logo
I'm a Canadian who lives in Florida. Don't let tariffs ruin our relationship.

I'm a Canadian who lives in Florida. Don't let tariffs ruin our relationship.

Yahoo18-03-2025

Like many other Canadians, I fell in love with Florida as a child. In my case, it was seven decades ago, when my brother and I spent a week of our Christmas holidays in Miami with my grandmother and her sister.
The memories of our visit to the small house on SW 17th St. are still vivid. There was a trip on the Jungle Queen, watching alligator wrestling at the Seminole trading post, hamburgers at White Castle, and an evening at the auction house in Ft. Lauderdale. It was all very exciting for a five-year-old from small-town Ontario.
The intervening years have been filled with family vacations throughout the Sunshine State, including the pilgrimages to Disney World that are rites of passage for Canadian families.
A decade ago, we bought our home in Naples. This was to be our first full winter here.
Our story isn't unique. The economic ties between Canada and Florida run deep. According to Visit Florida, 3.2 million Canadians came here in 2023, almost 20% more than the year before. Somewhere between 350,000 and a half-million Canadians own homes here. There are 503 Canadian-owned companies in the state, and they directly employ 51,450 Floridians.
Canada is Florida's number-one export market, to the tune of $5.2 billion a year. Tariff-free access to Canada provides jobs and incomes for tens of thousands of Florida families.
But our ties are more than economic. Some of us trace our family roots, like my American-born grandmother's, to the United States. We attend each other's universities, our militaries defend freedom together, and we celebrate our achievements together.
Wherever they come from, tourists help drive Florida's economy, but Canadians in Florida provide much more than just hotel stays. They join churches, fundraise for health care and other charities, volunteer with seniors and contribute to cultural activities. Artis—Naples, the outstanding visual and performing arts center in Naples, has created a Canadian Friends of Artis—Naples group of patrons. These supporters don't just pass through the community. They are an important part of it.
The decision to impose punishing tariffs against Canada was made in Washington, not in Ottawa or Tallahassee, but the businesses and citizens of both countries will bear the cost.
Opinion: I'm a Canadian and a longtime Florida snowbird. Where's the love, America?
Tariff wars are like nuclear wars. Everyone loses. That's why our governments have worked so hard over the years to prevent both.
Companies and customers who buy imported goods and services will all pay these new taxes. Ordinary Floridians worried about the cost of living will see significantly higher prices at the grocery store and at the gas pump. The tariffs will also add thousands of dollars to the price of new cars and make building new homes or repairing hurricane damage much more expensive because of higher lumber prices.
In addition, Canada's reciprocal tariffs against the U.S. will cause Canadian businesses and shoppers to avoid American products that suddenly become more expensive.
Canadians here report that their American neighbors remain warm and welcoming. Many have reached out to say that they don't understand why anyone would undermine such a beneficial relationship. But that relationship is indeed being severely strained.
Opinion: Let's get Florida's crucial 'State Park Preservation Act' over the finish line
Friends of ours had prepaid their Florida vacation until the end of April. They walked away from that investment and headed home last week. They will miss both the climate and the community, but their consciences won't let them stay in a country whose government says Canada should no longer exist.
They know that Washington won't notice their departure. But they represent millions of Canadians who are cancelling visits or changing buying habits because their country is suddenly under attack from its closest ally, neighbor and friend.
For generations, our shared goal has been to succeed together. I was there on April 6, 1987, when Ronald Regan told our Parliament how he saw the relationship:
As two proud and independent peoples, there is much that distinguishes us one from the other, but there is also much that we share: a vast continent, with its common hardships and uncommon duties; generations of mutual respect and support; and an abiding friendship that grows ever stronger.
Restoring mutual respect and support, and renewing the abiding friendship President Regan spoke of is what Canadians, including Canadians in Florida, want most of all.
We hope our American neighbors and friends share that desire.
Perrin Beatty is a former defense minister and foreign minister in Canada. He was President and CEO of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce until last August. He and his wife are winter residents of Naples.
This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Canada tourists, transplants love Florida, not tariff wars | Opinion

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Politician Says ‘Gangster' Trump Shouldn't Be Allowed to Come to Canada
Politician Says ‘Gangster' Trump Shouldn't Be Allowed to Come to Canada

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Politician Says ‘Gangster' Trump Shouldn't Be Allowed to Come to Canada

