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Carney says US-Canada trade deal likely to include some tariffs

Carney says US-Canada trade deal likely to include some tariffs

BBC News2 days ago
Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada may have to accept some tariffs as part of a trade deal with the United States. "There's not a lot of evidence right now" that the Trump administration would be willing to completely give up on the levies in any agreement, he said on Tuesday, as reported by CBC News. Speaking to journalists ahead of a cabinet meeting in Ottawa, the prime minister said in French that all of Trump's trade negotiations have thus far included tariffs. Last week, US President Donald Trump announced he would impose a new 35% duty on Canadian goods starting on 1 August.
Canada and the US have been in a trade war since Trump took office in January, with Trump imposing both targeted tariffs on to Canada and global levies that have been painful on certain Canadian sectors. Canada imposed its own counter measures in response. Carney did not say on Tuesday if he was willing to accept the levies in any deal with the US. At the G7 summit in mid-June, he said that he would only sign an agreement "that's in Canada's best interest".He also indicated that he would be willing to impose further counter-tariffs if Ottawa and Washington could not strike a deal. In addition to the latest threatened 35% tariff on Canada - an increase from the current 25%, which includes significant exemptions - Trump has imposed a global 50% tariff on aluminium and steel imports, and a 25% tariff on all cars and trucks not built in the US.The US president also recently announced a 50% tariff on copper imports, scheduled to take effect next month.Canada sells about three-quarters of its goods to the US, and is an auto manufacturing hub and a major supplier of metals, making the US tariffs especially damaging to those sectors.Still, much of the cross-border trade between the US, Canada and Mexico is exempt from additional levies under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (Cusma).US media have reported that the agreement remains in place for now. A recent report from the Royal Bank of Canada stated that Canada's exports to the US fell since April, but compliance with Cusma has risen. Around 91% of Canadian exports to the US crossed the border duty-free, the bank said, citing data from the US Census Bureau.
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Seth Meyers on the Maga schism over the Epstein files: ‘This meltdown has been years in the making'
Seth Meyers on the Maga schism over the Epstein files: ‘This meltdown has been years in the making'

The Guardian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Seth Meyers on the Maga schism over the Epstein files: ‘This meltdown has been years in the making'

Late-night hosts dig into the rift between Donald Trump and his most ardent supporters over his refusal to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein. A growing rift between hardcore Maga supporters and Donald Trump exploded into a full name-calling fight on Wednesday, when Trump told his base to stop asking about convicted sex offender and disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. 'I think Trump is really starting to crack under all this Epstein drama,' said Seth Meyers on Late Night. 'For years, the Maga right has willingly engaged in a mass delusion where New York real estate mogul and tabloid celebrity Donald Trump, the man who partied with and publicly praised Jeffrey Epstein, would be the savior who sweeps into power and exposes massive sex trafficking conspiracy involving the most powerful people on earth,' he explained. Numerous prominent conspiracy theorists believed Trump would expose the government's information on Epstein, even though he once called Epstein a 'terrific guy' who enjoyed 'younger women'. At one point, Epstein called Trump his 'closest friend for the past 10 years' – 'which is remarkable for two reasons', said Meyers. 'One, it's the world's most notorious sex trafficker saying he was close friends with the president, and two, no one stays friends with Trump for 10 years. I mean, the closest people in his life maybe last 6 months before he turns on them.' So Trump is trying to make the Epstein cloud go away, and 'it's backfiring badly', said Meyers. On Wednesday, Trump tried a new strategy, dismissing the Epstein files as a hoax created by Democrats – 'They were made up by Obama, they were made up by the Biden administration,' he said. 'Dude, if someone asks if your name is in the Epstein files and you say Obama made up the files, people are going to think your name is in those files,' Meyers responded. 'Because the very easy answer is 'no, of course not, that's ridiculous, I have nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein!' But Trump can't give that answer, because he's in photographs with Jeffrey Epstein.' 'This meltdown has been years in the making,' Meyers concluded. 'Maga fixated on the Epstein case and created the delusion that Trump would expose the truth, even though Trump himself was a close personal friend of Epstein's. And now they can't reconcile the fake Trump they believed in with the real Trump they're actually getting.' 'I don't know what you all are talking about, but everybody I've talked to is talking about what Donald Trump doesn't want to talk about,' said Stephen Colbert on Wednesday's Late Show. That would be Jeffrey Epstein, a person Trump has declared to be too boring to talk about. 'He's been dead for a long time,' Trump said outside Air Force One on Tuesday. 'He was never a big factor in terms of life.' 'That sentence was never a big factor in terms of word,' Colbert quipped. Trump went on: 'I don't understand why the Jeffrey Epstein case would be of interest to anybody. It's pretty boring stuff.' 'He's right, the Epstein saga is a total snoozefest,' Colbert deadpanned. 'I mean, the most powerful man in the world is blocking information about a powerful cabal of the rich, the famous and the royal befriending a con man who regularly flies off on his private plane to his private island to do super illegal sex stuff. Then the con man is arrested and they're afraid he's going to name names but before he can, he mysteriously dies right after being taken off a suicide watch in a federal prison during the administration of a guy who is blocking the release of the information. Boooooooring.' 'Sex cults and murder are famously dull,' he added. 'That's why they call that movie Eyes Wide Shut, because everyone was asleep.' Nevertheless, in a post to Truth Social on Wednesday, Trump dismissed anyone seeking information on Epstein – 'I don't want their support anymore!' 'You can't build a brand on conspiracy theories and then get mad that people are interested in your conspiracy theories,' Colbert retorted. MAGA won't let up on the Epstein files, and Trump is going full messy bitch on them The Maga schism over Epstein is 'a shocking turn of events for Donald Trump', said Jordan Klepper on the Daily Show. 'His own sycophants are breaking ranks with him and even worse, they are demanding accountability.' Even Lauren Boebert, one of the most notoriously inflammatory Republicans in Congress, suggested an outside special counsel investigate the handling of the files – though she also proposed it be led by disgraced ex-Congressman Matt Gaetz, who resigned last year after a federal investigation into alleged sex trafficking of underage girls. 'You want Matt Gaetz to investigate underage sex trafficking?' Klepper mused. 'Because it makes sense in a sort of 'game recognize game' way… I can see Matt Gaetz pulling up to R Kelly's house saying 'I'm putting together a team.'' 'This special counsel team might've been the last straw, because this morning, Trump absolutely lost it on his supporters,' Klepper said. In a lengthy screed on Truth Social, Trump called Maga supporters interested in Epstein 'weaklings' and said 'I don't want their support anymore'. 'He went full messy bitch,' Klepper laughed. ''If you can't handle me at my sex crimes coverup, you don't deserve me at my alligator concentration camp, you slut.''

A new mural in France shows the Statue of Liberty covering her eyes in a swipe at Trump
A new mural in France shows the Statue of Liberty covering her eyes in a swipe at Trump

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

A new mural in France shows the Statue of Liberty covering her eyes in a swipe at Trump

As statements go, it's a big one. A towering mural in France of the Statue of Liberty covering her eyes is racking up millions of views online with its swipe at U.S. President Donald Trump 's immigration and deportation policies. Amsterdam-based street artist Judith de Leeuw described her giant work in the northern French town of Roubaix, which has a large immigrant community, as 'a quiet reminder of what freedom should be.' She said 'freedom feels out of reach' for migrants and 'those pushed to the margins, silenced, or unseen.' 'I painted her covering her eyes because the weight of the world has become too heavy to witness. What was once a shining symbol of liberty now carries the sorrow of lost meaning,' de Leeuw wrote in a July 4 post on Facebook, when Americans were celebrating Independence Day. Her depiction of the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the French people in the late 1800s, has inspired some sharp criticism. Rep. Tim Burchett, a Republican lawmaker from Tennessee, wrote in an angry post on X that the work 'disgusts me.' He said he had an uncle who fought and died in France, where U.S. forces saw combat in both World War I and World War II. In an interview with The Associated Press, de Leeuw was unapologetic. 'I'm not offended to be hated by the Donald Trump movement. I am not sorry. This is the right thing to do," she said. The town stood by the work, with its deputy mayor in charge of cultural affairs, Frédéric Lefebvre, telling broadcaster France 3 that 'it's a very strong and powerful political message.' Since returning to the White House amid anti-immigration sentiment, Trump has launched an unprecedented campaign that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judges trying to restrain him. People from various countries have been deported to remote and unrelated places like South Sudan and the small African nation of Eswatini. Immigration is one of Trump's strongest issues in public polling in the U.S. The mural in Roubaix is part of an urban street culture festival backed by the town. Roubaix is one of the poorest towns in France. It was economically devastated by the collapse since the 1970s of its once-flourishing textile industry that used to attract migrant workers from elsewhere in Europe, north Africa and beyond. ___ Associated Press journalists Ahmad Seir in Amsterdam and John Leicester in Paris contributed.

Trump's big dream to reopen notorious Alcatraz prison gets closer to reality driving Democrats mad
Trump's big dream to reopen notorious Alcatraz prison gets closer to reality driving Democrats mad

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's big dream to reopen notorious Alcatraz prison gets closer to reality driving Democrats mad

Attorney General Pam Bondi and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum are in San Francisco to announce the reopening of the infamous island prison of Alcatraz. President Donald Trump said in May that he wanted to make the federal penitentiary operational once more. Currently, the National Park Service (NPS) controls the site, which is environmentally protected and serves as a popular California tourist destination. Bondi and Burgum's surprise visit to the island on Thursday is already drawing ire from Democrats – including top voices in the Golden State. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement that the idea to reopen Alcatraz is Trump's 'stupidest initiative yet.' 'It should concern us all that clearly the only intellectual resources the Administration has drawn upon for this foolish notion are decades-old fictional Hollywood movies,' the former speaker added. Bondi's trip out west comes as she is embroiled in controversy of the Justice Department's memo on the Jeffrey Epstein files. 'Pam Bondi will reopen Alcatraz the same day Trump lets her release the Epstein files. So... never,' California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. Reopening Alcatraz is in line with Trump's hard-on-crime policies. In a post shared to Truth Social announcing the plan, Trump said 'the reopening of ALCATRAZ will serve as a symbol of Law, Order, and JUSTICE.' Trump has directed the Bureau of Prisons to work alongside the Department of Justice, FBI and Homeland Security to 'reopen a substantially enlarged and rebuilt' Alcatraz. He said the notorious facility, which once held famed gangster Al Capone, will 'house America's most ruthless and violent Offenders.' The order comes as Trump has repeatedly clashed with the courts as he tries to send accused gang members and illegal migrants to a notorious prison in El Salvador. The maximum security prison, which was shut down in 1963, will provide Trump a workaround to those court orders barring him from carrying out the mass deportation scheme. 'We will no longer be held hostage to criminals, thugs, and Judges that are afraid to do their job and allow us to remove criminals, who came into our Country illegally,' he wrote, appearing to suggest illegal migrants will be the first sent to the prison. Trump has also directed the opening of a detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to hold up to 30,000 of what he has labeled the 'worst criminal aliens.' The trip by his top deputies comes after the president visited the new so-called 'Alligator Alcatraz' in Florida meant to house illegal immigrants as they are prepared for deportation. Congress is expected to introduce a bill that will end the environmental protections for Alcatraz and strip control of the site from the National Park Service. Alcatraz generates approximately $60 million in annual revenue, according to NPS. The prison operated from 1934 to 1963 - closing after just 29 years due to high operational costs. It was initially a military fort that was repurposed as a maximum-security prison dedicated for the most dangerous federal inmates. According to estimates, refurbishing the island and building a new prison would cost upwards of $250 million. The prison currently serves as a museum and historical site that tourists can visit and tour.

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