The MeidasTouch Podcast - Furious Canada Freezes Out Trump and Walks Out

Episode Date: August 4, 2025

MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Canada continuing to stick the dagger in Trump after refusing to make a bad deal with the United States as Prime Minister Carney senses Trump’s weakness. ... Americans United: Join in the fight: https://AU.org/meidas Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:30 Or head over to the arcade for nostalgic casino thrills. Download the BetMGM Ontario app today. You don't want to miss out! 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you Please contact con ex Ontario at one eight six six five three one two six zero zero to speak to an advisor free of charge Bed MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario So Canada stuck the dagger in Donald Trump and they twisted it the The trade minister of Canada, Dominique LeBlanc, went on American media and he was asked,
Starting point is 00:01:08 so why don't you just remove the retaliatory tariffs because the United States trade minister says, Donald Trump is really upset that Canada retaliated against the United States after the United States declared a trade war on Canada. And Dominique LeBlanc, the trade minister from Canada, said, from Canada said look if a deal happens we're gonna work to put Canada first that's what we're focused on y'all attacked us in Canada we're gonna do what's right for the Canadian people we're disappointed in the way that Donald Trump and Jameson Greer and this regime is behaving we're gonna continue to try to make a deal we are after all the biggest client and customer of the United States, but we're going to protect Canadian interest and we're going to look towards reliable trading partners. So you have to understand the sequence of what went down. So earlier in the day, you had the United States trade representative, basically our version of LeBlanc.
Starting point is 00:02:06 And our version is just a complete idiot. This guy, Jameson Greer, he's the guy who talks about, oh, we need to decouple from China. Really decouple from China while you attack Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and you don't even allow the Taiwan president to come into the United States because Donald Trump got a phone call from Xi Jinping and said, can you not let the Taiwan president come into the United States to go to Central America? Donald Trump's like, anything for you, Xi Jinping, anything for you, Xi.
Starting point is 00:02:38 OK, so not exactly a great deal of decoupling taking place, but I digress. Jameson Greer goes on the American media networks and he says, look, here is why we impose those 35% tariffs on Canada on the non-USMCA, United States-Mexico Agreement, compliance stuff. They retaliated against us when we declared a trade war and Donald Trump didn't like that retaliation. Nobody else retaliated against us, so maybe they removed the retaliatory tariffs against us. Then maybe there's some room. Watch the gaslighting by the United States Trade Representative,
Starting point is 00:03:16 Jameson Greer here play this clip. Let me ask you about Canada, which is our second largest largest trading partner. The president increased tariffs to 35%. It applies, though, to just about 10% of what Canada sells here. Why bother to do this now in the middle of negotiations? So I would say, first of all, early on, the president imposed a 25% tariff on Canada. And that was really about fentanyl and border issues,
Starting point is 00:03:42 right? It's a separate regime from their reciprocal tariff. And what did Canada do in response? You know, they talked about helping at the border, and I'm not a drug czar or anything, but what I do know as the trade guy is that Canada retaliated. The only other country in the world who retaliated on tariffs was the Chinese. And so if the president's going to take an action
Starting point is 00:04:03 and the Canadians retaliate, the United States needs to maintain the integrity of our so if the president's going to take an action and the Canadians retaliate, the United States needs to maintain the integrity of our action, the effectiveness. So we have to go up to. You're talking about the things that the former prime minister Trudeau put in place, not the current prime minister. And are still in place. They're still in place. But the current prime minister has held off largely on retaliation here. That's the guy you're negotiating with and his team. So what's the strategy
Starting point is 00:04:26 here and aren't you worried that this will hurt the broader free trade deal if you truly do want to renegotiate it next year? I'm not concerned that it's going to complicate things with Canada. Our view is the president is trying to fix the terms of trade with Canada. And if there's a way to a deal, we'll find it. And if it's not, we'll have the tariff levels that we have. But folks as we know there's always an excuse for the Trump regime to attack Canada. Donald Trump wants to turn Canada into the 51st state. He made it clear what his intentions are. He wants to strip Canadian sovereignty. So if it's not the retaliatory tariffs
Starting point is 00:05:01 what was it earlier last week? It was, oh, can't, okay, Donald Trump even wrote, oh, Canada, why would you recognize the Palestinian state? How are we supposed to get a deal done then? Then he called, then Howard Lutnick made his rounds on Fox state regime media, and Lutnick was like, oh, we were getting so close with Canada, and now you're recognizing the Palestinian state? I mean, come on. How could you be so tone deaf, Canada? Why would you do that? It just, I know that's my Howard Lutnick impression.
