Despite USMCA deal, the ‘sword’ of national security tariff threats still hangs over Canada’s head, say trade observers

‘When you break norms, those norms are very difficult to re-establish,’ says one former policy adviser to the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, right, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, told reporters on Oct. 1 the new USMCA would provide momentum for settling the ongoing dispute over steel and aluminum tariffs imposed by the U.S.
Despite the safeguards against damaging penalties on Canada’s auto industry under the continent’s newly renamed trilateral trade agreement, the American ability to impose destructive tariffs under the guise of national security protection remains a lingering threat, according to trade experts wh...

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