Canada, Donald Trump and Mark Carney
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Doubling down on his trade wars, President Trump is threatening to raise taxes on many goods from Canada and punish Brazil for prosecuting his friend.
The announcement came Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump's latest escalation of his tariff threat against Canada.
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Irish Star on MSNMark Carney's defiant five-word statement as Trump imposes 35% tariffsCanadian Prime Minister Mark Carney responded on Friday to President Donald Trump's threats to impose a 35% tariff on Canada starting Aug. 1, an increase from the initial 25% tariff rate he had set earlier this year.
The letter reiterated Trump’s complaints about dairy quotas, fentanyl and the U.S. trade deficit, which is mostly fueled by American refineries’ thirst for Canadian oil. His social media post caused the Canadian dollar to immediately tumble, indicating the market wasn’t expecting this escalation.
Canada’s PM Carney rejects Trump’s fentanyl claims amid 35% tariff threat. US-Canada trade talks extended to August 1 as global tariffs escalate.
A day after President Trump announced a new 35 percent tariff on Canadian goods beginning next month, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada had made “vital progress” towards stopping fentanyl.
Prime Minister Mark Carney says U.S. President Donald Trump has multiple objectives in his trade talks with various countries, including how it will impact the U.S. budget.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's statement came after US President Donald Trump said the new tariff rate would go into effect on August 1 and would go up if Canada retaliated.
Trump insiders maintain that it would make little sense — politically or from a policy standpoint — for the president to offer any further extensions on trade.