Starting point is 00:05:35 Here he is, though, watch Lutnick saying that here, play this clip. But Canada, I take it not so much or not so good. Well, imagine, like, the president truth doubt that the Canadians put out Oh, we're going to recognize the Palestinian state. I mean, come on Don't be so tone-deaf Right. The president is totally into trying to get peace in Gaza and you're throwing your hat in the ring from Canada Come on, you know, they still haven't solved dairy. They still have two countries on the whole world retaliated against the United States of America tariffs,
Starting point is 00:06:12 China, which we all know, and Canada. So you know what? I just don't see the president stepping off the gas. Now, Mark Carney came down, had a really nice lunch with the president when he first got elected. You know, if he makes that call and if he starts turning on the charm Carney came down, had a really nice lunch with the president when he first got elected. If he makes that call and if he starts turning on the charm and if he takes off his retaliation, lets and stops the silliness, maybe the president will let it down a bit.
Starting point is 00:06:36 But right now, 35% of that letter he sent is surely in the cards. Right. So it's all you recognize the Palestinians say, oh, all of that fentanyl you're bringing in, right? When there's no fentanyl that they're bringing in so it's excuse after excuse after excuse Now let me show you Dominic LeBlanc what he had to say so he was asked by American media. So why don't you just remove the retaliatory tariffs? Come on. Justin Trudeau the former prime minister he did it. You'll make us feel good here if you do that. Why don't you do that? And I think, look, Dominic LeBlanc, he was diplomatic about it. He goes, it would be great if we can do a deal. But no, we're
Starting point is 00:07:15 not going to just, you know, we're defending Canada here. And he said it in a polite way. Here, watch this. You heard Ambassador Greer say Canada, because Canada retaliated to the initial tariffs all the way back in April, when Prime Minister Trudeau was in office, you're paying the price now, even though you have a new government in place.
Starting point is 00:07:38 If that's the issue, why not make that concession and pull back? So Prime Minister Carney, our new Prime Minister, has, we think, built a very business-like, respectful relationship with President Trump. We think that's obviously very important to Canada and we think to the United States. We're dealing with, take for example, the steel sector in Canada. It's a strategic importance to national security in Canada as it is for President Trump and the American economy. We now have a situation where there's a 50 percent tariff. We're the biggest steel export
Starting point is 00:08:16 market for the United States. Right. We have a 25 percent tariff. There's a 50% tariff when we want to sell something into the United States. So effectively we're blocked from doing that. But the national security interest of Canada requires that we have a viable steel and aluminum sector. And my conversations with Secretary Lutnick and others are that therein lies an example where if we do the right work together, we have, Ms. Brennan, the toughest rules of any country dealing with Chinese dumping into Canada. We have melt and pour tracing so that products coming from other countries with Chinese steel can't be dumped into the Canadian market. So we're looking and
Starting point is 00:08:58 advancing ideas where we can do that work with the United States, at the same time, ensuring that our economy continues to have sectors vital to the economic future of Canada. And then now watch how Dominique LeBlanc also talks about how, you know, he left the United States without a trade deal. He flew back after Donald Trump started posting, oh, you know, oh Canada, I'm gonna, I'm 35% tariffs.
Starting point is 00:09:24 You know, I'm disappointed, but we'll go back. We'll still have a dialogue and we'll see. We're just going to make a deal that benefits Canada. And if a deal doesn't benefit Canada, we're not going to do it here. Play this clip. So we were obviously, obviously disappointed by that decision. We believe there's a great deal of common ground
Starting point is 00:09:42 between the United States and Canada in terms of building two strong economies that work well together. That's been the history of the 40-year free trade agreement that goes back to President Reagan. We were pleased the United States is respecting the terms of the USMCA agreement. That's vital, we think, to the cost of living
Starting point is 00:10:03 and affordability, certainly in the United States. It's true in Canada as well. So we're going to continue to do the work. We left always with a better understanding of the American concerns in the trading relationship. Ambassador Greer, Secretary Lutnick engaged with us in constructive, cordial conversations. So we're prepared to stick around and do the work needed. We think, Ms. Brennan, that the economies of both countries are strengthened when we
Starting point is 00:10:36 do things together. The trading relationship between Canada and the United States is unlike other partners. One description which I thought was very apt, we don't sell things to each other as much as we build things together. And that's why it's difficult in this relationship when so much is integrated, but we remain very optimistic. And LeBlanc says, look, there could still be
Starting point is 00:10:59 some conversations taking place. Here play this clip. Are there any plans for the two leaders to speak I saw President Trump said your prime minister called him Thursday and they just never connected I mean our tensions that high and given the changing Justification for the tariffs. Do you really feel like you're negotiating with the other side in good faith? Sure, we do. Of course we do. As I say, the conversations have been informative, constructive, and cordial. I would expect the Prime Minister will have a conversation with the President over the
Starting point is 00:11:34 next number of days. That's certainly my plan again with Secretary Lutnick, recognizing that we think there is an option of striking a deal that will bring down some of these tariffs, provide greater certainty to investment. Now, I want to remind you as well what the United States ambassador to Canada has also been saying,
Starting point is 00:11:57 because this is how the Trump regime feels about Canada. Just a reminder, here he is, Pete Hoekstra. Here's what he has to say. Here, play this clip. Oh, they just slapped a brand new tax on us that we've told them for months is an unfair tax. Oh, by the way, you have 11 out of your 13 provinces who ban American products on their shelves.
Starting point is 00:12:22 We haven't banned a single Canadian product in the United States. That's a pretty nasty move, okay? You have a number of your provinces have put in provisions into their procurement process that say, oh, if you're an American company, you can't bid. That's pretty nasty. But that was in response to the U.S. slapping major tariffs on this country. And exactly right now what? So responding is nasty? I'm just trying to get to the heart of this, Ambassador.
Starting point is 00:12:51 But where we are today. And here's what the U.S. ambassador to Canada had to say about the whole 51st state. Donald Trump saying that Canada should be the 51st state. Watch what he says here. Here, play this clip. And I do want to ask you about the 51st state. You had to have known this question was coming, because of course, the president brought it up again
Starting point is 00:13:10 over the weekend. It does seem to come up when things are getting a bit tense and a bit intense. Is Donald Trump using threats against Canada's sovereignty as a negotiating tactic? It is not a threat. How is it saying that Canada should become a state? He said we're not a real country before?
Starting point is 00:13:27 I think, you know, your prime minister, I forget what he said within the last week or something and said, you know, this is a, he didn't use exactly this word, but a term of endearment. You know, he loves- He has said it's a wish, a desire, rather than a real. A wish and a desire. Term of it, you think it's a term of end I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question.
Starting point is 00:13:46 I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question.
Starting point is 00:14:02 I think that's a good question. I think that's a good question. I, you know, they can see it however they want, far be it for me to tell Canadians how they should view the president's comments. But the president is not invite people on his team, on America's team, or to grow our team with the belief that by doing so, we're going to weaken America or weaken them. This message is brought to you by our sponsor, Americans United for Separation of Church and State. You don't destroy 250 years of secular democracy without gutting the rule of law, shadowing
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Starting point is 00:15:10 I found hope in are organizations just like Americans United for Separation of Church and State. AU is quite the force. It's fighting daily to preserve freedom without favor and equality without exception for every single American. They advocate for every individual's right to believe and live as you choose, so long as you don't harm others. Now, that is what freedom really is all about. Whether you're passionate about gender-affirming healthcare, reproductive rights, LGBTQ+, rights, or supporting our public schools, church-state separation touches almost every constitutional freedom.
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Starting point is 00:16:17 Now, I think Prime Minister Carney realizes that Canada holds a lot of cards. Look, I think he realizes that overwhelmingly the people are with him. They don't want a bad deal to happen. I think he recognized in all of the polls 60, 70, now close to 80 percent of Canadians have a negative view of the United States and the Trump regime view the US and the Trump regime as a threat to Canada. I think Prime Minister Carney recognizes that Canada holds close to a trillion dollars in United States treasuries. I think he realizes that Canada is the biggest customer and client of the United States,
Starting point is 00:16:58 that the boycott against the United States is crushing tourism in the United States. It's been a beacon to the rest of the world as well to say if Canada can do it, we should do it also and we should stand up. A tourism boycott, a boycott of American products is really stinging the United States. I think Carney's watching what's happening with the American markets. He's seeing that the American markets are struggling right now. Very bad jobs report, systemically the American market getting weaker.
Starting point is 00:17:31 I think Prime Minister Carney also is very attuned to the oral argument that took place before the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals regarding Donald Trump's ability to declare emergency powers to declare this trade war against the world to attack Canada and Mexico and every country I should add and that it's likely that this Federal Circuit Court of Appeals will rule against Donald Trump and negate all of the tariffs which Trump will then whine about. So I think Carney is buying time as well to see what the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals is going to do.
Starting point is 00:18:10 So I think he's watching those factors. But I want to give Carney credit as well, because he's talking with current conservative premiers, leaders of provinces like Doug Ford, and he's listening to what they have to say. So to have a liberal government listen to what conservative voices have to say and listen to what former prime ministers have to say. Staunch conservative prime ministers who were very pro-America in the past like Stephen Harper, and I've showed you those clips before as well. So Doug Ford, the Premier of Ontario, here's what he has to say, play this clip. Going back to your comments earlier about President Trump and the trade war, do you think it's possible for Canada to get a deal with Trump that doesn't include tariffs on
Starting point is 00:18:56 certain sectors like auto, steel, aluminum and energy? And would you be satisfied with a sectoral tariff deal? Well, great, great question. You know it's a problem with President Trump. And, you know, we're united. First of all, I've never seen this country more united ever in all my years of being in politics. And it's a great feeling in all provinces, territories, municipalities, and the federal government.
Starting point is 00:19:21 But, you know, Prime Minister Carney is trying his best. But this guy will say something one day and he'll wake up and the cheese slips off the cracker and then all of a sudden he goes the other way. And you're thinking, how do you deal with a guy like this? Are we hoping that we can get a deal with zero tariffs? Yes, but I always say how we can kick back, and it's not the American people kick back at President Trump, let's start on-shoring everything,
Starting point is 00:19:50 absolutely everything we possibly can, like I-beams, those big steel I-beams. I didn't realize we don't make them here until found out during the trade deal, or the rails that are beautiful, their cars are gonna be made, sorry, the street cars are gonna be made down the street. We don't make the rails that are beautiful, cars are going to be made, sorry the street cars are going to be made down the street. We don't make the rails so we need to start making rails and start making sure that we
Starting point is 00:20:14 make those steel I-beams and aluminum cans. Aluminum cans are my favorite. The Coke, the Pepsi's, all the other beverages, the Molson's, the LeBats, the Craft Brewers. We have, we're the kings of aluminum in Quebec. They ship the aluminum down 25% tariff. They get printed and formed 25% back tariffs. So my question was, why aren't we making aluminum cans here? Now we're going to be making aluminum cans.
Starting point is 00:20:42 We're going to lose a billion dollars of the business in the US.S. And same with tin cans from DeFasco. Ship it down to the U.S. They get formed. I had a meeting with the big users of the tins. Now we're bringing a line up here. And they're going to be losing out on about 1.3 billion cans, just on the tin cans. But I wanna, we can build anything here. We're an economic powerhouse. You know folks, we don't have to take a backseat to anyone in the world, and we sure the heck don't have to take a backseat to President Trump.
Starting point is 00:21:17 He needs to remember, we're his, yes, they're our number one customer, but we're their number one customer. You hear about all these deals he's making, he's making in their good countries, Japan and Korea. But I'll give you an example. With Japan, he said he made this beautiful deal and everything, and God bless him. But they buy $79 billion worth of products, US, off of the US Canada by
Starting point is 00:21:47 359 billion dollars US Off off the folks south of the border nine million Americans wake up every single morning To produce a widget or a good just for Ontario alone. Those nine million jobs are in jeopardy right now We buy more products off the US than Japan, Korea, China, the UK and France combined. So I wouldn't roll over and I told the Prime Minister, do not roll over, hit that guy back as hard as we possibly can and that's what we need to do and we can do it. We can build anything here in Canada, absolutely anything. From the beautiful trains that we build here, to the planes, to automobiles, to satellites, to jet engines,
Starting point is 00:22:33 and the list could go on and on and on. And our strength are the people. We have the brightest people anywhere in the world right here in Ontario. So when everyone goes out, another very powerful tool are the people of Canada. When you go out and you go to buy a product, just flip it around the back and see where it's manufactured. And buy Canadian when you can, anything possible.
Starting point is 00:23:00 And I got to call one company out that I learned when I was, just two days ago I met with all these tin can users and their food products, you know is a company called Campbell Soup They told me that Campbell Soups putting a Canadian flag on their cans. They closed their plants here They moved everything down to the US and they put recipe made in Canada. What sort of nonsense is that? Don't let them hoodwink you. I'm gonna call them out again. I'm gonna show you one of their cans. It's unacceptable that they do that. You know, don't try to pull one over people's eyes. Canadians are too smart for that. So please, when you go shopping, I
Starting point is 00:23:37 know it's not always possible, buy Canadian as much as you can. So we're gonna win this thing, one way or another, we're gonna go down and we're gonna roll over. We'll keep fighting every single day. Stephen Harper, former prime minister in the mid 2000s to early 2010-ish, 2015 I think, right?
