Sun. Jun 29th, 2025
Trump Halts Trade Negotiations with Canada

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U.S. President Donald Trump has announced the cessation of trade negotiations with Canada, citing the country’s planned enforcement of a tax policy targeting major technology companies.

The announcement, made via social media, comes as the two nations were engaged in discussions aimed at reaching a trade agreement by mid-July.

Tensions have risen between the U.S. and Canada following the imposition of tariffs on each other’s goods, a situation that originated earlier this year when President Trump initiated a trade dispute and raised the possibility of exerting “economic force” against Canada.

On Friday, the U.S. President stated that he was terminating trade talks due to what he characterized as an “egregious tax” on technology firms, further indicating that new tariffs on goods crossing the border would be announced within the week.

“We are hereby terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada, effective immediately,” President Trump wrote on social media.

“We will let Canada know the Tariff that they will be paying to do business with the United States of America within the next seven day period.”

In brief comments to reporters, Prime Minister Mark Carney suggested that talks would continue.

“We will continue to conduct these complex negotiations in the best interest of Canadians,” he said.

Canada’s 3% digital services tax, enacted last year, has been a point of contention in its relationship with the U.S., with the first payments due on Monday.

Business groups estimate that the tax will cost American companies, including Amazon, Apple, and Google, more than $2 billion annually.

Canadian officials had previously stated their intention to address the digital services tax as part of trade discussions with the U.S.

There were hopes that the relatively warm relationship that newly-elected Carney has forged with Trump might help those negotiations.

The president’s latest move casts doubt on a future deal, though Trump has often used social media threats to try to gain leverage in talks or speed up negotiations he sees as stalling.

Last month, for example, he threatened to ramp up tariffs on goods arriving to US shores from the European Union, only to climb down a few days later.

Candace Laing, chief executive of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce which has been critical of the digital services tax, said that “last-minute surprises should be expected” as the deadline for a deal approaches.

“The tone and tenor of talks has improved in recent months, and we hope to see progress continue,” she added.

During Trump’s first term, the White House fought hard as many countries began considering taxes on digital services.

But Inu Malak, fellow for trade policy at the Council on Foreign Relations, noted that the issue was left unresolved in the trade deal the US and the UK reached earlier this year, suggesting some flexibility.

She said Trump’s threat seemed like a move to ramp up pressure out of his typical negotiating “playbook – but was also a sign the president had refocused on Canada, which could open the way for a deal.

“It does provide a bit of an opening – maybe not the one that Prime Minister Carney wanted … but it does provide some space for them to hasten those talks,” she said.

The US is Canada’s top trade partner, buying more than $400bn in goods last year under a longstanding free trade agreement.

But Trump hit that trade with a new 25% tariff earlier this year, citing concerns about drug trafficking at the border.

New US tariffs on cars, steel and aluminium have also scrambled relations. Car parts, for example, cross US, Mexican and Canadian borders multiple times before a vehicle is completely assembled and such import taxes threaten supply chains.

Trump later carved out exemptions for some goods in the face of widespread alarm from businesses in both the US and Canada, which has hit back with tariffs of its own on some US products.

Shares in the US fell on Friday after Trump said he was cutting off talks, but later bounced back with the S&P 500 closing at a record high.

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