‘We don’t need cars made in Canada’: Trump calls CUSMA ‘irrelevant’ and takes aim at Canada
Trump dismisses CUSMA during a Michigan Ford plant tour, emphasizing U.S. raw material use and domestic car production over Canadian or Mexican imports.
- U.S. President Donald Trump says the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement on trade is 'irrelevant' to him and Americans don't need Canadian products.
- Trump said he doesn't care about the CUSMA trade deal but 'Canada would love it' and needs it, stating 'We don't need cars made in Canada, we don't need cars made in Mexico, we want to make them here.'
- While CUSMA has helped Canada avoid widespread impacts of tariffs, the steel and aluminum, lumber and auto sectors have been hit hard, and Trump highlighted tariffs on vehicles imported from China.
24 Articles
24 Articles
The quote was indicated in red. On the same day that the statistical office published the inflation data of the 2025 closing, the president of the United States, Donald Trump, had scheduled a trip to Detroit, the industrial heart of the country, to deliver a speech of economic content. There, in the city known as Motor City, while traveling the facilities of the car giant Ford, the president minimized the commercial agreement with Canada and Mex…
Trump calls CUSMA 'irrelevant' to U.S. as he tours Ford auto plant
U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday said the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement — the trade pact also known as CUSMA — is not relevant for the U.S., but Canada wants it, as he pushed for companies to bring manufacturing back to American soil.
Trump says Americans 'don't need' Canadian products, calls CUSMA 'irrelevant'
U.S. President Donald Trump says the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement on trade is "irrelevant" to him and Americans don't need Canadian products.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 69% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium













