
Canadian General Election: Anti-American Sentiment Boosts Ruling Party
The ruling party in Canada, which had been in a tight spot, became rejuvenated from asserting it would not give in to threats from U.S. President Donald Trump.
In the Canadian general election, in which 343 seats were up for grabs, the center-left Liberal Party led by Prime Minister Mark Carney maintained its position as the largest party, and Carney secured his position as prime minister. Although the party increased its seat count compared to when the House of Commons was dissolved, it fell short of a majority and will govern as a minority government.
The Liberal Party, which has been in power since 2015, had been struggling with low approval ratings due to rising prices and a housing shortage. In January, then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was forced to announce his resignation. It seemed inevitable that the largest party among the opposition, the Conservative Party, would take the reins of government.
But the situation was completely upended by Trump. He has referred to Canada as 'the 51st state of the United States' and expressed a desire to annex it. In the name of stopping illegal immigration and the influx of synthetic narcotics, he was quick to target Canada with his tariffs.
In response, Carney, who became prime minister in March, criticized Trump for betraying Canada and destroying the global economy. He countered Trump's moves with retaliatory tariffs.
There is no doubt that opposition to Trump has grown among voters, providing a tailwind for the ruling party. Canada has had its patriotism aroused, and there have even been movements to boycott U.S. products.
Trump should take seriously the fact that his words and actions have influenced the outcome of the election and caused Canada, a close ally, to turn away from him.
Carney will enter into tariff negotiations with the United States, which is Canada's largest trading partner. If Canada fails to pave the way to lower tariffs, there is a risk that its economy will fall into a recession.
On the other hand, Carney said after the election, 'Our old relationship with the United States, a relationship based on steadily increasing integration, is over.' Due to external pressure from Trump, Canada is seeking to reevaluate its excessive dependence on the United States.
Facing a coercive Trump administration, Canada is trying to protect its national interests while increasing its economic and diplomatic options by diversifying its trade and deepening relations with European and other countries. The new strategy that Canada is pursuing could serve as a reference for Japan.
Japan and Canada are members of the Group of Seven (G7) advanced countries and the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade agreement. They are important partners in trade and investment in areas such as energy and automobiles.
The two countries also overlap in many respects on security. Canada has adopted an 'Indo-Pacific Strategy' and has participated in joint military exercises led by Japan and the United States. The country is also focusing on security in new areas such as the Arctic.
The G7 summit will be held in the western Canadian city of Kananaskis in June. Japan should work with Canada, the G7 chair this year, and the European member countries to urge the United States to prioritize international cooperation.
(From The Yomiuri Shimbun, May 6, 2025)
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Yomiuri Shimbun
31 minutes ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
To Berlin's Relief, Musk — Not Merz — Got Slammed during White House Visit
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His meeting with the U.S. president in the Oval Office, sometimes a scene of public humiliation, was extremely polite and almost harmonious.' Germans, including Merz and his delegation, seemed thankful that Trump's trademark rage had been directed elsewhere during the meeting and was nothing like the president's public castigations of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa during their visits to the White House 'You are smiling,' Sen. Chris Coons (D-Delaware) told Merz as he gathered with a gaggle of senators following the White House meeting. 'That's a very good sign.' 'Still standing!' added Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), to laughter. Merz told the German broadcaster ZDF that he was 'very satisfied' with the meeting. Displaying no worry or concern about the visit being overshadowed, he added: 'I expected us to get along well. And that's exactly what happened.' 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I told her it shouldn't have happened, but it did,' Trump said, without naming Merkel. Merz didn't respond. Merz appeared to handle Trump more smoothly than he did British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron, though he had fewer speaking lines. Perhaps less was more. Merz mostly went out of his way to praise and flatter Trump, but he also remained assertive – insisting, for instance, that Russia alone was to blame for civilian deaths following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. For the most part, Merz had Trump nodding along – except when Merz mentioned the children in war-torn Ukraine, at which point Trump stopped nodding and froze. 'Under normal diplomatic practice, Donald Trump's monologue would be an affront to the chancellor,' German publication Focus wrote. Instead, Merz took it in stride and used his small amount of speaking time wisely, the magazine wrote. There were some noteworthy exchanges, including one about Nazis. Merz began noting that June 6 was the anniversary of D-Day, when the Allied Forces landed on the beaches of Normandy, 'when the Americans ended a war in Europe.' That day in 1944 was the symbolic start of Europe's liberation in World War II. Trump jumped in: 'That was not a pleasant day for you? This is not a great day.' Merz answered: 'No, in the long run, this was the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship.' Vice President JD Vance appeared again on his spot on the sofa as the president's wing man. But he did not pounce – and Merz made sure to say thank you. 'We owe the Americans a lot,' the chancellor said. 'We will never forget about them.' Turning toward the president, he continued, 'so with your German provenance, I think this is a very good basis for close cooperation between America and Germany.' It was unclear exactly what Merz and Germany might get out of the meeting, other than future encounters minus any awkward baggage. After Merz took a firm stand on Russia's responsibility for the war in Ukraine, Trump suggested that Russia and Ukraine be treated as two children fighting on a playground who should simply be left to battle it out. Asked by the press about Trump's comparison of the war to a playground tussle, Merz didn't take the bait. 'I think we both agree on this war and how terrible this war is going on,' he said. 'We are both looking for ways to stop it very soon.' Booth reported from London.


Kyodo News
43 minutes ago
- Kyodo News
Japan, U.S. yet to find common ground on tariffs but want quick deal
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Yomiuri Shimbun
an hour ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Trump Travel Ban Rattles Immigrant Communities across U.S.
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Yet immigrants like Roozbeh Farahanipour, who left Iran in 2000 and now owns three restaurants in Los Angeles, said Trump's action will punish individuals and families who pose no threat to the United States. Farahanipour was fielding calls Thursday from fellow Iranians in his community and back home, who are terrified about what the ban means for their future. His own story, he said, reflects a quintessential American success story. 'I want other people to follow me,' he added. 'I don't want to be the last American Dream.' Haitians in Ohio Gangs have taken over much of Haiti since the 2021 assassination of its president, pushing families to seek safety anywhere they can. Yet those who fled the violence now face a different danger in the United States: The temporary protected status (TPS) that has allowed hundreds of thousands of Haitians to work in the U.S. is set to expire in August. Yvena Jean François is among those whose future is at risk. She hadn't heard about the president's travel ban until she clocked into work Thursday at an Amazon warehouse in Springfield, Ohio, where many of those laboring around her were also Haitian. Everyone has been scared since Trump's election, she said, with the travel ban only the latest blow. Innocent civilians are the ones trying to escape Haiti, she noted, and her friends back home say the situation has only deteriorated since she left. François, a journalist, saw the carnage firsthand as she documented events. 'Following all the news,' she said, 'is nothing but stress.' As many as 15,000 Haitians have settled in her county, according to local estimates, with most of the newcomers arriving legally in the past five years. As Springfield pushed to revive its once-prosperous manufacturing sector, business leaders aimed recruitment efforts at Haitians to alleviate labor shortages. Some plants in town now employ Creole-speaking interpreters. Haitian restaurants, convenience stores and hair salons have opened their doors. At the same time, the burst of arrivals crowded medical clinics and classrooms, sparking some complaints in the city of roughly 60,000 and attention from far-right pundits. Trump blasted the immigrants last year during the campaign, saying they had 'destroyed' Springfield. The city's Republican mayor pushed back against the 'mischaracterization of our city.' Under the still-glaring political spotlight, community leaders say many Haitians in town are scared to venture out beyond school, work and church. The new ban may only intensify their fears. François, 39, prays that a judge will rule to preserve her protected status, as was the case in 2018. The Trump administration, she said, 'keeps making life harder for us.' Afghans and Somalis in Texas Valerie Plesch/For The Washington Post An employee at the Afghan Market in Alexandria carries a platter of homemade pastries on the day before Eid al-Adha. Thousands of Afghans raced to escape their country in 2021 when U.S. troops withdrew and the Taliban assumed power. In Somalia, another country on the travel ban list, humanitarian groups say the government suppresses citizens' basic rights. Immigrants from both of these places settled in Houston's Gulfton neighborhood, filling apartments and working to rebuild their lives. In one small strip mall here that caters to Afghans – with a clothing store, barbershop, restaurant and bakery offering familiarity – workers set trays of cookies outside as a steady stream of families flowed through Thursday, shopping for the Eid al-Adha holiday. Hasebullah Akhundzada, 20, migrated from Kabul four years ago, first to Boston, then to Houston. He left most relatives behind, in a country still controlled by the extremist Taliban regime. 'The whole family is over there,' he said as he helped customers at the Afghan Bazaar peruse glittering bangles, leather sandals, and racks of colorful embroidered shalwar kameez, traditional Afghan dress. In the barbershop at the back of the store, Said Jallal, 27, a security guard from outside Kabul, said that when he heard about the travel ban, he immediately thought of his wife, brother and father. All remain in Afghanistan. A few doors down in the same strip mall, Ali Ahmed nursed tea at Chai n Paan, a cafe broadcasting Al Jazeera and Arabic language news on several big screens. Ahmed, 41, came from Somalia 25 years ago after spending a decade in a Kenyan refugee camp. His wife and six children, ages 2 through 11, have been visiting Somalia for a family wedding and are due to return by summer's end – which makes the travel ban 'scary.' All have U.S. passports, he said, but 'you never know what's going to happen.' He has his own travel horror stories, though. He says immigration officials always pull him aside at airports for added screening in windowless rooms – traumatizing encounters that in recent years have taken seven to 10 hours, forcing him to miss flights and causing 'humiliation' and 'stigma.' He now shows up at airports five hours in advance. 'It makes you think you're doing something wrong, even though you're not.' And with the travel ban, he predicted, 'this is going to get worse, much worse.' Iranians in California On the west side of Los Angeles, in a neighborhood known as Tehrangeles, Iranian Americans received news of the president's ban with a mixture of resignation and dread. Iran was targeted in Trump's 2017 ban, and the country is in the middle of tumultuous negotiations with the United States over its nuclear program. Many figured it was only a matter of time until the travel prohibition was revived. Farahanipour recounted how he was imprisoned and tortured for his role helping to lead the Iranian student uprisings of 1999. He sought exile in the U.S. after his country's government issued a death sentence against him. From a table inside his Mary and Robb's Westwood Cafe, he said Trump's order is overly broad and will punish average Iranians who are just looking to visit relatives, receive medical care or study in the U.S. 'I don't think they're going to make the country safer,' he said. 'It's a blanket ban for normal, random people.' Alex Helmi, another Iranian business owner, said the policy will be especially harmful for Iranian students – who for years have studied in the United States as part of a cultural and academic exchange that Helmi still believes will ultimately lead to a more open Iran. 'Students come and see the democracy here and they go back,' he said. 'It's good for our country.' Down the street at Shahrzad Travel, a travel agency that primarily serves the city's Iranian community – the world's largest outside Iran – phones were ringing nonstop Thursday morning. Sherry Tahouri, the company's owner, said she is telling her clients that they must wait and see whether the president's order changes or is challenged. 'I think it's wrong,' she said. 'But I cannot say what he should do or not because I don't have control.' Stuck in limbo Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, who leads Global Refuge, a resettlement agency that handles refugee placements across the U.S., said Thursday that the organization was fielding calls from terrified clients who don't know whether their cases will proceed or family members will ever make it to the U.S. The emotional toll is enormous, she said, adding anxiety to families who 'are putting down roots and so eager to become contributing Americans.' 'People who have spent years doing everything we asked of them, navigating an already complex system, now face indefinite limbo,' she said. 'For many immigrants from these countries, this order is equally personal. It effectively says, because of where you're from, your family doesn't deserve the same chance to be together. You don't deserve the chance to make your case.' Late Thursday afternoon outside an Afghan supermarket in Alexandria, Virginia, Parwin Azizi Omari, 38, waited with her four children to be picked up from her grocery shopping for Eid al-Adha. It had taken her family a couple of years to get from Afghanistan to the U.S. They fled after the Taliban took over their country, first to Canada, then to New York and finally to the D.C. area, where she found a job as a cook at a local snack company. She has been grateful for the opportunity to rebuild her life. 'In our country, it's not safe,' she said. And since Trump suspended refugee admissions earlier this year and froze aid to resettle refugees, friends and former colleagues back home have become only more desperate. One woman she knew killed herself, Azizi Omari said. 'It's very difficult, because they are waiting for a long, long term,' she said. Now, they probably will have to wait even longer. Kassa, the executive director of African Communities Together, is focusing on supporting the large pockets of Sudanese and Eritreans in the U.S. He fears the ban will prompt some to withdraw from civic life and be less willing to engage with government services. 'What this does, he said, 'is make a region that feels like home to many African immigrants feel less like home.'