Trump and Carney are in direct contact over tariffs, says Canadian minister

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks to reporters in Washington, May 6. Industry Minister Melanie Joly said Thursday Carney is in direct contact with President Donald Trump in a bid to lift new metals tariffs.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks to reporters in Washington, May 6. Industry Minister Melanie Joly said Thursday Carney is in direct contact with President Donald Trump in a bid to lift new metals tariffs. (Kevin Lamarque, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney are in direct talks to resolve tariff issues.
  • Trump increased steel and aluminum tariffs to 50% Wednesday, which could impact Canada significantly.
  • Talks include trade, defense and security, though potential Canadian reprisals could be looming.

OTTAWA — Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and President Donald Trump are in direct communication as part of Ottawa's bid to persuade Washington to lift tariffs, Industry Minister Melanie Joly said on Thursday.

"We are in a trade war and it's normal that at the same time that the trade war is taking place, there are also diplomatic negotiations, and that therefore, Prime Minister Carney and President Trump talk to each other," she told reporters.

The Globe and Mail newspaper earlier quoted the envoy to Canada as saying the two leaders were secretly holding direct talks to work out a framework for a trade and security deal.

Trump this week doubled the tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum to 50% from 25%. The move has the potential to hurt Canada, which is the largest seller of the metals to the U.S.

Carney said on Wednesday that the countries were in intense negotiations over the tariffs and that Canada was "preparing reprisals if those negotiations do not succeed."

Pete Hoekstra, the ambassador to Canada, told the Globe the two sides were "laying out the perimeters" of a deal that could involve boosting content in autos, improving access to Canadian critical minerals and ensuring Canada played a much bigger role in the Arctic.

The talks also include increased defense spending, energy, border security, steel and aluminum as well as stopping the smuggling of fentanyl, the paper cited him as saying.

Carney's office declined to comment.

In an email, an official at the embassy in Ottawa said "both the President and Prime Minister, or members of their teams, have publicly acknowledged that there are ongoing conversations".

Unifor, the country's largest private sector union, on Wednesday called on Carney to retaliate immediately.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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