Canadian politician Charlie Angus delivered a blistering rebuke of President Donald Trump on Wednesday, claiming that Trump's 'authoritarian regime' means the U.S. and Canada are no longer allies. Angus, who retired from parliament in March, went so far as to suggest that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney should consider uninviting Trump to the G7 Summit in Canada next week. 'We can't kid ourselves about the threat that's being posed by Donald Trump,' Angus said at a news conference. 'Carney is not inviting our nearest neighbor and friendly ally to join us in the G7. Prime Minister Carney is not inviting the leader of the free world to Canada. He is welcoming in Vladimir Putin's sock puppet, who will have the best seat in the key negotiations.' Angus, 62, is a member of Canada's New Democratic Party. He has been outspoken against Trump in recent months, particularly over the president's seemingly abandoned desire to make Canada the 51st U.S. state. The recently retired Angus attacked Trump for a solid 10 minutes before taking questions from the press. He made his reason for calling a news conference clear from the jump. 'This morning, I offer my deep concern, solidarity, and prayers of the people of California, who are out in the streets, unarmed, defending the rule of law against illegal kidnapping and deportation, and they're being faced down by the military might of the United States Marines,' he said. 'We're not talking about creeping fascism here. This is full-on police state tyranny from the gangster president, Donald Trump, and this is the man who will soon be crossing our border to attend the G7 meetings in Canada.' Angus referred to Trump as a 'convicted felon,' a 'sexual predator,' and as a man 'who has threatened our nation's sovereignty.' He claimed that he has received an outpouring of messages from Canadians who are upset that Trump is being invited to travel north of the border. 'The Prime Minister must state boldly that he will stand up against any attempts to interfere in Canada and to undermine, through academia or through American corporations that are in Canada, any DEI measures that are in Canada, because Canada is a nation of diversity, equity, and inclusion. This is what makes Canada a light in this new dark age of gangster regimes, and Trump is the gangster,' Angus said. Angus said he understands that Carney likely invited Trump to keep from further straining U.S.-Canadian relations. Still, he said the new leader has some serious thinking to do about how he deals with an emboldened MAGA 2.0. Trump poses a 'clear threat to American democracy, to Canadian sovereignty and to the international rule of law,' Angus said, adding that he has 'made over 100 attacks on Canada' in his second term. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Angus called on Carney, a member of the Liberal Party of Canada, to work with those in his more progressive New Democratic Party to stand up to Trump. 'I urge the prime minister to work with us and work with our allies, and send a very clear message that we will not support, in any way, the rise of an authoritarian regime south of the border that is using the military against its own people,' he said. 'Canada, at this point, is holding the line, but we must remain true, north, strong, and free.'

EU could impose Russian oil price cap without US support, Kallas says
EU could impose Russian oil price cap without US support, Kallas says

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

EU could impose Russian oil price cap without US support, Kallas says

The European Union can impose an additional price cap on Russian oil without U.S. support, EU High Representative Kaja Kallas said at the Brussels Forum on June 11. "If you think about the oil going through the channels, it's mostly Europe, it's via the Baltic Sea, it's via the Black Sea. So even if the Americans are not on board, we can still do it and have an impact," Kallas said. The EU's 17th package of sanctions against Russia came into effect on May 20. The bloc is already working on its next wave of sanctions. The 18th EU sanctions package will include additional restrictions on energy, banking, oil, and other areas, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced on June 10. "What the intelligence tells is that, now the sanctions will (harder hit) the supply chains of Russia needed to really fund this war," Kallas said. "Of course, it is important the United States... is together with us, and we have been operating together for quite some time," she said. Kallas noted the Group of Seven (G7) oil price cap was previously agreed upon to be 5% below the market price. "It is important, of course, what we do together, but it is also equally important for us what we do alone, because we alone are also a player," Kallas said. Kallas noted the EU is still an ally to the U.S., but recognized the dynamic between the two powers is changing. "We still value the relationship... I think with the Americans we are not growing apart, but growing up in our relationships," Kallas said. The upcoming G7 summit will take place in Alberta, Canada. A wide range of topics, including Russia's war against Ukraine, are expected to be discussed at the annual event. President Volodymyr Zelensky previously confirmed he would be attending the G7 summit after receiving an invitation from Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. Read also: 'Ukrainians have been stripped of illusion of control' — Filmmaker Kateryna Gornostai on Russia's war, cinema and reclaiming the narrative We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.

Ivanhoe restarts part of Congo copper mine; cuts output guidance
Ivanhoe restarts part of Congo copper mine; cuts output guidance

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Ivanhoe restarts part of Congo copper mine; cuts output guidance

By Rishabh Jaiswal and Divya Rajagopal (Reuters) -Ivanhoe Mines said on Wednesday it had resumed underground mining in part of its Kakula copper mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo that had been closed due to seismic activity, but lowered output guidance for the year. Mining on the mine's western side resumed on June 7, while Ivanhoe will start pumping water out of the eastern side in August, aiming to finish by the year's fourth quarter. It will also look to open a new section for mining in the eastern part. The Kakula mine is part of the giant Kamoa-Kakula copper mining complex. The Canadian miner said it now expects 370,000 tons and 420,000 tons of copper output from the Kamoa-Kakula mining complex. It had withdrawn earlier guidance of 520,000 and 580,000 tonnes following seismic activity and floods in May. The company also withdrew its 2026 target of about 600,000 tonnes of copper production. "This is a significant setback for the plans at Kamoa-Kakula and leaves uncertainty about 2026 and beyond production and whether mining can resume in the previously developed area of Kakula East," analysts at RBC said in a note. The disruption is the latest in a series of supply-side setbacks that has tightened global copper supply, helping to drive margins for smelters into deeply negative territory. Co-owner Zijin Mining has not issued any statements on the mine's status since May, when it said the tremors had damaged mine roofs and could affect output. Ivanhoe subsequently disputed Zijin's statement, although it later withdrew guidance. Zijin did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment about Ivanhoe's latest statement.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store