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In a statement on Saturday evening, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said Trump’s tariffs are “disappointing and will damage both our countries’ economies, workers and consumers.”
Premier Scott Moe said Trump’s tariffs are “disappointing and will damage both our countries’ economies, workers and consumers.”
In a statement on Saturday evening, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said Trump’s tariffs are “disappointing and will damage both our countries’ economies, workers and consumers.”
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United States President Donald Trump has started a trade war with Canada, imposing a 10 per cent tariff on Canadian energy an a 25 per cent tariff on all other Canadian goods, scheduled to go into effect on Tuesday.
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“We don’t need anything they have,” Trump said in a social media post on Sunday, referring to Canadian energy, cars and lumber.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada would respond with its own set of 25 per cent tariffs, beginning with a targeted selection of American goods including alcohol, furniture and natural resources. More duties on American goods could follow by the end of the month.
Moe said he supports “very targeted and specific retaliatory measures to initial tariffs,” while the province works with businesses and other governments “to find common ground on this important issue to ensure that damaging tariffs are removed as quickly as possible.”
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Also on Saturday, Saskatchewan NDP leader Carla Beck said MLAs should immediately return to the legislature on Monday to hash out the province’s response to this new economic landscape and “put a stop to a no-win trade war.”
In 2023, among Canadian provinces, Saskatchewan was the top per-capita exporter, selling $49.3 billion in goods including potash, crude oil and agricultural equipment to international markets.
The United States accounted for over 50 per cent of those exports — but that number had fallen from the previous year. Meanwhile, Saskatchewan was exporting more goods to China, Germany, Algeria, the U.K and Latin America.
In 2023, the United States bought $6.7 billion worth of Saskatchewan agri-food products alone. The province’s next-biggest international food buyer, China, purchased $4.3 billion worth of agri-food goods.
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In a statement on Sunday, Canadian Federation of Agriculture president Keith Currie said it is “no question” that the incoming tariffs will have “negative consequences for farmers and consumers on both sides of the border.”
— with files from The Canadian Press and Nykole King
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