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U.S. commerce secretary dismisses question that free trade with Canada is


U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is dismissing the question of whether U.S. free trade with Canada is dead, calling the notion “silly” and saying a substantial amount of Canadian goods enter the U.S. tariff-free under the current North American free trade deal.

“We have a plan called [the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement], virtually 75 per cent of all goods coming from Mexico and Canada are already coming tariff-free,” Lutnick said in an interview on Face the Nation that aired Sunday morning on CBS.

But in the same breath, Lutnick suggested tariffs on Canada are here to stay, for now.

“The president understands that we need to open the markets. Canada is not open to us. They need to open their market. Unless they’re willing to open their market, they’re going to pay a tariff,” he added.

The commerce secretary’s comments come days after Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters in French there’s “not a lot of evidence right now” that the U.S. is willing to cut a deal with Canada without some tariffs included.

WATCH | Carney says ‘not a lot of evidence’ for tariff-free deal: 

Carney says ‘not a lot of evidence’ for tariff-free deals with U.S.

Prime Minister Mark Carney, speaking in French ahead of a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, said ‘we need to stabilize ‘ the situation for Canada when asked about the potential for a tariff-free deal with the U.S.

But the prime minister also said on Tuesday that Canada has “almost free trade” with the U.S. — a reference to tariff exemptions granted to Canadian goods that are compliant with USMCA, known as the Canada-U.S.Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) among Canadians.

According to an RBC report released last month, approximately 79 per cent of U.S. imports from Canada were “explicitly duty free” in January 2025.

That figure rose to approximately 89 per cent in April.

“Why should we have our country be wide open while theirs is closed? This is an 80-year wrong that President Trump is trying to fix, and our businesses are going to really, really enjoy it,” Lutnick told host Margaret Brennan.

CUSMA negotiations looming

Lutnick also told Brennan that Trump “is absolutely going to renegotiate [CUSMA], but that’s a year from today.”

“It makes perfect sense for the president to renegotiate it. He wants to protect American jobs. He doesn’t want cars built in Canada or Mexico when they could be built in Michigan or Ohio. It’s just better for American workers,” he added.

CUSMA is not officially up for renegotiation until 2026, but some Canadian business leaders and others have called on the federal government to kick-start talks for the sake of economic stability.

Carney, Trump, Sheinbuam
Prime Minister Mark Carney, U.S. President Donald Trump and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum will renegotiate the trilateral free trade pact, known as the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement, in 2026. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press, Marco Ugarte/The Associated Press, Manuel Balce Ceneta/The Associated Press)

There are also lingering questions over whether…



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