U.S. Negotiates ’In Good Faith’ Despite New Tariffs, Says Canada’s Trade Minister

Trade tensions flare—but Ottawa insists Washington isn’t playing dirty.
Tariffs vs. Trust
Canada’s trade minister doubles down on U.S. negotiations, claiming goodwill persists even as fresh tariffs bite. No numbers? Classic political theater—just like a meme stock’s 'fundamentals.'
The Fine Print
Behind the diplomatic smiles: steel, aluminum, and enough passive-aggressive subtext to fuel a crypto Twitter feud. Will 'good faith' hold? Or is this another case of 'buy the rumor, sell the news'?
Closer
Either way, someone’s getting taxed—just not the hedge funds.
Canada tries to protect trade despite political friction
Dominic flew to Washington last week and stayed there for several days to meet with senior officials at the WHITE House. He said the meetings were productive, even though the tariffs had already gone live.
He pointed to the decades-long economic relationship between the two countries, referencing the original free trade agreement from the Reagan era. He said the U.S. and Canada “build things together.”
That statement came as Dominic tried to make the case that the two economies are deeply connected. He said, “That’s why it’s difficult in this relationship when so much is integrated.” Dominic said the shared supply chains make it hard to fully separate the two sides, and that’s part of why Canada is still talking.
He also said Canada understands why Trump wants to protect national security, but still wants to find a way to make a trade agreement that works for both countries.
He said, “We understand and respect totally the President’s view in terms of the national security interest. In fact, we share it.” But he also pointed out that any deal must keep jobs alive on both sides of the border. Dominic framed the conversation as a search for a structure that protects critical industries in both countries without blowing up the trade flow.
Trump’s social media post throws in a new twist
Late last week, Trump posted on his platform that Mark Carney’s support for recognizing Palestinian statehood could get in the way of a deal. Trump wrote that the pledge makes it “very hard for us to make a Trade Deal with them.” That post added a political wrinkle to what had been mostly economic talks.
Dominic didn’t directly respond to the comment during his CBS appearance. But he didn’t change his tone either. He kept saying there’s still room for progress and repeated that Canada wants to keep things moving.
At the White House, Kevin Hassett, who leads the National Economic Council, gave his own update. He said Sunday on NBC that the new tariff rates are “more or less locked in,” though he added that there might still be “some dancing around the edges” when it comes to the fine print. Hassett confirmed that the reciprocal rates WOULD kick in the following week for any country that didn’t have a deal in place, Canada included.
He also said that no amount of negative market reaction would push Trump to change his position, unlike what happened in April when the “liberation day” tariffs triggered backlash. This time, Hassett said, “The markets have seen what we’re doing and celebrated it. And so I don’t see how that would happen. I would rule it out. Because these are the final deals.”
So far, Canada hasn’t threatened retaliation. Dominic is keeping the focus on economic cooperation, and Carney hasn’t addressed the Palestine comment publicly. The talks remain tense but active.
Both sides know that pulling the plug on this relationship could cause real damage, especially to the industries now caught in the crossfire.
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