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Carney says renegotiating CUSMA likely won’t resolve all trade issues with U.S.
- Prime Minister Mark Carney, President Donald Trump, and Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc met at the White House on Tuesday to discuss Canada-U.S. trade relations.
- Canada sought these talks as ongoing U.S. tariffs continue to affect industries such as steel, auto, energy, and lumber despite an existing trade agreement.
- During the meeting, Trump told reporters tariffs on Canadian goods will continue, while LeBlanc pressed for tariff relief with U.S. officials.
- Carney indicated that the United States intends to maintain tariffs on specific industries, and cautioned that the forthcoming trade discussions are unlikely to address every outstanding concern.
- With formal talks on the trade agreement scheduled for next year, Canada is actively pursuing temporary arrangements in the meantime.
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Carney Says USMCA Renegotiation Unlikely to Resolve All Trade ‘Issues’
U.S. tariffs on certain Canadian sectors will likely remain in place even with a re-negotiated United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) in 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney says. Carney made the comments at an Oct. 10 press conference, saying approximately 85 percent of trade with the United States remains tariff-free, and “one of the possibilities” is that this would continue under a revised USMCA deal. “But what’s also very clear is that t…
·New York, United States
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+21 Reposted by 21 other sources
Carney says renegotiating CUSMA likely won't resolve all trade issues with U.S.
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada
·Winnipeg, Canada
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Total News Sources34
Leaning Left18Leaning Right2Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution75% Left
Bias Distribution
- 75% of the sources lean Left
75% Left
L 75%
C 17%
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