亏了加拿大没有退让,Trump说要对加拿大的木材和奶制品加关税。。。从今天开始。

净扯,墨西哥那么大的问题,结局比加拿大好。至少目前看。

足见加拿大政客水平不行啊。

强硬反击。但不能逞口舌之利。

报复但是不要说。

明知川普好面子记仇。

一根筋嚷嚷出来。出卖加拿大的利益。换取自己的政治上的好处。

胖子和土豆。
言未落地呢吧。胖子就软了。哎。加拿大的政客。傻逼太多。看看人墨西哥。看看人澳大利亚。。。加拿大直奔三流国家全是这帮。。。
 
这个回合,下来,加拿大继续吃亏。踏实利用美国股市的波动。低调上实在的。才是加拿大的路子。跟老川捯饬。找虐呢吧。

两颗蛋下的老流氓。你跟他对骂。。。。?
 
言未落地呢吧。胖子就软了。哎。加拿大的政客。傻逼太多。看看人墨西哥。看看人澳大利亚。。。加拿大直奔三流国家全是这帮。。。
对不起,加拿大是四流
 
这年头就看谁狠。福特牛!


Trump reverses new tariffs threat on Canada after Ontario rescinds electricity charges​

David Goldman
By David Goldman and Elisabeth Buchwald, CNN
6 minute read
Updated 5:37 PM EDT, Tue March 11, 2025





Steel coils at the ArcelorMittal Dofasco steel production facility in Hamilton, Ontario, Monday, Feb. 10, 2025.

Steel coils at the ArcelorMittal Dofasco steel production facility in Hamilton, Ontario, Monday, Feb. 10, 2025.
Nick Iwanyshyn/The Canadian Press/AP
CNN —
President Donald Trump backed down from an extraordinary trade war escalation Tuesday that had threatened a massive surge in tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum and new tariffs on Canadian electricity. In turn, Ontario paused surcharges on electricity to US customers.

After the back-and-forth tariff threats that sent markets sharply lower for a second day Tuesday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Canada’s Minister of Finance Dominic LeBlanc and Ontario Premier Doug Ford said they would meet Thursday to renegotiate the free trade treaty known as the USMCA.

Ontario agreed to suspend its 25% surcharge on electricity exports to Michigan, Minnesota and New York. President Donald Trump earlier on Tuesday threatened a 50% tariff on the country’s aluminum and steel, a sharp escalation in the budding trade war with Canada in retaliation for Ontario’s export surcharge. But Trump later signaled he would back down.




When a reporter asked him at a White House event if that 50% tariff would still go into effect, Trump sidestepped: “I’ll let you know,” he said. Shortly after those remarks, White House senior counselor for trade and manufacturing Peter Navarro confirmed in a CNBC interview that Trump’s threat of higher tariffs won’t be going into effect.

Instead, 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum the US imports, including from Canada, are set to take effect at midnight on Wednesday, White House spokesperson Kush Desai told CNN in an emailed statement.

“It may go up higher,” Trump said Tuesday at an event hosted by the Business Roundtable. “The higher it goes, the more likely it is they’re going to build,” he said, referring to more companies moving their production to the US.

Markets initially fell sharply following Trump’s Truth Social post announcing his 50% tariff threat on Canadian aluminum and steel but pared their losses after the joint Lutnick-Ford statement. The Dow pared its losses but still fell after Trump said in comments outside the White House Tuesday that he didn’t care what happened to the stock market.

The Dow closed the day down 478 points, or 1.1%. The broader S&P 500 fell 0.8% and approached correction territory, when a stock falls 10% from its high. The Nasdaq Composite, already in correction, fell another 0.2%.

Tit for tat​

Earlier Tuesday morning, Trump said he would respond in kind to Ontario’s 25% surcharge on electricity to New York, Minnesota and Michigan with a 25% tariff on Canadian electricity. The surcharge, announced Monday, could have increases utility bills by $100 a month, according to Ford.

In addition, Trump said he would levy even larger tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum than he had planned Wednesday.

“Based on Ontario, Canada, placing a 25% Tariff on ‘Electricity’ coming into the United States, I have instructed my Secretary of Commerce to ad an ADDITIONAL 25% Tariff, to 50%, on all STEEL and ALUMINUM COMING INTO THE UNITED STATES FROM CANADA, ONE OF THE HIGHEST TARIFFING NATIONS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD,” Trump said in a social media post Tuesday.

Ford threatened to shut off electricity supply to the US entirely, and Mark Carney, Canada’s next leader, said he would continue to keep the pressure on America in response to Trump’s tariff actions.

“My government will keep our tariffs on until the Americans show us respect and make credible, reliable commitments to free and fair trade,” he said in a post on X on Tuesday before the announcement from Lutnick and Ford. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday that Trump has yet to speak with Carney but that “his phone is always open to leaders who wish to speak with him.”

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell in New York City on March 10, 2025.
Trump had said he would declare a national electricity emergency in the states Ontario targeted. “Can you imagine Canada stooping so low as to use ELECTRICITY, that so affects the life of innocent people, as a bargaining chip and threat?” he said in a Truth Social post.

Meanwhile, he threatened to “substantially” increase tariffs on cars coming into the United States from Canada starting on April 2.

The president said those autos tariffs “will, essentially, permanently shut down the automobile manufacturing business in Canada. Those cars can easily be made in the USA!”

The threat of 50% tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum comes ahead of a midnight deadline for when Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs across all steel and aluminum imports. It’s unclear if Canada would still be included in those tariffs.

Another looming threat: A 250% tariff on dairy products from Canada, which the president announced on Friday, though he has yet to finalize anything. Trump said the tariff would be in response to Canada’s taxes on American dairy products, which can be as high as 241% in the case of milk.

In an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday, Ford said such tariffs get “under (Trump’s) skin,” but said it’s all the more reason why he thinks Trump should want to “sit down and talk about it.”

A threat to the American economy, too​

While Trump’s aim is to hurt the Canadian economy by imposing higher steel and aluminum tariffs on them, the move risks hurting the American economy as well.

Canada is the top source of iron, steel and aluminum sent to the US. The US imported $11.4 billion worth of aluminum and $7.6 billion worth of iron and steel from Canada last year, according to data from the US Commerce Department. (The government data groups iron and steel together.)

Canadian aluminum exports account for 41% of all aluminum the US imported last year, while Canadian iron and steel accounted for nearly a quarter of it.

A 25% tariff on Canadian aluminum alone could cost the US 100,000 jobs, the CEO of one of the largest US aluminum makers, Alcoa, recently warned.

In total, the aluminum industry directly employs 164,000 workers in the US and indirectly employs an additional 272,000 workers within industries such as mining, construction and manufacturing, according to the Aluminum Association.

Though Alcoa is headquartered in Pittsburgh, a significant share of Alcoa’s aluminum production is located in Canada and then shipped to the US, William Oplinger, CEO of Alcoa, said at an industry conference last month.

Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers labeled the tariff threats “the worst trade policy yet.”

“It is a self-inflicted wound to the U.S. economy that we cannot afford, at a moment when recession risks are rising,” Summers said in a Tuesday post on X.

In a statement to CNN, United Steelworkers president David McCall said, “China and other bad actors for decades have abused international trade laws, undercutting our domestic industries and threatening the livelihoods of thousands of workers who play by the rules.”

“Canada, however, has always been a strong ally and should not be lumped with trade cheaters seeking to dominate global markets at our expense,” he said.

From cars to appliances​

Aluminum and steel are used heavily in an extensive list of goods. Tariffs on both metals could significantly raise prices for Americans.

For instance, cars contain hundreds, if not thousands, of pounds of steel and aluminum. So, while Trump said his “substantially” higher auto tariffs will “shut down” the auto industry in Canada, they are more likely to backfire on US auto production, given how intertwined the North American car supply chain is.

Appliances, machinery, infrastructure, medical devices, cans and power lines are all among the many commonly used products that also rely on steel and aluminum.

CNN’s Vanessa Yurkevich contributed reporting.


 

Trump will ‘probably’ reduce tariffs on Canada after Ford backs off on electricity. Live updates here.


Ontario Premier Doug Ford backed away from his surcharge on energy exports after U.S. President Donald Trump dramatically upped the ante in his trade war with Canada Tuesday.
拉到吧,胖子之前放豪言,美帝不取消关税,就涨电费,再加 就再涨,直到拉闸。才半天时间就怂了,换来的是钢铝只涨25%,咋看都是落下风了,呵呵。
 
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