This week President Trump imposed a 25% tariff on imported steel and a 10% tariff on imported aluminum products from Canada, Mexico, and the European Union. The rationale was that this was done for reasons of National Security. In view of the very modest size of Canada’s military and the longstanding, peaceful relationship between the two countries, this explanation is ludicrous.
We are also being led to believe that the President apparently took these actions to protect jobs in the steel and aluminum industries, to correct what he deems as unfair trade practices by other countries and to bully Canada and Mexico into making concessions on the new NAFTA agreement that has been under negotiation for many months. Again, these are weak reasons to damage the strongest trade relationship between any two nations in the world.
In the case of NAFTA, the most recent sticking point has become the “sunset clause.” Vice President Mike Pence advised Prime Minister Trudeau last week that he'd have to accept this clause, which would make the trade agreement subject to renegotiation every five years. Trudeau said he couldn't accept the terms. The sunset clause is just one sticking point. The U.S. is also seeking changes to the "rules of origin" that govern how much of a car must be manufactured in North American to avoid import taxes in the three countries that make up NAFTA.
As a Canadian businessperson, I have two messages for Prime Minister Trudeau, push back hard against these bullying tactics and hit President Trump where it hurts. As the world has seen, persuasion, charm, diplomacy, and logical reasoning don’t work with this president. The fact is that both French President Macron and German Chancellor Merkel, two long-time allies, went to the White House in recent weeks to reason with him. Their visits appear to have had no impact.
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