Canada will match US tariff exemptions under USMCA trade pact, Prime
Minister Carney says
[August 23, 2025] By
ROB GILLIES
TORONTO (AP) — Canada is dropping many of its retaliatory tariffs to
match U.S. tariff exemptions for goods covered under the United
States-Mexico-Canada trade pact, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced
Friday.
Carney said Canada will include the carve-out that the U.S. has on
Canadian goods under the 2020 free trade deal that shields the vast
majority of goods from the punishing duties, easing Canada's previous
stance on holding the line on punitive tariffs until U.S. President
Donald Trump relents more on those imposed by the U.S.
Some Canadian politicians and union leaders characterized Carney's move
as capitulation, but the prime minister accentuated what he considered
Canada's favorable position so far and said that the exemptions would
jump-start further trade talks with Washington.
“Canada currently has the best trade deal with the United States. And
while it’s different from what we had before, it's still better than
that of any other country,” Carney said.
Carney and Trump spoke on the phone Thursday, and Carney met with his
Cabinet on Friday before making the announcement.
“We had a very good call,” Trump said Friday in the Oval Office. “We are
working on something. We want to be very good to Canada. I like Carney a
lot. I think he’s a very good person." He also said: “I am fighting for
the United States, and Canada and Mexico have taken a lot of our
business over the years."

Carney said Trump told him that lifting the tariffs would reset trade
negotiations. The United States-Mexico-Canada trade pact, or USMCA, is
up for review in 2026, and Carney called the pact a unique advantage for
Canada at a time when it is clear that the U.S. is charging for access
to its market.
Carney said the commitment of the U.S. to the core of USMCA means that
over 85% of Canada-U.S. trade continues to be free of tariffs. He said
the U.S. average tariff rate on Canadian goods is 5.6% and remains the
lowest among all its trading partners.
Canadian and Mexican companies can claim preferential treatment under
the USMCA.
Canada and China are the only countries that have retaliated against
Trump in his trade war. Canada imposed 25% tariffs on a long list of
American goods in March, including oranges, alcohol, clothing and shoes,
motorcycles and cosmetics.
Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau initially put on retaliatory
tariffs in response to U.S. tariffs, but before the U.S. tariffs were
applied the Trump administration exempted goods covered by the free
trade deal.
Most imports from Canada and Mexico are still protected by the USMCA,
but U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has said, “I think the
president is absolutely going to renegotiate USMCA.”
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Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks during a news conference at the
National Press Theatre in Ottawa on Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (Spencer
Colby/The Canadian Press via AP)
 Preserving the free trade pact will
be critical for Canada and Mexico. More than 75% of Canada’s exports
go to the U.S. while more than 80% of Mexico’s exports go there.
Trump has announced some sector-specific tariffs that do apply for
Canada despite the USMCA — known as 232 tariffs — which are having
an impact on the Canadian economy. There is a 50% tariff on steel
and aluminum imports, for example.
“Canada and the United States have reestablished free trade for the
vast majority of our goods," Carney said. “Canada will retain our
tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos as we work intensively to
resolve the issues there.”
Carney previously rescinded Canada's plan to tax U.S. technology
firms after Trump said he was suspending trade talks with Canada
over those plans, which he called “a direct and blatant attack on
our country.”
The prime minister disputed any notion that Canada is appeasing
Trump, noting that Canada is matching what the U.S. is doing.
“The president and I had a long conversation,” Carney said. “There
is a review of the free trade agreement in the spring. We're
starting our preparations.”
Lana Payne, president of Unifor, Canada’s largest private sector
union, characterized Carney's announcement as Canada backing down,
and said the country shouldn't back down unless the U.S. drops all
punitive tariffs.
“Trump’s attacks on auto, steel, aluminum, and forestry sectors are
hurting Canadian workers in real time,” she posted on social media.
“Walking back counter-tariffs isn’t an olive branch. It only enables
more U.S. aggression.”
Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre called it a
capitulation by Carney. Poilievre said he would have gone to the
U.S. president and asked him respectfully to remove all the tariffs.
"Any small tariff on Canada, any amount, by the United States has an
outsized effect because more than 20% of our economy is exports to
the U.S.,” he said.
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