Some tariff-relief deals countries signed with U.S. are worthless, Carney tells CBC

1 hour ago 7
Mark Carney and Donald TrumpPrime Minister Mark Carney meets with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 7, 2025. Photo by Jim WATSON/AFP via Getty Images

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Prime Minister Mark Carney told the CBC he’s in no hurry to sign a minor deal for tariff relief with the U.S., arguing that other governments that have done so aren’t happy with the results.

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“A lot of countries rushed into deals with the U.S.. They weren’t really worth the paper they were written on,” Carney told the broadcaster in an interview that aired Monday.

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In private, other countries’ leaders are “certainly not” happy with the agreements they signed to reduce U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on their goods, Carney said — though he didn’t name them.

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Trump has threatened to change some deals after he signing them, such as a pact with the U.K.

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Unlike many countries, a large majority of goods from Canada are currently imported tariff-free by U.S. buyers, thanks to an exemption recognizing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement signed by Trump in 2020. Canada is a huge supplier of oil, fertilizer and other raw materials to the U.S., and adding import taxes to those would add to U.S. inflationary pressures.

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But high U.S. tariffs against foreign autos, steel, aluminum and lumber are hitting Canada’s economy and causing job losses because those industries are interlinked with the U.S. market.

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Carney told the CBC he doesn’t want to strike an imperfect “small deal that disadvantages us” simply to win relief in those industries.

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“We could sit down this afternoon and hammer the whole thing out over the course of 10 days if the U.S. side — which has other things to do, I acknowledge that — had the bandwidth and the inclination to go through it,” he told the CBC. “But it takes two to negotiate it through, and they’re not all the way there.”

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Carney’s CBC interview comes days after senior U.S. and Canadian officials shared a flurry of public updates on the roadblocks each side sees as they approach a scheduled review of the CUSMA.

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U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer threatened unspecified “enforcement action” because Canadian provinces have taken U.S. alcohol out of state-run liquor stores in retaliation for U.S. tariffs. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also lambasted Canadian limits on dairy imports.

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Carney fired back last week, calling U.S. tariffs a violation of the countries’ 2020 trade deal. His new chief trade negotiator said Canada wants to see some recognition by the White House that Canada has already made concessions on trade, such as removing a digital services tax at Trump’s request.

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There has been little public progress in Canada-U.S. tariff talks since October. The two countries were close to a limited deal on metals before Trump terminated negotiations. The president said it was in retaliation for an anti-tariff television commercial from the province of Ontario which quoted former U.S. President Ronald Reagan.

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Carney said there’s no doubt that the final decision on trade issues is up to one man. “He’s the decision-maker, full stop, on these issues and all other issues,” the prime minister said of Trump.

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