Starting point is 00:24:02 Again, pro-America, like super like super pro America. And Harper's like, I was wrong. He goes, if you asked me a year ago, I would have told you lean in, work with the Trump administration. He goes, I was wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Do not do, do not make bad deals. And he goes, that's how the rest of the world feels right now. Here, play this clip. Look, I'm just gonna, I was just gonna put it in this context, just so everyone understands, you know, I was, I think it's fair to say, probably the most pro-American prime minister Canadian history. And I tell people that if a year ago, the government had asked me, you know, President Trump's coming in, he's talking
Starting point is 00:24:48 about big challenges on trade, USMCA tariffs, what would you advise? I would have said a year ago, this is a real opportunity for Canada to really deepen its economic and security partnership with the United States. However, when this government did actually ask me a few weeks ago my advice, my advice was the opposite. My advice was yes, you know, on the economy we've got to kind of get something short-term worked out with the Trump administration, but this really is a wake-up call for this country to truly diversify its trade export markets. That's why, you know, that's why we did sign the trade deals all around the world, Europe, Asia, Pacific, the
Starting point is 00:25:45 Americas. And Canada has been, to be blunt, this is nothing against the U.S. The reality is independent of the current disputes. Canada has been, to use business term, and I'm in the investment business now, we have been grossly overweight the United States as a country and there is no reason for that. Just because we have that geographic proximity does not justify the degree of dependence that we have on a single market, which is sometimes disadvantageous. And the other thing, you know, in terms of security, I, my advice to the government is, yes, absolutely
Starting point is 00:26:25 spend more on defense. We should have been doing it all along. But let's, while we spend a lot more on defense, while the border is a shared responsibility, let's make sure we spend a lot more on defense so that we can be independently responsible for our own land, seas, and skies independent of the United States. And I'm just going to tell you right now, I, you know, one political role I still have, I chair the Global Federation of Conservative Parties and I can tell you that this is the advice every allied capital is getting from everybody like me that they talk to.
Starting point is 00:27:06 And this is not ideal, but I just think it's a reality. The cat's out of the bag. You can't, or two spaces out of the two, whatever you want to call it. You can't put it back. And I think it's unfortunate. I think in the long term, this will actually, this direction will weaken the free world more than it will, more than it will help it. And it will, I think, ultimately weaken the United States as well. So I think it's unfortunate, but that is the reality of the situation that, that we have to deal with.
Starting point is 00:27:37 And then, so you can see the chaos of all of this. Then you have Kevin Hassett on if tariff rates are now locked in because Donald Trump said August 1 then they're locked and he goes well it's up to Donald Trump to decide we'll see what he does well you know what Donald Trump did decide you're gonna wake up one day and fire the Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner he wakes up one day angry he does this wakes up another day angry and does that he's always arbitrary capricious, reckless, malicious.
Starting point is 00:28:06 Anyway, here's Kevin Hassett, let's play. Are the tariff rates locked in or are they still up for negotiation? I think these, we have eight deals that cover about 55% of world GDP with our biggest trading partners, the EU and Japan and Korea and so on. And I expect that those matters are more or less locked in,
Starting point is 00:28:29 although there will have to be some dancing around the edges about exactly what we mean when we do this or that. For the deals that aren't ready yet, they're going to get the reciprocal rates soon, and then we would expect that there might continue to be negotiations with those countries. But for those eight deals that you say are deals that are announced, you're saying more or less, are they locked in? Yeah, the president will decide what the president decides, but the president likes those deals,
Starting point is 00:28:57 the Europeans like those deals, and they're absolutely historically wonderful deals. Think about it, we've got Europe agreeing to open their markets to our products, so our farmers, our small businessmen, can sell stuff in Europe like they never could before and they're letting us charge a 50% tariff which is going to raise maybe about a hundred billion dollars a year. And I think people are curious because they remember that back in April when President Trump first announced these tariffs he then backtracked when the bond market was spooked. Could a market reaction
Starting point is 00:29:26 prompt President Trump to change these tariff rates again? The markets have seen what we're doing and celebrated them. And so I don't see how that would happen. Okay, but not ruling it out. No, I would rule it out because these are the final deals. There you have it folks. Well, let me know what you think. Hit subscribe and let's get to six million subscribers You might as much drop check out the latest pro democracy sticker packs t-shirts hats sweatshirts and more all that store dot mightest touch
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