Canadian prime minister says Canada will match US auto tariffs
[April 04, 2025] By
ROB GILLIES
TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday that Canada will
match U.S. President Donald Trump’s 25% auto tariffs with a tariff on
vehicles imported from the United States.
Trump's previously announced 25% tariffs on auto imports took effect
Thursday. The prime minister said he told Trump last week in a phone
call that he would be retaliating for those tariffs.
"We take these measures reluctantly. And we take them in ways that is
intended and will cause maximum impact in the United States and minimum
impact in Canada,” Carney said.
Carney said Canada won't put tariffs on auto parts as Trump has done,
because he said Canadians know the benefits of the integrated auto
sector. The parts can go back and forth across the Canada-U.S. border
several times before being fully assembled in Ontario or Michigan.
Carney said Canadians are already seeing the impact.
Automaker Stellantis said it shut down its assembly plant in Windsor,
Canada, for two weeks from April 7, the local union said late Wednesday.
The president of Unifor Local 444, James Stewart, said more scheduling
changes were expected in coming weeks.
Carney said that will impact 3,600 auto workers that he met with last
week.

Autos are Canada’s second-largest export and the sector employs 125,000
Canadians directly and almost another 500,000 in related industries.
Carney announced last week a CA$2 billion ($1.4 billion) “strategic
response fund” that will protect Canadian auto jobs affected by Trump’s
tariffs.
Trump previously placed 25% tariffs on Canada’s steel and aluminum. And
Carney said Canada can expects further tariffs on pharmaceuticals,
lumber and semi-conductors.
[to top of second column] |

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks about tariffs during a
news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Thursday April 3,
2025. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press via AP)
 “Given the prospective damage to
their own people the American administration should eventually
change course,” Carney said. “Although their policy will hurt
American families, until that pain becomes impossible to ignore, I
do not believe they will change direction, so the road to that point
may indeed be long. And will be hard on Canadians just as it will be
on other partners of the United States.”
Carney, a former two-time central banker in Canada and the U.K, said
Trump’s actions will reverberate in Canada and across the world.
“They are all unjustified and unwarranted and in our judgement
misguided,” Carney said.
Canada’s initial $30 billion Canadian (US$21 billion) worth of
retaliatory tariffs remain in place, having been applied on items
like American orange juice, peanut butter, coffee, appliances,
footwear, cosmetics, motorcycles and certain pulp and paper
products.
Carney suspended his election campaign to return to Ottawa to deal
with Trump's tariffs.
Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre said he would remove
the federal tax on Canadian made vehicles.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford, whose province has the bulk of Canada’s
auto industry, called Canada’s latest tariffs a “measured response.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |