
B.C. premier, Washington state senator to speak live on impact of Trump tariffs
In a release about the event, which takes place at 12:15 p.m. PT, Murray says U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war with Canada is 'driving down businesses and creating chaos for WA State's economy.'
The event will be livestreamed above.
Trump has announced he will impose 35 per cent tariffs on all imports from Canada starting Aug. 1. He has already applied 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum and 25 per cent tariffs on cars, excluding U.S.-made parts.
2:11
Carney, premiers talk trade as Trump's new tariff deadline looms
Murray says that Canada is the second-largest export market for Washington state, which exports $7.9 billion in goods and $2.2 billion in services annually.
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Washington state imports $17.8 billion in goods from Canada each year, according to Murray, with energy imports accounting for 54 per cent of that total.
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Canada is also the largest source of international visitors to the U.S. but border crossings have dropped this year compared to last.
Border crossings compiled by Cascade Gateway and the Whatcom Council of Governments show that in 2024, there were 206,978 border crossings at the four B.C. ports of entry.
In 2025, there were 118,292 crossings, which is a decline of 43 per cent.
This story will be updated following the press conference on Wednesday afternoon.
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