steel, aluminium, and automobiles – have hit Canada hard, forcing job losses and squeezing businesses. AFP

