Trudeau tells CEOs Trump wants to annex Canada


Real threat: Trudeau speaking at the summit in Toronto last Friday. If the US tariffs are imposed or the investigation into commerce tariffs scheduled for April progresses, the premier says Canada needs to be ready to respond strongly . — AP

TORONTO: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told executives gathered at an economic summit last Friday that he believes US president Donald Trump’s desire to annex the northern nation “is a real thing” due to its abundance of critical minerals.

Trudeau made the remarks to dozens of business leaders and policymakers gathered in Toronto to discuss how Canada can diversify trade away from the United States, given Trump’s tariff threats.

The comments were confirmed by a senior government official who asked not to be identified discussing the closed-door meeting.

Since his election in November, Trump has repeatedly said Canada could avoid tariffs by becoming the 51st state.

While the Trudeau government initially brushed off the comment as a joke, the jab took on a more menacing tone after Trump pledged in January to use “economic force” to compel the union and dismissed the border as an “artificially drawn line”.

Canada is rich in nearly three dozen critical minerals that are essential to modern technology, including mobile phones, electric vehicle batteries and defence applications.

The country’s Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson was in Washington, DC, last week, urging the United States to partner with Canada on mining projects to erode China’s dominance in the sector.

The Toronto Star first reported on Trudeau’s remarks, which were made after media were asked to leave the room.

“They’re very aware of our resources, of what we have and they very much want to be able to benefit from those,” Trudeau said in response to a question, according to the Toronto Star.

“But Mr Trump has it in mind that one of the easiest ways of doing that is absorbing our country. And it is a real thing.”

Other political leaders in Canada have also said they are taking Trump’s annexation remarks seriously.

British Columbia Premier David Eby said last Monday that Trump is deploying a deliberate strategy to “destroy Canada’s economy” and drive it into becoming the 51st state.

Federal New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh also views the sovereignty threat as real.

Trump signed an order Feb 1 to put 25% tariffs on most of what Canada and Mexico sell to the United States, upending the countries’ longstanding trade agreement.

Trudeau’s government responded by pledging similar levies.

Last Monday, the two countries agreed to delay the tariffs for 30 days.

But the threat of a broader trade war remains, as one of Trump’s first executive orders after inauguration asked officials to investigate and report back on the state of US trade relationships by April 1.

“If those tariffs do end up coming in or the investigation into commerce tariffs that is scheduled for April moves forward, we need to be ready to respond robustly,” Trudeau said in public remarks at the economic summit, adding the country faces “what may be a more challenging long-term political situation with the United States.”

Executives attending last Friday’s event included Kingsdale Advisors chair Wes Hall, Linamar Corp executive chair Linda Hasenfratz and Peter Tertzakian, an energy economist who is the founder of the ARC Energy Research Institute.

The summit, at a former brickworks factory-turned meeting space, underscores a broader concern in Canada that the country needs to urgently shift trade patterns and forge new international relationships in response to Trump’s policies.

“It should have happened 20 years ago, but the one thing that nobody in that room downstairs can build is a time machine. So we’re starting right now,” Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association, said on the sidelines of the summit.

Volpe said his industry, which supplies auto parts to the likes of Stellantis NV, General Motors Co and others at assembly plants in Canada and the United States, is unlikely to be able to diversify exports to Asia or Europe.

Still, he said other industries should make a push to trade “east-west” instead of only shipping goods to the United States.

“The best business case is always north-south,” he said, but shifting 5% to 10% of Canada’s exports to other markets is a way for the country to “get a win out of efforts like this.”

Anita Anand, the minister of transport and internal trade, agreed.

“We have to make sure that we are trading with multiple partners in multiple locations,” she said.

“Canada is the only G7 (Group of Seven) country that has a free trade agreement with every other G7 country.” — Bloomberg

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Trump , Canada , annex , minerals , mining

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