Equal rules, smart strategy, and strength at the table
Canada remains tangled in tariff disputes with its largest trading partners — the United States, China, and the European Union. Each continues to protect its own markets while blocking ours. The U.S. maintains duties on Canadian steel and aluminum. China restricts canola and pork when politics flare. Europe keeps a 10% tariff on Canadian-built vehicles — the same we pay on theirs. These barriers drive up prices, limit opportunity, and weaken Canada’s position in the global economy.
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The current system is a patchwork of conflicting rules and political games. Canada applies tariffs of 6.1% on imported passenger vehicles, up to 18% on certain steel products, and over 200% on supply-managed goods, such as dairy and pou

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