WASHINGTONâU. S. President Donald Trump claimed again on Monday that his threat to impose tariffs on Canadian-made cars forced the Trudeau government into concessions on NAFTA.Trump made the assertion while also calling the Canadians tough negotiators and saying the new agreement is good for both countries.âYou know, we think of O Canada. Well, O Canadaâs tough. Theyâre tough. And I said, âLook, you know, you`re either gonna do this or we`re gonna put 20, 25 per cent tariffs on your cars that you ship in here by the millions,â he told a gathering of U.S. governors at the White House.âAnd every time we had a problem, weâd just say, âThatâs OK, donât worry about it, weâll put the tariffs on.â They said, âOK, fine, thatâs OK, weâll sign.ââTrump is still thinking about imposing tariffs on cars imported from Europe and Asia. In the agreement on the revised NAFTA, which Trump calls the USMCA, Canada secured a de facto exemption from any future Trump auto tariffs.Trump made a similar claim about his tariff threat in âoff the recordâ remarks last year to Bloomberg. In those remarks, obtained and published by the Star, he claimed he was scaring the Canadians into submission by showing them a photo of the Oshawa-made Chevrolet Impala.Adam Austen, a spokesperson for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, said the government kept its promise of making a good deal for Canada.âWe held out for that good deal and that is what we achieved. The new NAFTA supports good, middle-class jobs in Canada; strengthens economic ties between the three countries; and safeguards the more than $2 billion a day in cross-border trade and tariff-free access for more than 70 per cent of Canadian exports,â Austen said in an email.Trump returned Monday to his regular complaint about Canadaâs high dairy tariffs, claiming that âwe did something about it ...
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